“The Bureau of Prisons shall, to the extent practicable, assure that a prisoner serving a term of imprisonment spends a reasonable part, not to exceed six months, of the last 10 per centum of the term to be served under conditions that will afford the prisoner a reasonable opportunity to adjust to and prepare for the prisoner’s reentry into the community.' The authority provided by this subsection may be used to place a prisoner in home confinement.” 18 U.S.C. § 3624(c). In December 2002 the Department of Justice concluded (relying on an opinion issued by the Office of Legal Counsel) that the “not to exceed” proviso in § 3624(c) limits the Bureau’s discretion under 18 U.S.C. § 3621(b) to designate an inmate’s place of confinement, and that as a result prisoners 'áre ineligible for community or home confinement before the last six months or 10% of their sentences, whichever is shorter. Becausé the Bureau is a unit within the Department of Justice, the OLC’s opinion governs the Bureau’s conduct.
Inmates throughout the nation have challenged the new interpretation, which one circuit recently found to be erroneous. See
Goldings v. Winn,
Richmond is approaching the statutory milestones — he enters the final six months o:: his sentence on December 14, 2004, and the last 10% on February 3, 2005 — so judicial relief must come quickly if he is to enjoy an opportunity for earlier consideration. Looming dates excuse exhaustion, Richmond says; anyway, he asks, what good would a post-2002 request have done given the OLC’s legal opinion? As the Bureau sees matters, however, this is a challenge to prison conditions covered by the exhaustion requirement in the Prison Litigation Reform Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a).
Perez v. Wisconsin Department of Corrections,
Now it is doubtful that the choice between “challenge to prison conditions” and “§ 2241 proceeding” makes much difference to Richmond. A common-law exhaustion rule applies to § 2241 actions even though § 1997e(a) does not, and although the common law allows of exceptions the hurdle is high. Compare
Gonzalez v. O’Connell,
Application to the Bureau need not have been a pointless exercise. Richmond might have asked it to exempt current inmates, a possibility that the OLC did not consider. (In this litigation Richmond contends that the Ex Post Facto Clause precludes application of the OLC’s opinion to persons whose crimes occurred before December 2002. As a constitutional argument this is not promising; the statutes predate his offense. But as a request for a grandfather clause in the new approach, Richmond’s position may fare better and should have been presented to the Bureau.) Another outcome could have been a decision that Richmond is unsuitable for that placement independent of the OLC’s statutory interpretation. Such a decision would have avoided any need for this litigation. By withholding a request for administrative action, Richmond may well have trumped up a legal issue. We cannot be sure, so it is not possible to declare that he seeks an advisory opinion; still, reducing uncertainty is an important benefit of an administrative request.
What is more, it is hard to see why we should strain to find an opportunity to address the correctness of the OLC’s opinion, when Richmond probably has nothing to gain by a conclusion that § 3621(b) grants the Bureau of Prisons more discretion than the Office of Legal Counsel believed. To say that the Bureau has discretion is not to say that it must act favorably on any inmate’s request.
Consider 18 U.S.C. § 3621(e)(2)(B), which permits the Bureau of Prisons to reduce the time served by a prisoner who completes a substance-abuse program. Persons convicted of “crimes of violence”
*605
are ineligible, and the Bureau concluded that anyone who possessed a weapon in connection with a crime was covered by that exception. After several appellate courts held that this was a legal blunder— that there is a difference between the inmate’s real offense behavior and the crime of conviction, and that only the latter matters to eligibility — -the Bureau revised its policies to exclude all gun-toting felons as a matter of discretion. The Supreme Court held that the new policy is lawful, because a power to deny participation case-by-case implies a power to exercise discretion categorically and establish a rule that affects all situations. See
Lopez v. Davis,
That pattern is being repeated' for § 3621(a) and § 3624(c). Although several courts have held that the Bureau has more discretion than the OLC thought, the Department of Justice has decided not to exercise in prisoners’ favor whatever dispensing power it possesses. It has proposed a rule that inmates will be placed in community or home confinement only during the last 10% of their sentences. See 69 Fed.Reg. 51213 (Aug..-18, 2004) (adding a new 28 C.F.R. § 570.21). The rule has not yet been promulgated; the comment period lasts until October 18, 2004. Unless comments lead to a change, however, the Bureau will defer Richmond’s transfer until February 3, 2005, or later, no matter how § 3621(b) is understood. Given the holding of
Lopez
that discretion may be exercised by rule as well as by person-specific decision, see also
American Hospital Ass’n v. NLRB,
The difference between a claim of entitlement to be released, and an opportunity to be considered for release, also affects the choice between § 2241 and a mundane civil action — here, under the Administrative Procedure Act for review of the policy that rests on the OLC’s opinion. A placement, decision itself is not open to. challenge under the APA, see 18 U.S.C. § 3625,. but Richmond does not contest his current placement; he contests only the rules that will.be used to decide where he should serve the last few months of his time.
The parties’ briefs devote considerable energy to the question whether differences between a minimum-security prison camp (where Richmond now is being held) and community confinement are sufficiently great that Richmond can be deemed to challenge the fact of custody, rather than simply the conditions of confinement acknowledged to be lawful. See, e.g.,
Moran v. Sondalle,
A judge could do no more than determine the extent of the Bureau’s discretion to make placement decisions; the substance of any eventual decision is not at issue. Parole litigation supplies a helpful analogy:. a prisoner claiming a right to
release
on parole must use § 2241 (or § 2254 for a state prisoner); but a prisoner claiming that parole officials are apt to use incorrect rulqs when resolving a future application must use the APA (or 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for a state prisoner). See, e.g.,
White v. Henman,
Richmond’s suit therefore seems to us on the APA side of a line that, as
Clark
and
Graham
discuss, has been hazy ever since
Preiser v. Rodriguez,
Consistency implies treating a challenge to rules that affect placement in community confinement the same way as rules that affect placement in parole systems. The upshot is that § 2241 does not furnish the appropriate means to contest the Bureau’s understanding of § 3624(c). We recognize that
Goldings
proceeded under § 2241, as did
Lopez,
but the choice between § 2241 and the APA was not brought to either court’s attention by the litigants or discussed in either opinion, so neither decision contains a holding on the subject. See
Pennhurst State School & Hospital v. Haldennan,
Richmond has not followed any of the rules applicable to prisoners’ general civil litigation — not only exhaustion under § 1997e(a) but also payment of the full docket fee, screening through of the three-strikes rule, and the other differences between requests for habeas corpus and general civil litigation. These many differences have led us to say that a petition for habeas corpus may not be “converted” to a civil suit, nor may district judges convert suits in the other direction. See
Copus v. Edgerton,
AFFIRMED.
