OPINION
The Warden appeals from the district court’s issuance of a writ of habeas corpus in favor of Petitioner Kenneth A. Roberts. The district court issued the writ pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) after concluding that California misapplied its standard for determining Roberts’s eligibility for parole. We have jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253(a). In light of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Swarthout v. Cooke,
— U.S. -,
*1044 I.
California law vests the State Board of Prison Terms (Board) with authority to evaluate whether state prisoners, such as Roberts, are eligible for parole. In conducting this evaluation, the Board is required to “set a release date” for an inmate unless the Board finds that “consideration of the public safety requires a more lengthy period of incarceration.” Cal.Penal Code Ann. § 3041(b) (West 2010). When the Board determines that an inmate is ineligible for parole, that prisoner can seek judicial review by filing a petition for collateral relief in state court. Review of the Board’s decision, however, is “extremely deferential.”
In re Rosenkrantz,
Roberts appeared before the Board for consideration of his eligibility for parole in June 2006. He had been convicted of second-degree murder twenty years earlier and sentenced to a tеrm of life imprisonment with the possibility of parole. At the 2006 parole hearing, the Board permitted Roberts to speak on his own behalf and to respond to the evidence presented against him. Upon review of the еvidence in Roberts’s parole file, the Board denied parole due to concerns about the nature of Roberts’s offense, his subsequent minimization of the murder, and his reasons for surrendering to law enforcement.
Shortly after the Board issued its decision, Roberts filed a petition for collateral relief in state superior court. Relying on Rosenkrantz, Roberts asserted that the Board’s parole decision was not supported by sufficient evidence оf dangerousness. The superior court disagreed, concluding that the Board’s decision satisfied California’s “some evidence” standard because Roberts committed his crime in “a dispassionate and calculated mаnner” and for a “very trivial motive.” Roberts’s subsequent petitions to the court of appeal and state supreme court were summarily denied.
Roberts then filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Eastern District оf California. Following then-existing precedent, the district court issued the writ, holding that Roberts’s due process rights had been violated by the state court’s misapplication of California’s “some evidence” standard for parole determinations. Relying on a magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, the district court concluded that there was no nexus between the facts relied upon by the state superior court and the Board’s finding that Rоberts presented a current threat of dangerousness.
II.
We review a district court’s decision to issue a writ of habeas corpus de novo.
Lambert v. Blodgett,
Until now, and notwithstаnding AED-PA’s deferential standard of review, our circuit has permitted California prisoners
*1045
seeking parole to obtain a federal writ of habeas corpus based on a state court’s misapplication of California’s “some evidence” standard. We recently addressed this issue en banc in
Hayward v. Marshall,
Our decision in
Cooke v. Solis,
The Supreme Court, however, recently reversed our decision in
Cooke,
holding we did not apply the correct legal test for determining whether a state prisoner’s due process rights had been violated by a state court decision approving the Board’s parole determination. The Court instructed that the due process inquiry must be analyzed in two steps.
Cooke,
Turning to the first step,
Cooke
did not disturb our conclusion that California law creates a liberty interest in parole.
Id.
at 861-62. Nevertheless, because states “are under no duty to offer parole to their prisoners,” the Court explained that the existence of this
state
liberty interest does not give rise to a
federal
right “to be conditionally released before the expiration of a valid sentence.”
Id.
at 862,
citing Greenholtz,
Thus, when “a Stаte creates a liberty interest” in parole, the second step of the due process inquiry requires federal courts to evaluate whether the state provided “fair procedures” for the vindication of that intеrest.
Id.
Under this step, we look to federal law to determine whether a
*1046
state prisoner has been afforded the procedural protections required by the Constitution.
Id.
In the parole context, “the procedures required are minimal.”
Id.
Due process is satisfied as long as the state provides an inmate seeking parole with “an opportunity to be heard and ... a statement of the reasons why parole was denied.”
Id., citing Greenholtz,
III.
Based on
Cooke,
it is clear that California did not violate Rоberts’s due process rights when it denied his request for parole. At his parole hearing, the Board permitted Roberts to speak on his own behalf and to contest the evidence against him.
See
Cal.Penal Code Ann. §§ 3041, 3041.5. The Board further рrovided Roberts an explanation of its decision.
See id.
at § 3041.5(b)(2). This was sufficient to satisfy the Due Process Clause.
See Cooke,
It makes no difference that Roberts may have been subjected to a misapplication of California’s “some evidence” standard. A state’s misapplication of its own laws does not provide a basis for granting a federal writ of habeas corpus.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(a) (stating that a federal court may grant the writ only if a state prisoner’s custody violates the Constitution or other laws of the United States);
Cooke,
Finally, Roberts’s reliance on our decision in
Irons v. Carey,
Cooke
reaffirms the distinction between the process necessary when a prisoner’s good-time credits are revoked and the process due when a state denies a prisoner’s request for parole. Examining stаte law, the Court explained that California does “not purport to equate [its] parole system with good-time credits.”
Cooke,
IV.
The district court granted habeas relief without the benefit of the Court’s recent decision in
Cooke.
As we very recently stated,
“Cooke
was unеquivocal in holding that if an inmate seeking parole receives an opportunity to be heard, a notification of the reasons as to denial of parole, and access to their records in advance, that should be the beginning and the end of the inquiry into whether the inmate received due process.”
Pearson v. Muntz,
REVERSED.
