Opinion Per Curiam.
Appellees are seven federal prisoners who were convicted on charges of criminal contempt in the Federal District Court for the Eastern District of New York. They are currently serving sentences ranging from eighteen months to three years in various federal penal institutions around the country. Appellees' convictions grew *415 out of their refusal to testify before a grand jury investigating the activities of a Puerto Rican independence group.
Appellees brought habeas corpus petitions under 28 U.S.C. § 2241 (1982) in the District Court for the District of Columbia seeking release because of allegedly illegal actions of the United States Parole Commission. Appellees also sought mandamus relief, asking the District Court to order the Commission to reevaluate their cases. The District Court granted the appellees’ request for bail pending resolution of the merits of the dispute. The government appealed the bail order. Because the District Court has no jurisdiction to entertain the appellees’ habeas corpus petitions, we reverse.
I. Background
The Parole Commission generally follows a set of guidelines in determining prisoners’ presumptive parole eligibility dates. See 28 C.P.R. § 2.20 (1985). The guidelines rate the severity of crimes from severity level one, for minor crimes, to severity level eight for very serious crimes. The guidelines also provide for a “salient factor score,” which predicts the potential risk of parole violation by each prisoner. The guidelines do not explicitly treat the crime of criminal contempt, but the Commission has likened it to the crime of accessory after the fact. Notes and Procedures to 618(a), United States Parole Commission, Rules and Procedures Manual (1984) (providing for analogy to accessory after the fact). In this case, the Commission also determined that the crime that appellants were accessories to was the most serious crime investigated by the grand jury — murder. The Parole Commission thus classified the appellees’ crimes as severity level six, among the most serious offenses. This classification obviated any possibility of parole.
The District Court, however, found that by analogizing contempt to accessory after the fact, the Commission had acted arbitrarily and capriciously. Moreover, the court ruled that the Commission had invalidly promulgated this provision.
Guerra v. Meese,
The appellees then challenged the decision of the Parole Commission to ignore its guidelines. Moreover, pending a decision on the merits of their challenge to the Parole Commission’s actions, the appellees asked to be released from their respective correctional facilities. The District Court found that the appellees had demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits and that the appellees presented little risk of flight. The appellees were thus released on bail pending a decision on the legality of the Commission’s actions. Guerra v. Meese, No. 85-1510 (D.D.C. Sept. 3, 1985), J.A. at 88. In this appeal, the government challenges only the District Court’s bail decision. Pending argument on the merits of the bail decision, this court granted a stay. Guerra v. Meese, No. 85-5912 (D.C. Cir. Sept. 23, 1985). Appellees thus remain incarcerated.
II. Habeas Corpus Jurisdiction
A district court may not entertain a habeas corpus action unless it has personal jurisdiction over the custodian of the prisoner.
Braden v. 30th Judicial Circuit Court,
It is clear that the Parole Commission is responsible for the appellees’ continued detention. Were the Commission to decide to change the prisoners’ parole eligibility dates today, they might be freed. But this power does not make the Commission the prisoners’ custodian in the sense of the habeas corpus statute. Appellees argue that because the Commission has the power to release them, the Commission is their custodian. But their argument extends to any person or entity possessing some sort of power to release them. Under appellees’ theory, the Attorney General of the United States could be considered the custodian of every prisoner in federal custody because he supervises the Federal Bureau of Prisons.
See
18 U.S.C. § 4041 (1982). We have specifically rejected this interpretation.
Sanders v. Bennett,
In 28 U.S.C. § 2243 (1982), Congress required the federal courts to direct the writ of habeas corpus “to the person having custody of the person detained.” Moreover, unless the writ presents only issues of law, “the person to whom the writ is directed shall be required to produce at the hearing the body of the person detained.”
Id.
These provisions indicate that the custodian is the person having a day-to-day control over the prisoner. That person is the only one who can directly produce “the body” of the petitioner. In
Billiteri v. United States Bd. of Parole,
[I]t would stretch the meaning of the term beyond the limits thus far established by the Supreme Court to characterize the Parole Board as the “custodian” of a prisoner who is under the control of a warden and confined in a prison, and who is seeking, in a habeas corpus action, to be released from precisely that form of confinement. At that point the prisoner’s relationship with the Parole Board is based solely on the fact that it is the decisionmaking body which may, in its discretion, authorize a prisoner’s release on parole.
We agree and hold that, for purposes of challenging a Parole Commission action on the sentence a prisoner is currently serving in a federal penal facility, the warden of that facility is the prisoner’s custodian within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. §§ 2241-2243 (1982).
See Ex parte Endo,
Nothing in
Braden v. 30th Judicial Circuit Court,
The
Braden
decision in no way stands for the proposition that the Parole Commission is the “custodian” of a prisoner currently incarcerated in a federal penal institution or that federal courts may entertain a habeas corpus petition when the custodian is outside their territorial jurisdiction. When the appellees are paroled, if ever, the Parole Commission might then be considered their custodian, within the meaning of the habeas corpus statute.
See Jones v. Cunningham,
The
Braden
Court concluded that “[r]ead literally, the language of § 2241(a) requires nothing more than that the court issuing the writ have jurisdiction over the custodian.”
Braden,
III. Interim Release on Bail
Since the District Court cannot entertain a habeas action, it most assuredly cannot bail the appellees out of jail. Bail is available as interim relief only when the court would ultimately have power to release the prisoners if they were successful on the merits. In
Baker v. Sard,
It is clear that appellees in this action cannot merely allege that because their confinement is illegal they must be released. Litigation concerning the fact or duration of confinement
must
be brought via a habeas corpus action.
Preiser v. Rodriguez,
Even if the appellees’ complaint could be viewed as a form of action other than a petition for habeas corpus, an issue we do not reach,
cf. In re Chatman-Bey,
within a fixed period of time.”
Id.
If the Commission’s actions in this case are invalidated, release would not inexorably follow. The Commission could conceivably promulgate a new policy for determining severity factors for unlisted crimes, promulgate a valid guideline for criminal contempt, or completely disregard its guidelines in deciding the appellees’ cases. 18 U.S.C. § 4206(c) (1982). The District Court would still be limited to ordering the Parole Commission to follow the court’s interpretation of the law. The court would have no power to hold its own parole hearing.
Billiteri,
* * sic
The government urges this court to rule that an attack on actions of the Parole Commission is necessarily an attack challenging the fact or duration of confinement and thus only maintainable by habeas corpus under
Preiser v. Rodriguez,
The District Court’s bail order, however, stands on a different footing. This is the only aspect of the case the government challenged in its Notice of Appeal. J.A. at 101. The bail decision falls within the collateral order doctrine and is thus immediately reviewable.
See Iuteri v. Nardoza,
It is so ordered.
Notes
.
Demjanjuk v. Meese,
. We need not decide under what circumstances, if any, the District Court could grant bail as interim relief if it had habeas corpus jurisdiction. The question presented in this case is whether the court can grant bail absent habeas jurisdiction.
