Fourteen years after his conviction in state court, Randy Closs was granted a conditional parole. The parole agreement, which he signed, stated that “[i]n consideration” of being granted parole he would comply with instructions regarding his parole supervision and with other “special limitatiоns and conditions.” Mr. Closs had a long-term diagnosis of schizophrenia, and as part of the “special limitations and conditions” of his parole he agreed to “[bjegin and maintain psychological or psychiatric treatment at a facility or with a psychologist or psychiatrist approved by thе [Board of Pardons and Parole].”
In compliance with the parole agreement, Mr. Closs voluntarily entered a board-approved mental health facility for psychiatric treatment. At the facility, his attending psychiatrist prescribed a psychotropic drug for him. Psychotropic drugs are “cоmmonly used in treating mental disorders such as schizophrenia” by altering the chemical balance in the brain,
see Washington v. Harper,
At his parole violation hearing, Mr. Closs testified that the parole agreement did not require him to take medication, and that he quit taking the medicine because it caused him side effects, including a dry mouth, stiff muscles, and drowsiness. The board concluded that he had violated his parole conditions by failing to comply with “all instructions affecting [his] supervision.” As a result, the board revoked Mr. Closs’s parole and reduced his good-time credits by two years. See S.D. Codified Laws § 24-15-24.
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Mr. Closs petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus in state court,
see
S.D. Codified Laws § 21-27-1, contending that his parole revocation violated due process. The state court denied Mr. Closs’s рetition without opinion, but it granted him a certificate of probable cause to appeal.
See
S.D. Codified Laws § 21-27-18.1. The state supreme court affirmed without opinion the trial court’s denial of Mr. Closs’s habeas petition.
See Closs v. Weber,
Mr. Closs then filed a petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in federal court, claiming that he had a right not to tаke his medication, that his due process rights were therefore violated when the board revoked his parole for failure to take his medication while in a mental health facility, and that state law regarding mental health treatment was not followed. The district court granted Mr. Closs’s § 2254 petition in part and ordered that his good-time credits be restored to him.
See Closs v. Weber,
The board, through the warden of the South Dakota State Penitentiary, appeals the district court’s order. We reverse.
I.
We review the district court’s conclusions of law
de novo. See Whitmore v. Kemna,
Under § 2254(d)(1), a state court decision is “contrary to” established federal law if it contradicts the governing Supreme Court cases on a question of law or if; when confronting facts “materially indistinguishable,”
Williams,
Because the state court’s decision was not contrary to Supreme Court precedent, we may uphold the district court’s grant of relief to Mr. Closs only if the state court decision involved an “unreasonable application” of federal law under § 2254(d)(1). A writ may not issue based on the state court’s “unreasonable application” of Supreme Court precedent,
id.,
solely because a federal court concludes that the state court decision erroneously applied the law; the state court’s errоneous application of the law “must also be unreasonable,”
see Williams,
II.
Although the Supreme Court has not addressed the treatment of mentally ill
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parolees, the Court, prior to Mr. Closs’s 1997 parole date, had considered the fourteenth amendment due process rights of state prisoners who are involuntarily treated for mental illness. In
Vitek v. Jones,
With regard to medication, the Court held ten years after
Vitek
that a state prison policy may confer upon prisoners “a right to be free from the arbitrary administration” of psychotropic drugs,
Harper,
The Court in
Harper,
In Mr. Closs’s case, as in Harper, the state requires that cеrtain procedures be followed before the “involuntary treatment” of inmates with psychotropic medication, see S.D. Codified Laws § 24-2-33, and we note that parolees remain “inmate[s]” under state law until their terms of imprisonment expire, see S.D. Codified Laws § 24-15-1.1. In addition, the state prohibits the forcible administration of psychotropic medication, absent an emergency, to anyone admitted to a mental institution. See S.D. Codified Laws § 27A-12-3.12, § 27A-12-3.23.
III.
The Supreme Court cases that we cite above establish that prisoners have a liberty interest in being free from being forcibly.medicated with psychotropic drugs and that procedural protections must be provided to prisoners before this liberty interest may be taken from them. We believe, however, that the state court could reasonably have concluded that such protections were inapplicable to Mr. Closs’s circumstances.
First, we believe that the state court could reasonably have decided that it was not required to rely upon the above cases because Mr. Closs, rather than being forcibly medicated, agreed to treatment that included prescribed medication. Although Mr. Closs correctly stated that the parole agreement did not require him to take prescribed medication, the agreement did provide that he would maintain board-approved mental health treatment. We believe that the state court could have determined as a matter of law that under the facts presented here the parole agreement to maintain “treatment” necessarily included an agreement to take the drugs that were prescribed as an integral part of that treatment.
Cf. Franceschi v. American Motorists Insurance Co.,
In addition, there was no evidence that Mr. Closs was forced to agree to the parole terms or that he objected to the treatment condition when it was imposed, and state law specifically provides that an inmate is “not required to accept a conditional parole,”
see
S.D. Codified Laws § 24-15-1.1. The board’s decision whether to grant parole to Mr. Closs was discretionary, moreover,
see id.,
and he therefore had no protected liberty interest in receiving it,
see Greenholtz v. Inmates of Nebraska Penal and Correctional Complex,
Although it may be that arbitrary parole conditions violate the Constitution,
see Preston v. Piggman,
Here Mr. Closs had a long-term diagnosis of schizophrenia and related hospitalizations, and he had previously been placеd on psychotropic medication for his condition. His prison physician was concerned that he would have difficulty functioning in society upon his release and recommended that he receive inpatient treatment. Furthermore, there was evidence that when Mr. Closs took his medication his social skills improved and he was less likely to be orally aggressive and to throw things. Given these facts, we do not believe that the state court was required to conclude that the condition imposed was unconstitutional.
Cf. United States v. Cooper,
Under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), we need not decide whether the due process clause actually requires procedural protections before parоle is conditioned on the taking of psychotropic medication, because we conclude that the state court, by denying Mr. Closs’s habeas petition, did not unreasonably apply Supreme Court precedent. The state court could have concluded that Mr. Closs’s parole agreement conditioned his parole on his taking psychotropic drugs if they were prescribed, that when he refused to do so he violated a valid condition of his parole, and that his due process rights were not violated by the parole revocation.
IV.
With respect to Mr. Closs’s loss of good-time сredits, under state law the board has the discretion to reduce a parolee’s good-time credits once it decides that the parolee has violated the conditions of his or her parole. See S.D. Codified Laws § 24-15-24. We note that at his parole violation hearing, Mr. Closs testified that he understoоd that he could lose his good-time credits if the board concluded that he had violated the terms of his parole agreement, and his good-time credits are not mentioned specifically in his state habeas petition or in his petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Because we believe that the state court could properly have upheld the decision to revoke Mr. Closs’s parole, we also conclude that the state court could reasonably have upheld the board’s decision to reduce Mr. Closs’s good-time credits under S.D. Codified Laws § 24-15-24, a statute that Mr. Closs has not challenged.
V.
With regard to the retaliation claim referred to by the district court, we conclude after reviewing the record that Mr. Closs did not assert a retaliation claim as a separate ground for relief in either his state habeas petition or his petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, and he does not rely on such a claim in this appeal. Insofar as Mr. Closs, by relying on state statutes in state and federal court, attempts to allege a state-law claim, we are limited as a federal habeas court to deciding whether “the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States” have been violated,
see
§ 2254(a);
see also Reed v. Farley,
VI.
For the reasons stated, we reverse the district court’s order, and we remand the case to the district court for the entry of an order denying Mr. Closs’s petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
