Neil E. Beachem appeals the district court’s 1 dismissal of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We affirm.
I.
Beachem began serving a ten-year sentence in Maryland in August of 1982. That same month, the State of Missouri, seeking prosecution for felony charges, placed a detainer against him pursuant to the Interstate Agreement on Detainers (IAD). In late 1982, the State of Virginia, also pursuing a felony prosecution, lodged a similar detainer. Beachem was temporarily transferred to Missouri in 1984, where he eventually pled guilty pursuant to a negotiated plea agreement. The Missouri circuit court sentenced Beachem to an aggregate eighteen-year term to run concurrently with his Maryland sen
In November of 1987, Beachem was extradited to Virginia to answer to the felony charges pending there. He was found guilty and sentenced to an aggregate twenty-two-year term to be served consecutively to “any other sentences that [Beachem was] serving,” and was subsequently returned to Maryland’s custody. Maryland released Beachem to Virginia in 1989 to serve that state’s sentence. Missouri then filed a detainer against Beachem for the balance of his Missouri sentence, a detainer that Beachem alleges adversely affected his Virginia prisoner classification.
Meanwhile, the Missouri Board of Probation and Parole (the Board) informed Beachem that he had been granted a delayed parole release date of September 17, 1991. Beachem, contending that the documents failed to include the 837 days credit given to him by the Missouri sentencing judge, did not sign the documents. The Board interpreted Beachem’s failure to sign as a refusal and therefore canceled the release date. The Board later informed Beachem that Missouri law prohibited credit for time served in another state. On October 25, 1991, Beachem received a new parole date from the Board. He again refused to sign the release documents, and his release was canceled once more. In November, 1991, Beachem filed a motion to vacate his sentence in Missouri circuit court. After the motion was dismissed as untimely, Beachem filed a state writ of habeas corpus petition pursuant to Missouri Supreme Court Rule 91, which was subsequently denied on the ground that he was not in the custody of Missouri.
Beachem then filed this federal habeas action. Meanwhile, Beachem’s Missouri detainer was removed and he was released on parole from Missouri, to be served while he finished his Virginia sentence. We now consider Beaehem’s arguments that: (1) Missouri waived jurisdiction over him when it failed to exercise its detainer after his release from custody in Maryland; and (2) Missouri violated the terms of his plea agreement by failing to grant him credit for time served in Maryland.
II.
The state challenges Beachem’s jurisdictional claim as nonjusticiable, arguing that the removal of its detainer renders his allegations moot. The inability of a federal court to “review moot cases derives from the requirement of Article III of the Constitution under which the exercise of judicial power depends upon the existence of a ease or controversy.”
Liner v. Jafco, Inc.,
The limits of this presumption were tested in
Lane v. Williams,
Beachem is scheduled for release from Missouri’s parole term on November 1, 2002. Although the record contains no specific reference to Beachem’s Virginia release date, it suggests that he will remain in the legal custody of Virginia authorities, in one form or another, until late 2010. Beachem originally suggested that the Missouri detainer was detrimentally affecting his Virginia prisoner classification and consequently sought removal of the detainer. Missouri has removed the detainer, and Beachem, challenging that state’s jurisdiction over him, now maintains that his Missouri parole term is void. After considering: (1) that Beachem is challenging the administration of his sentence, rather than his conviction,
see Lane,
Citing
United States v. Burton,
As the Court in
Lane
observed: “Collateral review of a final judgment is not an endeavor to be undertaken lightly. It is not warranted absent a showing that the complainant suffers actual harm from the judgment that he seeks to avoid.”
Id.
Absent a reasonable expectation that Missouri’s sentence will again affect Beachem, the case is moot.
See Murphy v. Hunt,
Finally, Beachem argues that Missouri violated the terms of his plea agreement by failing to grant him credit for time
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Stephen N. Limbaugh, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri, adopting the recommendation of the Honorable Thomas C. Mummert III, United States Magistrate Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
