MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Pro se plaintiffs Kevin Lynch and Kevin Babineau are currently incarcerated in the Massachusetts Correctional Facility at Shirley, Massachusetts. Each is eligible for parole and has been denied parole at least once. Lynch and Babineau filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (“section 1983”), seeking a declaratory’judgment that one of the Massachusetts statutes governing parole of state prisoners, Mass. Gen.Laws ch. 127, § 130, is unconstitutionally vague (Count I), and that the Massachusetts Parole Board denied them due process by allowing crime victims and their families to speak at parole hearings while refusing to permit the plaintiffs’ families and friends to be heard (Count II). They also assert that the Parole Board’s hearings fail to comply with other provisions of applicable Massachusetts law (Count III). In addition to declaratory relief, the plaintiffs seek a prospective injunction.
The defendant, Sheila Hubbard, who is Chairperson of the Parole Board, has moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ suit with prejudice, arguing that the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, that the plaintiffs’ claims are not cognizable under section 1983, and that the plaintiffs have failed to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.
Eleventh Amendment
The defendant first argues that the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution bars the plaintiffs’ suit. As to Counts I and II, which seek declaratory and prospective injunctive relief to compel a state official to conform her agency’s activities to the requirements of the federal constitution, the argument is meritless.
See Ex parte Young,
Count III, however, seeks an injunction requiring a state official to act conformably with
state
law. The Eleventh Amendment does prevent such a claim from being litigated in a federal court.
Pennhurst State School & Hosp. v. Halderman,
Section 1983
The defendant argues that the plaintiffs’ due process claims may not be brought under section 1983, but rather must be presented, if at all, in a petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. When a state prisoner challenges the fact or duration of his confinement, the exclusive federal remedy is a writ of habeas corpus. Such claims are not cognizable under section 1983.
See Heck v. Humphrey,
These plaintiffs present the latter class of suit. If their action should succeed, the consequence would be better
(i.e.,
constitutionally satisfactory) parole hearings in the future. The plaintiffs seek neither to reverse a prior denial of parole nor to require a future grant. Rather, they want what they contend would be a fairer consideration of their candidacy for parole. This outcome would not result in a judgment that “would necessarily imply the invalidity [of their] convictionfs] or sentence[s].”
See Heck,
Due Process Claims
In Count I, the plaintiffs challenge the constitutionality of Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 127, § 130, which authorizes the Parole Board to grant a parole permit to a state prisoner “only if the [Board] is of the opinion that there is a reasonable probability that, if such prisoner is released, he will live and remain at liberty without violating the law, and that his release is not incompatible with the welfare of society.” The plaintiffs’ argument is that this standard is too general and too subjective to satisfy the requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause. In Count II, they claim that the Parole Board violated their rights to due process at their respective parole hearings by not permitting their own family members to speak while at the same hearing permitting members of their victims’ families to speak.
The plaintiffs have failed to state in either count a claim upon which relief can be granted, for a fundamental reason: When the Massachusetts Parole Board decides not to grant a prisoner a parole permit, it does not deprive him of a liberty interest protected under the Fourteenth Amendment, and thus the Due Process Clause does not apply to the decision not to grant parole.
“There is no constitutional or inherent right of a convicted person to be conditionally released before the expiration of a valid sentence.”
Greenholtz v. Inmates of Nebraska Penal and Correctional Complex,
Nevertheless, a state may create a liberty interest where none inherently exists by enacting provisions governing parole that give an inmate a reasonable expectation that he will be released if certain specified criteria are met.
See Board of Pardons v. Allen,
*128 The Massachusetts statute does not create such an expectation or presumption. Unlike the statutes involved in Greenholtz and Allen, it is phrased negatively:
No prisoner shall be granted a parole permit merely as a reward for good conduct but only if the parole board is of the opinion that there is a reasonable probability that, if such prisoner is released, he will live and remain at liberty without violating the law, and that his release is not incompatible with the welfare of society.
Mass.Gen.Laws, ch. 127, § 130.
The Supreme Court has also noted that statutes that employ a language structure like that of the Massachusetts statute can be distinguished from the ones containing mandatory phrasing that give rise to the liberty interest.
See Allen,
The Massachusetts courts also have explicitly distinguished the Commonwealth’s statute from the one considered in
Green-holtz, see Commonwealth v. Hogan,
The Supreme Court has more recently expressed disapproval of the mode of analysis outlined in Greenholtz and Allen, but the change is hardly favorable to the plaintiffs. In
Sandin v. Conner,
Sandin’s prescription was articulated in the context of administrative discipline of inmates, and there is some debate whether it ought to be employed at all in other contexts.
2
Nevertheless, the Court of Appeals for this circuit has employed the
Sandin
mode of analysis to hold that an
*129
inmate does not have a liberty interest in being given an expected, but not mandated, parole hearing,
see Hamm v. Latessa,
It may always have been difficult, but post
-Sandin
it is impossible to conceive how making
no change
in a prisoner’s incarcerated status could deprive him of liberty. His original sentence deprived him of liberty.
See Meachum v. Fano,
The conclusion that these plaintiffs have not identified a liberty interest sufficient to invoke the protection of the Due Process Clause is bolstered by recent decisions finding no liberty interest in other discretionary sentence-reducing benefits. In
Ohio Adult Parole Auth. v. Woodard,
So it is here. The fact that the plaintiffs have not been paroled simply means that they will continue to serve the sentence that lawfully deprived them of their liberty. Since no liberty interest is at stake, the Due Process Clause does not pertain. The plaintiffs have failed to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, defendant’s motion to dismiss is GRANTED with prejudice as to Counts I and II. Count III is dismissed without prejudice for want of jurisdiction.
It is SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Although that latter conclusion is not binding here as a matter of federal constitutional law, the state courts’ interpretation of the scope of the Parole Board’s discretion is authoritative as a matter of state law and thus relevant to the constitutional inquiry.
See Greenholtz,
.
See Ellis v. District of Columbia,
