Robert Lee Jones, Texas prisoner # 647786, appeals the denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition. We affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Jones received deferred adjudiсation and a six-year term of probation, commencing on August 13, 1992, on two assault charges in Bexar County, Texas. In April 1996, while he was on probation, Jones was arrested in Travis County for driving while intoxicated (“DWI”), for which offense he also received probation.
In April 1998, Bexar County moved to revoke Jones’s probation in both assault cases based on allegations that Jones had made threats, had driven while his license was suspended, and had failed to pay court-ordered costs. The motions to revoke were amended on July 7, 1998, to allege, in addition to other charges, that Jones had been arrested for DWI in April 1996 and that he had failed to report that arrest.
At the time Jones was arrested for DWI, he was reporting to the Bexar County probation office by mail, using a form which he was required to complete and return each month. On the forms Jones submitted to Bexar County for the months between April and November 1996, he failed to disclose his arrest and incorrectly stated that he had not been arrested since his last report date. Jones’s Bеxar County supervision was transferred to Travis County on November 1, 1996, and Jones began reporting to Travis County probation officer Cynthiа Rodriguez. Jones alleges that he told Rodriguez at their first meeting about the DWI arrest. Respondent contends that Bexar County did not leаrn of the DWI arrest until July 1, 1998.
On August 4, 1998, Jones pleaded true to the allegations in the motions to revoke; his probation was revoked, guilt was adjudiсated, and he was sentenced to two years imprisonment in each case. Jones filed state habeas applicаtions, asserting, inter *827 alia, that the two year delay in seeking revocation based on his DWI arrest violated his due-process rights. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied the applications without written order.
Jones subsequently filed a 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition, which was denied by the district court. The district court granted Jones a certificate of appealability (“COA”) on the following issues: 1) whether, under the circumstances of the instant case, the delay in filing a probation-revocation charge against Jones based on his DWI arrest violated his duе process rights, and 2) whether the Travis County probation officer supervising Jones’s probation was an agent for the Bexar County probation office for purposes of conveying knowledge of his 1996 DWI conviction.
DISCUSSION
Jones argues that his due process rights were violated by Bexar County’s delay in seeking revocation based on the 1996 DWI offense because the delay in seeking revocation, coupled with the Travis County probation officer’s knowledge of the violation, was fundamentally unfair. The respondent counters that the delay in initiating revocation proceedings on Jones’s DWI arrest was not fundamentally unfair because he conсealed his arrest when he was still under Bexar County supervision and because Bexar County did not have actual knowledge of the violation until July 1998.
Because Jones’s due process claim was adjudicated in state court on the merits, this court will not overturn the state court’s decision unless it was “contrary to” or was an “unreasonable application of’ clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme Court.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1);
Hill v. Johnson,
It is well established that due process must be afforded probationers in connection with the revocation of probation.
Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
In •
Tyler,
a probationer was convicted of three misdemeanor сharges during the course of his probation.
Jones’s case is distinguishable from
Tyler
in three important ways. First,
Tyler
noted that delay attributable to deception by the probationer would not support a finding of due process violаtion.
Id.
(citing
United States v. Sciuto,
Further, we have noted with approval the Eighth Circuit’s holding that an original decision not to issue a revocation warrant in response to a probation violation may be reasonable аnd is not made unreasonable by a reevaluation in light of additional violations that the probationer later committed.
Cortinas v. United States Parole Comm’n,
Because we find that the revocation proceedings in this case comport with due procеss requirements, it is not necessary to consider the second COA issue concerning whether Travis County’s probation officer was an аgent of Bexar County in the circumstances of this case.
Based on the foregoing, we affirm the district court’s denial of Jones’s § 2254 petition.
AFFIRMED.
