Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge MIKVA.
Appellant Roosevelt Brandon claims that the delay of the District of Columbia Board of Parole (the Board) in granting his application for reparole violated his due process and equal protection rights. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court granted appellees’ motion and dismissed Brandon’s complaint. The court held that there was no basis for Brandon’s due process claims because he had no liberty interest in reparóle. The court further held that the Board had not violated Brandon’s constitutional right to equal protection of the law. We affirm.
I. Background
In 1966, Brandon pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to a term of ten to thirty years. He was paroled in April of 1975. On November 11, 1975, while on parole, Brandon was arrested and charged with armed rape. As a result, the Board revoked Brandon’s parole. Shortly thereafter, appellant pleaded guilty to the armed rape charge and received another sentence of ten to thirty years, to be served consecutively to his prior murder sentence. Brandon thus could not begin serving his second term until he had either served out his time or been reparoled on the first conviction.
Brandon came before the Board five times before he was finally granted repa-róle on his murder conviction; he was paroled not to the community but to begin serving his second sentence. The Board continued Brandon’s first scheduled parole hearing in November of 1976 because the presentence report on his second conviction was not available; then, in an order issued on January 24, 1977, the Board denied Brandon’s reparole application without a statement of reasons. In October of 1977, Brandon again appeared before the Board, which denied reparole because of Brandon’s failure to involve himself fully in institutional academic and vocational programs. The Board requested the Forensic Psychiatry Office to conduct a psychiatric evaluation of Brandon prior to his next parole rehearing. No forensic psychiatry evaluation was performed between this request and Brandon’s next reparole hearing in September of 1978. In denying appellant reparole for a third time, the Board explained that Brandon still refused to become involved in institutional programs. In February 1979, Brandon once again appeared before the Board. At this, Brandon’s fourth parole hearing, the Board expressed concern about appellant’s continued failure to participate in academic programs and vocational training. It also found that it lacked sufficient psychiatric information and therefore continued the hearing pending completion of the evaluation it had requested a year and a half earlier. In April of 1979, a physician from the Forensic Psychiatry Office examined Brandon, found him to be seriously disturbed, and recommended that reparóle be denied and that appellant be admitted to a clinic. Acting on this recommendation, the Board denied reparole for the fourth time in May. Brandon began psychotherapy in August of 1979 and was granted reparole ten months later in February of 1980, 51 months after his parole had been revoked.
During the period in question, the unwritten policy of the Board was to request the Forensic Psychiatry Office to evaluate persons convicted of violent crimes before making a decision to grant parole to such inmates. In Brandon’s case, the Board did not request a psychiatric evaluation until October of 1977, and the evaluation was not completed until April of 1979, 38 *646 months after Brandon's parole had been revoked. Throughout this same period, the Board’s procedural regulations provided that the Board would ordinarily afford re-paróle hearings to parole violators, like Brandon, who had more than five years remaining to be served, within twelve months of their parole revocation. Brandon’s first reparole hearing was held approximately twelve months after the revocation of his parole on his first conviction.
After the Board finally granted his application for reparole, Brandon filed a complaint pro se in the district court, challenging the Board’s delay. Brandon alleged that the failure to reparole him before 1980 departed from the Board’s rules, regulations, and policies. He asserted that the Board would have reparoled the average parole violator to a consecutive sentence within twenty-four months of his parole revocation, whereas he had been subjected to a four-year wait. He sought amendment of his Certificate of Reparole to reflect reparole after twenty-four months. Such an amendment would have shortened the time he served for murder by two years and three months and credited that time against the service of his armed rape sentence. Brandon also sought punitive and compensatory damages against the Board members.
The district court dismissed the complaint sua sponte, and this court reversed.
See Brandon v. District of Columbia Board of Parole,
On remand, the district court appointed counsel who subsequently filed an amended complaint and a petition for habeas corpus. In his amended complaint and petition, Brandon alleged that the Board had violated his due process and equal protection rights under the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution. Appellant further contended that the actions of the Board violated 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and, prior to the statute’s application to the District of Columbia, the principles set forth in
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
Upon consideration of the record, and in reliance on the parties’ stipulation of facts, the district court granted the Board's motion for summary judgment and denied Brandon’s cross-motion.
See Brandon v. District of Columbia Board of Parole,
II. DISCUSSION
A. Brandon’s Due Process Claim
Not all interests are protected by the Due Process Clause’s prohibition on governmental deprivation of an individual’s life, liberty, or property without due process of law. To ascertain whether governmental action affecting an individual’s interest is violative of this provision, the court must first inquire whether the nature of'the interest is within the contemplation of the Constitution’s “liberty or property” language.
See Morrissey v. Brewer,
Brandon expressly states that he does not challenge the district court’s holding that District of Columbia law and the Board’s regulations, policies, and practices do not create a protected liberty interest in parole or reparole release; that is, Brandon does not claim to have a substantive interest in reparole entitled to due process protection. Instead, Brandon maintains that he has a constitutionally protected interest in having the Board adhere to its own procedures for parole consideration. Brandon claims that District of Columbia law creates a protectible liberty interest in a meaningful annual reparole hearing. For a hearing to be meaningful, according to Brandon, there must exist the possibility that reparóle can be granted. Brandon contends that, pursuant to Board practice and policy, the Board would not consider a grant of reparole to an inmate in his record of violent crimes without having first received a forensic psychiatric report. Accordingly, he asserts that the Board’s 38-month delay in obtaining the necessary evaluation deprived him of his right to a meaningful parole hearing during that period and therefore violated his right to due process.
It is unclear whether Brandon articulated this theory below. To the extent the district court can be understood to have responded to it, the court firmly rejected the notion that the parole-determination procedures themselves created a protecti-
*648
ble liberty interest.
See Brandon,
Process only assumes significance in a context. The notion that naked process itself takes on constitutional dimensions has most troublesome implications. Courts have explicitly and repeatedly rejected the proposition that an individual has an, interest in a state-created procedural device, such as a hearing, that is entitled to constitutional due process protection. The Supreme Court itself has recognized that “an expectation of receiving process is not, without more, a liberty interest protected by the Due Process Clause.”
Olim v. Wakinekona,
“[a] liberty interest is of course a substantive interest of an individual; it cannot be the right to demand needless formality.” Process is not an end in itself. Its constitutional purpose is to protect a substantive interest to which the individual has a legitimate claim of entitlement— The State may choose to require procedures for reasons other than protection against deprivation of substantive rights, of course, but in making that choice the State does not create an independent substantive right.
Id.
at 450-51 (quoting
Shango,
The Due Process Clause ensures that the government does not arbitrarily deprive an individual of liberty for requiring that any deprivation be effected pursuant to constitutionally adequate procedures. An essential principle of due process is that a deprivation of liberty “be preceded by notice and opportunity for hearing appropriate to the nature of the case.”
Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
In fact, Brandon asks us to abandon altogether the standard due process analy
*649
sis. Instead of identifying the substantive interest entitled to constitutional protection and then determining what process is due before an individual can be deprived of that interest,
see Morrissey,
Appellant protests that our holding today offends the
pre-Greenholtz
decision of this court in
Childs v. United States Parole Board,
in which we found that procedural due process protections apply to the parole release decision.
See Childs,
In sum, we hold that the procedures adopted by the state to guide its parole release determinations are not themselves liberty interests entitled to constitutional due process protection. Brandon does not have a constitutionally protected interest in having the Board adhere to its procedural requirements. Thus, even if the Board failed to comply with its regulations with regard to the conduct of his reparole hearings, as Brandon alleges, that failure did not violate Brandon’s federal constitutional right to due process of law. Such state procedural requirements must be enforced in state courts under state law.
See Boothe v. Hammock,
Having reached this conclusion, we note again that Brandon has not asked this court to review the district court’s determination that the District of Columbia’s parole system does not create a protectible liberty interest in parole release or repa-róle. Nor have we undertaken that task. Accordingly, our decision today should not be understood as expressing an opinion on the merits of that aspect of the district *650 court’s decision. We turn next to the other claim that Brandon premises on the Board’s alleged failure to adhere to its own procedures and policies — the violation of the equal protection clause of the Fifth Amendment.
B. Brandon’s Equal Protection Claim
The equal protection principles embodied in the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment essentially direct “that all persons similarly situated should be treated alike.”
Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center, Inc.,
On appeal, Brandon concedes that his criminal record could have provided a rational basis for delaying his reparole when (according to Brandon) other prisoners in his circumstances would have been granted reparole within twenty-four months of parole revocation, and admits that the Board’s reasons furthered legitimate governmental interests. Appellant does not challenge that portion of the district court’s decision. Rather, Brandon claims that the district court failed to address his claim that he was deprived of equal protection because the Board denied him a meaningful opportunity for reparole consideration for 38 months by failing to obtain the forensic psychiatric evaluation, in violation of the Board’s own regulations and policy. Brandon alleges that the Board purposefully singled him out for harsher treatment than that accorded to similarly situated prisoners. Brandon contends that the nature of his criminal record could not provide a rational basis for depriving him of the timely, meaningful reparole consideration provided to other inmates.
We need not reach the question of whether the Board’s action was rationally related to a legitimate governmental purpose because Brandon has failed to make the necessary predicate showings. The success of Brandon’s equal protection claim hinges first on his ability to establish that he was treated differently than other prisoners in his circumstances with regard to the Board’s failure to afford meaningful reparole consideration because of its delay in obtaining a forensic psychiatric evaluation.
See Brandon,
Conclusion
The essence of appellant’s complaint is that the District of Columbia Board of Parole failed to follow its regulations and policies in considering his application for reparole. Although a municipality’s adherence to its own procedural rules is certainly desirable, every deviation from such procedures cannot be viewed as a federal constitutional violation. Brandon’s claims alleged, at most, a violation of District of Columbia law. We reject appellant’s attempts to transform his state law claim into a federal court action by dressing it in the verbiage of due process and equal protection. Accordingly, the district court’s decision is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
