Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS.
This appeal puts in question the relationship between an
en banc
decision of this court and two recent Supreme Court cases. The latter require a prisoner to succeed in a habeas action before bringing a claim that challenges, even indirectly, the
*373
duration of his custody — for example a damages claim for due process violations made in the course of a decision revoking good time credit. See
Edwards v. Balisok,
Appellant Kevin Razzoli is a federal prisoner serving a sentence for attempted murder. He challenges an order by the district court dismissing his claims against the Federal Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) and the United States Parole Commission for declaratory relief and damages under the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, and the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552 (“FOIA”).
Razzoli’s current troubles started when a prison official at the Allenwood Federal Correctional Institution claimed that on July 23, 1995 he had found cocaine and a razor blade in Razzoli’s cell. After a Unit Disciplinary Committee hearing, Razzoli received a sanction that included the loss of 60 days statutory good time credit. A report on the incident was forwarded to the FBI for investigation, but no new criminal charges were brought against Razzoli. After the Disciplinary Committee action, but based on the same events, the United States Parole Commission withdrew Razzoli’s recommended parole release date and established a new date twenty-four months later, in effect delaying his eligibility for parole by two years.
Razzoli filed a pro se complaint in district court here, alleging that the BOP staged the incident on which the actions of the Disciplinary Committee and Parole Commission were based. Although the complaint does not highlight the difference, it suggests that the Disciplinary Committee found him guilty only of possession and that the Parole Commission found him guilty of possession with intent to distribute. It further alleges that the Parole Commission conspired with the BOP and knowingly used false information against Razzoli. The complaint says that Razzoli never received a copy of any FBI report and suggests that the report must not have supported the Parole Commission’s determination.
Before the complaint was served on either of the federal defendants, the district court dismissed the case
sua sponte
for failure to state a claim on which relief could be granted. The court found that Razzoli’s claims amounted to collateral attacks on the actions of the Disciplinary Committee, and that under
Balisok
and the key predecessor cases of
Heck v. Humphrey,
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We review the district court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim
de novo.
See
Davis v. District of Columbia,
The theory of Razzoli’s Privacy Act claim is that BOP and the Parole Commission violated 5 U.S.C. § 552a(e)(5) by maintaining in their files and using a false record, the report of the drug possession incident, even though they knew it to be false. We read the Privacy Act part of the complaint as having two dimensions, one clearly running afoul of Balisok, the other not so clearly.
What clearly runs afoul of
Balisok
is his apparent claim in relation to the recision of good time. If BOP knowingly preserved and acted upon a totally invented record of drug possession, plainly the recision of good time would have to be overturned, thus accelerating Razzoli’s release. Indeed, Razzoli has already brought such a claim in the Middle District of Pennsylvania in the form of an action under
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
But the amicus contends that Razzoli frames a second attack that implicates only the determination by the Parole Commission to postpone his parole eligibility. Under this reading, Razzoli is arguing that the Parole Commission decision was based on additional inaccuracies in his record— the absence of the FBI report and the addition ■ of “intent to distribute” to the possession charge. The government resists this interpretation, but we think it within the range of plausible interpretations given the alleged absence of the FBI report from the record, the complaint’s explicit attacks on the decision of the Parole Commission, and the distinction (slightly submerged, to be sure) between the Disciplinary Committee’s charge of possession and the Parole Commission’s finding of possession with intent to distribute.
The Supreme Court’s trilogy addressing the relation between petitions for habeas corpus and other prisoner claims began with
Preiser v. Rodriguez,
In
Heck v. Humphrey,
In each of the cases of.the trilogy, the plaintiffs establishment of his claim would itself have been sufficient to
entitle
him to earlier release — subject, at least in the
Balisok
case, to the possibility of renewed revocation of the good time credit in a new hearing untainted by constitutional error. See
Balisok,
The amicus would have us hold that
Chatman-Bey
is no longer controlling. In
Anyamuutaku v. Moore,
Of course a Supreme Court decision flatly contradicting an earlier circuit precedent would control. See
Dellums v. United States Nuclear Regulatory Comm’n
Finding
Chatman-Bey
alive and at worst only modestly ailing, we conclude that Razzoli’s Privacy Act claim—not only in regard to the good time decision but also in regard to parole eligibility—is not cognizable. In one respect, however, the district court erred on this claim: it should have been dismissed
without prejudice.
If Razzoli is successful in overturning the Disciplinary Committee and Parole Committee actions through a petition for habe-as, he should be allowed to bring his Privacy Act claim at that time. See
Fottler v. United States,
There remains Razzoli’s FOIA claim. The district court concluded that not only the Privacy Act but also the FOIA claim was barred by
Heck
and
Bali-sok.
We do not see the logic. A FOIA claim wins, generally speaking, if the plaintiff has properly requested the document from the agency and no exemption applies. Razzoli evidently seeks the supposedly exonerating FBI report. Of course that report could possibly be helpful in both his good time and his parole eligibility claims. But a judicial finding that some agency must deliver this report to Razzoli would not itself establish some necessary element of those claims; so
Balisok
would not apply even under the comparatively broad reading that prevails in the Seventh Circuit. See
Clayton-EL v. Fisher,
Appellees contend that, quite apart from
Heck
and
Balisok,
Razzoli has failed to state a claim on which relief can be granted. In reviewing the decision of a lower court, we “can affirm a correct decision even if on different grounds than those assigned in the decision under review.”
Danielsen v. Burnside-Ott Aviation Training Center, Inc.,
Here, despite the efforts of the amicus to stretch our imaginations, we find little more in the complaint than a bald reference to the statute. Appellant mentions in passing that he did not receive the FBI report, but makes no reference to requests for this document. He later claims that he “has exhausted all other remedies available to him to attempt to correct the record, but was denied,” but in the context of the complaint this seems to be a reference to the entire record of his cocaine possession. Complaint at 4, Raz- *377 zoli v. Federal Bureau of Prisons, No. 99 CV 1711 (D.D.C. June 27, 1999) Even giving the pro se plaintiff the benefit of every reasonable doubt, we cannot make out a FOIA claim from this complaint.
The only question remaining is whether
sua sponte
dismissal without leave to amend was appropriate. The Prisoner Litigation Reform Act of 1995 not only allows but requires a district court to dismiss a prisoner’s claim before the defendant answers if it finds that the complaint fails to state a claim. See 28 U.S.C. 1915A(b)(l). Even prior to the enactment of that statute, this court had approved of
sua sponte
dismissals for failure to state a claim in some circumstances. See
Baker v. Director, United States Parole Comm’n,
We vacate the order dismissing the Privacy Act claim with prejudice and remand for the district court to do so without prejudice. We also vacate the order dismissing the FOIA claim with prejudice and remand for the district court to dismiss with leave to amend.
So ordered.
