Appellant, an inmate at the federal penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas, filed a habeas corpus petition in the district court seeking his release from detention. An order dismissing the petition without a hearing was appealed tо this court and remanded for a hearing on the merits. Cotner v. Willingham,
After conviction in the District of Arizona for violating the Dyer Act, appellant was sentenced to a total of ten years imprisonment. In July, 1966, with 1310 days remaining to be served, he was given a mandatory release under 18 U.S.C. § 4163 and allowed to return to Arizona. Some three months later a warrant was issued charging him with leaving the district without permission, failing to submit his September supervision report, and absconding from supervision. He was arrested on November 10, 1966, at Winslow, Arizona, and transferred to the county jail in Prescott. Five days later, at an interview conducted by his parole officer, he admitted leaving the district without permission. He denied, however, that he had absconded or that he had failed to submit his September report. He also denied a statement in the warrant application that indicated he hаd been discharged by his employer.
*855 The parole officer presented the appellant with the Standard Form 59A, Attorney-Witness Election Form, which is designed to inform violators of the rules relating to preliminary interviews and parole revоcation hearings. After several hours were spent discussing the alternatives offered in Form 59A, 1 appellant elected to admit the violation and postpone the interview to allow his mother to appear and offer mitigating evidence. He indicated that he did not intend to procure legal assistance. Accordingly, the interview was postponed and rescheduled for December 6, 1966. His mother, who resided in Winslow, was notified of the hearing date but because of inclement weather she was unable to appear.
The thirty days allowed for postponement of the preliminary interview having elapsed, and having received no request that the period be extended, the authorities apparently considered the matter of the local interview to be closed. The appellant then appeared before a United States Commissioner in connection with new Dyer Act charges pending in the District of Arizona. The charges were dismissed by the United States Attorney after he learned that appellant had 1310 days yet to serve as a result of his parole violation.
Appellant was returned to Leavenworth on January 27, 1967. Shortly thereafter, a parole officer advised him of his right to have a revocation hearing at which he could appear with retained counsel or present witnesses, or both. The appellant refused to sign a statement that would indicate a prеference in the matter. On March 16, 1967, appellant was conducted to a revocation hearing where he again refused to sign Form 59A, but rather, persisted in his demand for a local hearing. Another institutional revocation hearing was scheduled for May, 1967. At that time, the appellant again appeared at the hearing and refused to sign a Form 59A. The examiner concluded from the appellant’s previous admissions at the first interview, and from the facts presented in other documentary evidence, that he had indeed violated parole. On July 11, 1966, the appellant’s mandatory release was formally revoked by the Board of Parole.
To sustain this application for habeas corpus, aрpellant asserts that he was denied due process because he was not provided with appointed legal counsel, because he was denied a local hearing, and because he was not granted his “opportunity to appear” within a reasonable time.
This court recently declared in Earnest v. Willingham,
It is clear, however, that we are not dealing with the right to counsel in the traditional or ordinary sense as exemplified in Gideon v. Wainright,
This follows from the fact that although Earnest v. Willingham involved a disputed factual situation in which the releasee emphatically denied violating the conditions of release, this court noted with approval the statement by Chief Judge Sobeloff, concurring specially in Jones v. Rivers,
With regard to the contention that the Board failed to provide a local hearing, we note the limited scope of judicial review in the area of pаrole violations. “Habeas corpus is a proper remedy to test only the jurisdiction of the Parole Board and other aspects of due process that are applicable to the limited rights of a parolee.” Hayes v. Taylor,
The court in Hyser v. Reed considered the varying positions of the several petitioners in the case and concluded: “Those who have not denied the charged violаtion of parole or any whose parole was revoked because of a criminal conviction would not now be benefited by a hearing which is designed specifically to make a record only in cases where the faсt of violation is controverted.”
*857
The appellant was offered the regulatory alternatives embodied in Form 59A. He chose to admit the violation and postpone the local preliminary interview. This сourse was followed and the hearing rescheduled. When the postponed hearing defaulted because of the failure of the witness to appear, the thirty day postponement period elapsed and with it the unqualified right to а local interview. As provided in the regulations, any further postponement was within the discretion of the Board.
6
“Having been offered the regulatory alternatives he cannot now be heard to complain.” Earnest v. Willingham,
There remains thе question of the effect of the lengthy delay between the arrest in November, 1966, and the convening of the institutional revocation hearing in May, 1967 — a period of approximately six months.
7
The district court found, and we agree, that much of thе delay was the result of appellant’s refusal to cooperate. In such circumstances the delay is usually not deemed to be prejudicial. United States ex rel. Obler v. Kenton,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Form 59A provides tlie parolee with essentially three options (1) he can admit or deny the charges and waive a local revocation hearing in favor of an institutional hearing upon being returned to the penitentiary; (2) he can deny the charges and request a local revocation hearing; or (3) he can admit the charges and request a postрonement of the preliminary interview for up to 30 days in order to secure witnesses or an attorney, or both.
. This was indicated by Chief Judge Murrah when he quoted from Washington v. Hagan,
. Hyser v. Reed,
. 28 C.F.R. §§ 2.40 and 2.41.
. “If the District Court finds that the parolee no longer persists in his innocence of a violation, or if he otherwise indicates a desire to waive the local hearing, then of course the court need not оrder such a hearing.” Josey v. United States Board of Parole, 116 U.S. App.D.C. 8,
. “A postponement beyond 30 days will not be granted except in the discretion of the Board.” Form 59A. “Once the violation is established or admitted, the exercise of discrеtion in determining whether or not parole should be revoked, represents a very high form of expert regulatory and administrative judgment and the expert appraisal of the Parole Board in this area can be regarded as almost unreviewable.” Hyser v. Reed,
. The revocation hearing is not to be confused with the local preliminary interview. The appellant apparently does not contest the provision in the regulations providing that once a violation is admitted the violator is entitled to a local preliminary interview but not a local hearing on the matter of the revocation itself. In any event, the difference between “interview” and “hearing” is perhaps more apparent than real.
