MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Petitioner, a prisoner at Bland Correctional Center, has brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Petitioner seeks relief from this court alleging that the named respondents unconstitutionally denied him parole due to his two previous felony convictions. The respondents have moved to dismiss this complaint. The petitioner in his traverse to the motion to dismiss alleges that the Board overlooked relevant evi *184 dence and “acted in an arbitrary and capricious manner.”
The facts are virtually undisputed. On May 14, 1976, after consideration of the petitioner’s parole application, one of the respondents, Shields, a member of the Virginia Parole Board, (hereinafter, “Board”) notified the petitioner that the Board felt that the petitioner was “not a good risk” for parole. This letter stated that the reason for the parole denial was the petitioner’s “serious prior record including two previous felony convictions.” On June 1, 1977, a similar notification was sent to the petitioner following determination of his second parole application. Respondent Shields stated that the Board was “still deeply concerned about” the petitioner’s “serious prior record of illegal behavior.” On July 22, 1977, following petitioner’s appeal of the parole denial, Shields advised petitioner that he had reviewed his case file and could “find no basis on which to justify further consideration” at the time.
It is the rule that members of “Boards of Parole” are “given absolute discretion in matters of parole.”
Tarlton v. Clark,
Section 53-251, Code of Virginia (1950), as amended, deals with eligibility for parole. And, for this reason, the Constitution requires that the procedures, utilized by the State in determining whether such expectation of liberty will be granted, must be “fundamentally fair.”
Franklin v. Shields,
And when parole is not granted, a written statement of reasons for the denial is necessary. The main reason for such writing is “that it helps to assure that the Board’s decision was not based on an erroneous assumption of fact.”
Sites v. McKenzie,
In following the standards set forth by the court in Franklin v. Shields, supra, this court finds that the procedure followed in the instant case of supplying general reasons which are substantially related to the parole decision criteria is constitutionally sufficient.
Furthermore, the fact that the Virginia Parole Board took the prisoner’s (petitioner’s) prior criminal record into consideration in determining his eligibility for parole was not, without more, a basis for concluding the Board had considered any prior unconstitutional convictions.
See Wren v. U. S. Board of Parole,
Apparently, the petitioner is alleging that his prior felony conviction(s) are invalid,
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and therefore cannot be considered by the Board. In the case of the
United States v. Francischine,
Accordingly, this court finds that the standards and criteria utilized by the respondents with respect to granting of parole are sufficient to satisfy the constitutional requirements of due process. For the foregoing reasons, the court concludes that the motion of the respondents to dismiss the complaint must be sustained.
