The appellant, Richard Lee Morgan, a prisoner in the Florida State Penitentiary System, filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida. On the report and recommendation of a magistrate, the district court summarily dismissed Morgan’s petition. Morgan appeals to this court raising the sole question presented in his petition for habeas corpus: Whether the due process clause or equal protection clause requires a state to impanel a jury to determine a disputed question of identity in a probation revocation hearing. Finding that Florida’s refusal to afford Morgan a jury in such proceedings did not violate any of his constitutional rights, we affirm the order of the district court.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Morgan originally pled guilty to two counts of robbery and was placed on probation for two concurrent terms of fifteen years. During his probationary period, Morgan was charged by his probation supervisor with the commission of another robbery. Morgan denies that he committed this third robbery, and he requested at his probation revocation hearing that the court impanel a jury to determine this disputed issue of identity. The court denied this request, and, after a factual hearing, found that Morgan had committed the robbery. The court revoked Morgan’s probation and sentenced him to two consecutive terms of life imprisonment.
Morgan appealed the revocation order to the Florida District Court of Appeals, again raising his claim of a right to a jury on the question of identity. The district court of appeals denied Morgan’s claim, expressly rejecting language in an earlier opinion that suggested such a right to a jury might exist in Florida, and affirmed the order of revocation.
Morgan v. State,
*478 II. DUE PROCESS
Morgan’s major argument for requiring a jury to determine questions of identity in a probation revocation hearing is grounded on the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The due process clause undoubtedly imposes some restrictions on the power of states to revoke summarily a probationer’s conditional liberty.
Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
In Gagnon and Morrissey, the Supreme Court confronted the questions of what procedural safeguards the Constitution requires for, respectively, probation and parole revocation proceedings. The state had revoked the conditional liberty of the petitioners in Gagnon and Morrissey without providing those petitioners with even the most minimal hearing. In holding that such action offended the due process clause, the court set forth “the minimum requirements of due process.” These requirements include:
“(a) written notice of the claimed violations of [probation or] parole; (b) disclosure to the [probationer or] parolee of evidence against him; (c) opportunity to be heard in person and to present witnesses and documentary evidence; (d) the right to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses (unless the hearing officer specifically finds good cause for not allowing confrontation); (e) a ‘neutral and detached’ hearing body such as a traditional parole board, members of which need not be judicial officers or lawyers; and (f) a written statement by the factfinders as to the evidence relied on and reasons for revoking [probation or] parole.”
Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
The
Gagnon
and
Morrissey
opinions evidence a concern for safeguarding the liberty interests of the probationer and the parolee without encumbering state revocation hearings with unwieldy and impractical procedural requirements.
Morrissey
acknowledged that “[g]iven the previous conviction and the proper imposition of conditions, the state has an overwhelming interest in being able to return the individual to imprisonment without the burden of a new adversary criminal trial if in fact he has failed to abide by the conditions of his parole.”
We emphasize there is no thought to equate this second stage of parole revocation to a criminal prosecution in any sense. It is a narrow inquiry; the process should be flexible enough to consider evidence including letters, affidavits, and other material that would not be admissible in an adversary criminal trial.
We have no thought to create an inflexible structure for parole revocation procedures. The few basic requirements set out above, which are applicable to future revocations of parole, should not impose a great burden on any State’s parole system. Control over the required proceedings by the hearing officers can assure that delaying tactics and other abuses sometimes present in the traditional adversary trial situation do not occur. Obviously a parolee cannot relitigate issues determined against him in *479 other forums, as in the situation presented when the revocation is based on conviction of another crime.
Id. at 489-90,
The Court in Gagnon again expressed reluctance to allow the due process clause to convert probation revocation proceedings into full-fledged criminal trials. In declining to adopt a per se rule requiring appointed counsel for all indigent probationers in revocation hearings, Gagnon observed that attempts to mold revocation proceedings into a criminal trial might distort the probation process and its aims:
The role of the hearing body itself, aptly described in Morrissey as being “predictive and discretionary” as well as fact-finding, may become more akin to that of a judge at a trial, and less attuned to the rehabilitative needs of the individual probationer or parolee. In the greater self-consciousness of its quasi-judicial role, the hearing body may be less tolerant of marginal deviant behavior and feel more pressure to reincarcerate rather than to continue nonpunitive rehabilitation. Certainly, the decisionmaking process will be prolonged, and the financial cost to the State — for appointed counsel, counsel for the State, a longer record, and the possibility of judicial review — will not be insubstantial.
[D]ue process is not so rigid as to require that the significant interests in informality, flexibility, and economy must always be sacrificed.
Thus, the language and reasoning of
Gagnon
and
Morrissey
reveal that the Court did not contemplate a jury as one of the due process requirements in a probation revocation hearing. Indeed, the' administrative and rehabilitative considerations that the Court found persuasive as a countervailing state interest strongly militate against imposing a constitutional jury requirement. The presence of a jury would probably entail the need for some sort of formalized rules of evidence — precisely what
Gagnon
and
Morrissey
denied would be necessary.
Morgan points out that
Gagnon
and
Morrissey
only set forth the
“minimum
requirements of due process” and that
Gag-non
recognizes that in some circumstances more
(e.g.,
appointed counsel) may be required. Morgan urges us that his case is unique, and that it presents such special circumstances as would constitutionally necessitate the additional procedural safeguard of a jury. We have difficulty perceiving how Morgan’s case is unique. Morgan denies that he violated the conditions of his probation and contests the identification of him as the perpetrator of the robbery. Since the state bears the burden of proving facts sufficient to justify the revocation of probation, in many cases the pro
*480
bationer could dispute the alleged violation of his probation conditions and place the question of identity in issue.
See Morgan v. State,
There is, however, a procedural aspect of Morgan’s case that might suggest an apparent distinction from
Gagnon
and
Morrissey
and that merits some discussion. The statement of the state court proceedings contained in Morgan’s original pro se
2
brief might be read to suggest that the hearing at which Morgan’s probation was revoked also served as a sentencing hearing. The appellee quite properly points out that the record on appeal before us does not contain an account of the state court proceedings and, as such, Morgan’s reference is to matters outside of the immediate record. Yet, we can take cognizance of the fact that, as a matter of law, Florida criminal procedure does not permit the “[pronouncement and imposition of sentence of imprisonment . . . upon a defendant who is to be placed on probation,” but instead provides that pronouncement and imposition of sentence shall follow a hearing revoking probation. Fla.R.Crim.P. 3.790 (West 1975).
See State v. Griffith,
Nevertheless, even assuming that Morgan’s hearing was for the dual purposes of probation revocation and sentencing, this does not strengthen his constitutional claim
3
to a jury nor does it render the rationale of
Gagnon
and
Morrissey
any less applicable. The law is well-established that the accused is not entitled to a jury in every criminal proceeding.
E.g., McKeiver v. Pennsylvania,
We therefore hold, following
Gag-non
and
Morrissey,
that Morgan has no constitutional right to a jury determination of the identity issue in his probation revocation hearing. This decision is consistent with the conclusions of other circuits that have confronted this question.
See United States v. Segal,
III. EQUAL PROTECTION
Morgan also contends that even if he has no federal constitutional right to a jury at his revocation hearing, Florida, as a matter of state law, does confer such a right on some probationers, and the state’s failure to provide one in his case violates the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Our answer to this claim is two-fold; First, our examination of Florida law leads us to conclude, as urged by the appellee, that no such right to a jury exists in Florida for any probationers. Second, even if Florida does provide for juries in some cases, the state has established no classifications that violate the Fourteenth Amendment.
Morgan has cited to us in support of this claim a handful of Florida opinions which, at most, suggest in dictum that a trial judge might impanel an advisory jury where the probationer denies that he committed the act alleged to violate his probation. In
State ex rel. Roberts v. Cochran,
Thus, Morgan has cited us no case that held a probationer entitled to a jury at a revocation hearing nor any case where a jury was in fact provided. 5 Our review of Florida law leads us to conclude that no such right presently exists in Florida and that Morgan has not been treated in this regard differently than any other probationer. In the absence of any proof that another probationer has received or could receive a benefit which Morgan has been denied, we perceive no discrimination or violation of the equal protection clause. Moreover, to the extent that any probationer might ever be afforded a jury in a probation revocation hearing, this is at best a matter left on a case-by-case basis to the discretion of the court holding the hearing. Morgan has made no claim or showing that the state has drawn any impermissible lines or made any classifications whatsoever. Nor has Morgan claimed or shown that he was arbitrarily denied a jury which in other cases was provided to others similarly situated. Without proof, or even an argument, that the court in exercising this discretion has made impermissible, arbitrary, or irrational distinctions, we find that Morgan has *483 not been denied the equal protection of the laws. A contrary rule would call into question a vast array of decisions left to the discretion of the hearing tribunal (e.g., sentencing) and is without support in law. 6
IV. CONCLUSION
In sum, Florida did not violate any due process or equal protection right of the petitioner when it refused to impanel a jury at his probation revocation hearing. We therefore hereby affirm the district court’s dismissal of the petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The appellee does not challenge that Morgan exhausted his state remedies. We are uninformed as to whether Morgan has pursued or may still pursue state habeas relief.
See Doescher v. Estelle,
. Morgan proceeded pro se before the district court and continued in that capacity to file a notice of appeal, an original appellate brief, and a reply brief. When this case was scheduled for oral argument, the court appointed counsel for Morgan and ordered supplemental briefing by counsel.
. Counsel for Morgan expressly (in brief and at oral argument) did not raise any claim of a Sixth Amendment right to a jury. The Mempa case rested in part on the Sixth Amendment and thus any attempt to distinguish Gagnon on this ground would appear to be a Sixth Amendment argument (i.e., probation revocation alone is not a stage in a criminal prosecution and therefore the Sixth Amendment does not apply; but revocation plus sentencing is part of the criminal prosecution and therefore there is a Sixth Amendment right to a jury). We cannot perceive any difference between whether this argument is denominated a Sixth Amendment and due process claim or simply a due process claim. Regardless of how the argument is styled, the imposition of a sentence at a probation revocation hearing does not give a probationer any greater constitutional claim to a jury than he otherwise would have for that revocation hearing.
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. Our own research has uncovered a few Florida decisions, more than 70 years old, that in dictum have said that “ ‘[i]f the prisoner denies that he is the same person who was convicted, sentenced, and pardoned, he is
entitled
to have a jury summarily impaneled to try such issue; but if his identity is not denied, all the other facts and issues can be heard by the judge alone, unless the judge, solely in his discretion, shall see proper to submit the facts to a jury for determination.’ ”
Carraway v. State,
. The cases cited by Morgan for his equal protection claim are wholly inapposite.
Baxstrom v. Herold,
