There were originally three plaintiffs in the District Court of Connecticut, Thomas LaBonte, Michael Holup and Howard Studley. Each separately sought a declaratory judgment under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and 28 U.S.C. § 2201 to the effect that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires (a) that each state prisoner be allowed to inspect his prison file before it is used by the Connecticut Parole Board in deciding whether to grant the inmate parole, and (b) that each inmate be allowed the assistance of counsel or a counsel-substitute during the parole release hearing.
These three plaintiffs were given a joint trial by the District Judge, Hon. M. Joseph Blumenfeld. Following the trial, but before the decision of the District Court was announced, Studley and LaBonte were released on parole. Their actions were properly dismissed as moot. See
Weinstein v. Bradford,
Judge Blumenfeld proceeded to render a decision in the case of Holup. He rejected both claims in a considered opinion,
LaBonte v. Gates,
Without a further hearing the Judge dismissed their complaints on the authority of his decision in LaBonte v. Gates, supra. While three appeals were still pending by Holup as well as Copley and DeLorenzo, Copley was also paroled. That leaves one appellant, DeLorenzo, still incarcerated. His appeal remains the only appeal before us.
I
Judge Blumenfeld was correct in holding that due process does not require Connecticut to change its present rules regarding the participation by counsel in the parole release hearing. The Connecticut procedure in this regard is eminently fair. Counsel for the parolee is permitted to have a pre-hearing conference with the chairman of the panel which will decide the parolee’s case, and to place in the file which all members of that panel read, any statement or other documentary information. The justification advanced by the Board for excluding counsel or counsel-substitute from the hearing itself is quite reasonable: The purpose of the hearing in the Connecticut system is to enable the members personally to speak with and observe the inmate, to determine his attitude towards his crime, readiness for parole and the like. The members feel that this can best be achieved by hearing the inmate’s own words, unguided by the presence or promptings of counsel. We find that the state’s interest in excluding persons other than the inmate from the hearings outweighs the “need for and usefulness” to the inmate of having such a representative, despite the inmate’s concededly great interest in the decision being made.
See Haymes v. Regan,
The Supreme Court has declined to hold appointment of counsel constitutionally required in all parole or. probation
revocation
cases,
Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
Although the parole release decision is arguably distinguishable from the types of proceedings involved in the above decisions, we do not think this helps appellants and in any case the direction of the Court is clear. 1 In view of the generous opportunity afforded counsel to place his or her views on the record prior to the hearing, we hold that the Constitution does not require the Connecticut State Board of Parole to permit counsel or counsel-substitute to attend the hearings.
II
This appeal comes to us in an unusual posture. The original plaintiffs who had a hearing are no longer engaged in a case or controversy that is justiciable.
See DeFunis v. Odegaard,
In
Haymes v. Regan,
We decided in
Haymes
that the New York statute (Correction Law § 214) requiring the Board to inform each prisoner denied parole of “ ‘the facts and reason or reasons for such denial’ ” was sufficient. We held that “[t]his requirement, if properly observed, should serve to protect the inmate from arbitrary and capricious decisions or actions grounded upon impermissible considerations.
United States ex rel. Johnson, supra,
We could accept this as dispositive of the issue here raised, particularly when we must also balance the possible administrative hardship in redacting each file to excise information given in confidence or which threatens prison discipline.
On the other hand, if we were convinced that errors in the files of Connecticut are especially common and that the true facts upon which parole is denied are often concealed, we might reach another conclusion.
The trial of the three original plaintiffs, on which appellant relies, discloses that the Connecticut Parole Board apparently follows the requirements of
Haymes v. Regan,
The Supreme Court has never passed on the question, however, whether a presentence report must be shown to a defendant in advance of sentencing.
4
The Court has held that a sentence cannot stand if it is based on assumptions concerning the defendant’s criminal record that are “materially untrue.”
Town0send v. Burke,
In subjecting the due-process claim to a balancing test, we do not have sufficient hard evidence in this record upon which to base a judgment. There is no doubt that many inmates would like as much preparatory material as possible in advance of their appearance before the Board. Whether the divulging of information in the file will, in the average case, be of any help in allowing the inmate to affect the parole decision is more doubtful. The Connecticut Parole Board releases over 95% of the inmates on parole before term expiration, and over 50% at the first parole hearing. 5 Nor are we clear on this record whether the “mistakes” in the parole files are of matters material to the parole decision. We lack convincing evidence, moreover, of whether the burden that would be imposed upon the Parole Board if appropriate review for the redaction of confidential material were made, would be onerous, and whether giving a redacted file to every prospective parolee, including those who will be granted parole, would make for an excessive, and, indeed, unnecessary burden.
We must accordingly remand to the District Court, with some reluctance, to hold a separate trial in DeLorenzo’s case in which an adequate record will be made to supply the evidence mentioned above. The history of the mistakes actually called to the attention of the Connecticut Parole Board should also be elicited. Testimony should also be taken on the method that would be used in redacting prisoners’ files, and the extent of such burden, if it were required that only prisoners who have been denied parole should be given access to their redacted files with a further prompt second hearing after the prisoner has had a chance to look through his file for mistaken items.
We do not intimate what the District Court should decide after the full record is made before it. Since we have already devoted so much time to this appeal, however, we believe it to be in the interest of an orderly administration that this panel retain jurisdiction in the event that there is a further appeal.
Remanded for further proceedings relating .to Part II of this opinion. The District Court’s judgment denying the right to representation at a parole board hearing is affirmed.
Notes
. We note the distinctions made in
Childs v. United States Board of Parole, 167
U.S.App. D.C. 268,
“There is a substantial difference on the due process issue between a finding of serious disciplinary action leading to loss of good-time credits, involved in Wolff, and denial of an application for parole. The broad discretion of the Board in the latter instance lessens the content of required due process . . . Id. at 1282.
And Judge Tamm in a concurring opinion stated:
“ . .1 recognize a distinction between the discretion afforded the government in denying an application of conditional liberty and in revoking liberty once granted. Consequently, I do not read our holding as requiring that parole denial procedures incorporate all the elements of due process made applicable to parole revocation proceedings in Morissey.” Id. at 1286.
See Ganz v. Bensinger,
. The district courts are divided on the question of access to files in parole release decision-making.
Compare Childs v. United States Board of Parole,
. We think that in the absence of a record that tells us what happened in DeLorenzo’s case we should be reluctant to declare rights generally. The granting of declaratory relief is governed by equitable principles,
Eccles v. Peoples Bank of Lakewood Village,
. The Supreme Court has granted certiorari to consider the legality of a death sentence where the judge refused to disclose a confidential section of the presentence report on which he relied in part in imposing a death sentence contrary to the recommendation of the jury.
Gardner v. Florida,
- U.S. -,
.
See LaBonte v. Gates,
