MEMORANDUM ON DISMISSAL
Petitioner, Martha Cecilia Mares, brings this action seeking habeas corpus relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2241. The Petitioner is presently in the custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) serving a sentence for a federal conviction. She is incarcerated in the Federal Prison Camp in Bryan, Texas.
I. BACKGROUND AND CLAIMS
Petitioner’s assertions and claims follow. She was convicted on her guilty plea. The district court made a “strong” recommendation that she participate in the Intensive Confinement Center (ICC) Program, also known as the shock incarceration or federal boot camp program. Petitioner claims the program is a sentencing benefit which would have reduced her incarceration. After Petitioner was designated for and accepted into the ICC Program, the BOP cancelled the program. The BOP can-celled the ICC program without notice based on budgetary concerns. Petitioner has remained in the general prison population.
Petitioner claims this cancellation without notice violated the notice-and-comment requirements for agency rulemaking under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. § 553, and the congressional mandate in the governing statute. She also claims the cancellation violated the Due Process Clause because the court sentenced her based on misinformation and the cancellation violated the Ex Post Facto Clause. Petitioner requests that this Court order the BOP to provide the sentencing benefit of the ICC Program, or a similar benefit such as a halfway house placement or home confinement.
The boot camp program was authorized by statute in 1990. 18 U.S.C. § 4046. Congress passed a statute which provided that the Bureau of Prisons “may place in a shock incarceration program any person who is sentenced to a term of imprisonment of more than 12, but not more than 30 months.” Id. Successful completion of the boot camp program could entitle an inmate to early release consideration. 28 C.F.R. §§ 524.32. An inmate who successfully completed the institution-based component of the program ordinarily would have been eligible to serve the remainder of his sentence in a community-based program, and if successful there and had a period of supervised release to follow, would have been eligible for up to a six-month reduction in their sentence. 28 C.F.R. § 524.32(d).
II. THE APA AND THE CONGRESSIONAL MANDATE
The APA says a general notice of a proposed rule making must be published and interested persons must be allowed to comment on the proposed rule making. 5 U.S.C. § 553. Failure to comply with the notice and comment provision of the APA invalidates a rule covered by the APA.
The BOP shut down the program because of budgetary constraints and its conclusion that the program did not reduce recidivism.
U.S. v. McLean,
Petitioner argues that because Congress expressly established, authorized, and funded the program, the BOP cannot dissolve it without a Congressional mandate. The statute Congress enacted states: “The BOP
may
place in a shock incarceration program....” 18 U.S.C. § 4046(a) (emphasis added). As stated above, Congress did not appropriate specific funds for the Program, and the BOP funded the program from a lump-sum congressional appropriation. “Congress intended to authorize the BOP to operate a boot camp program but did not intend to require operation of such a program.”
Castellini,
III. THE DUE PROCESS CLAUSE
Petitioner claims that eliminating the sentencing benefit of the ICC Program is a due process deprivation because her sentence was based on misinformation. Petitioner says that in deciding her sentence, the court “clearly relied upon the continued existence” of the ICC Program and the court might have rendered a different sentence had the court known the facts about the program. Petitioner claims the Due Process Clause does not allow the sentencing court to rely on incorrect information at sentencing.
Under 18 U.S.C. § 3621(b), the Bureau of Prisons has the authority to decide the place of the prisoner’s imprisonment. “[A] district court has no power to dictate or impose any place of confinement for the imprisonment portion of the sentence. Rather, the power to determine the
Petitioner does not claim that she had begun or completed any program orientation. There is no showing that she would have completed the rigorous program such that she would be entitled to the relief she seeks. 18 U.S.C. § 4046(b); 28 C.F.R. §§ 524.30, 524.32(a) (“eligible inmate ... must .. forego opportunities which may be otherwise available.... Opportunities may that may be affected include, .... visitation, telephone use, legal research time, religious practices, commissary, smoking, and grooming preferences”).
The frustration of the intent of the sentencing court is not a basis for invalidating a sentence.
See United States v. Addonizio,
Although our case involves allegedly present incorrect information (the nonavailability of the ICC Program) and
Addonizio
involved future parole decisions,
Addonizio
informs the analysis here. Like the sentencing court in
Addonizio,
the lack of the fulfillment of the sentencing judge’s intent, as claimed by Petitioner, concerning the potential placement in boot camp does not invalidate the sentence. The failure to fulfill the intent of the sentencing court concerning possible future events is not a due process violation.
Addonizio,
As a separate matter and of greater importance, to the extent Petitioner’s due process claim has any validity, it belongs in a section 2255 motion in the sentencing court. Petitioner states her “sentenc[e] was based on misinformation.” Petitioner’s due process claim challenges the sentence. A challenge “directed toward the sentence itself.....[is] cognizable only under 28 U.S.C. § 2255.”
United States v. Gabor,
IV. THE EX POST FACTO CLAUSE
The focus in an
ex post facto
claim is on whether the change alters the definition of a crime or increases the punishment, not on whether there is some kind of disadvantage to the prisoner or affects his opportunity to take advantage of an early release program.
California Dept. of Corrections v. Morales,
The
Wottlin
case involved a retroactively applied change in BOP policy which denied early release to prisoners who were convicted of certain violent offenses — it directly affected the possibility of a prisoner’s release. Here, the change only affects the acceptance into a cancelled discretionary program for which the prisoner’s success in the program may allow him early release. In an unpublished opinion, the Fifth Circuit found no
ex post facto
violation where a BOP determination “merely deprived [the petitioner] of an opportunity to take advantage of a discretionary early-release provision.”
Alexander v. Wendt,
Petitioner also claims that beyond an
ex post facto
analysis, the BOP cannot cancel the ICC Program because this retroactively impinges on settled expectations, citing
Bowen v. Georgetown University Hosp.,
Petitioner has not started the ICC Program. Furthermore, in Moore the BOP cancelled the halfway house program based on their new legal interpretation that they had no authority to place petitioners in a halfway house. Here, in contrast, the BOP cancelled the program based on ineffectiveness and cost. The legal principle proscribing the retroactive use of modifications of the law embraced in Landgraf and Bowen does not apply here.
Petitioner’s allegations do not show an ex post facto violation or inappropriate retroactive application of a BOP policy.
Accordingly, it is ORDERED that this habeas corpus petition be DENIED for failure to state a claim on which relief may be granted. All pending motions and requests for relief are DENIED as moot.
