*271 MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plаintiff, an inmate at the Federal Penitentiary at McNeil Island, Washington, seeks a writ of habeas corpus directing the District of Columbia Board of Parole to withdraw а parole violation warrant lodged as a detainer against him at the penitentiary. ■ Plaintiff contends that the Board lacks jurisdiction to execute its warrаnt and that its decision to maintain the warrant as a detainer without affording plaintiff a parole revocation hearing violates plaintiff’s right to due process of law under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
The facts are not in dispute. On February 5, 1965, plaintiff was convicted of assault with a dangerous weapon by thе United States District Court for. the District of Columbia. He was paroled on June 10, 1970, and placed under the supervision of the D. C. Board of Parole. While on parole, plaintiff was convicted of possessing counterfeit government securities by the United States District Court for the Eastern District ■of Virginia, for which he is now serving a ten-yeаr sentence in the McNeil Island Penitentiary. The D. C. Board of Parole then issued a warrant, citing the Virginia conviction as evidence that plaintiff had violated his рarole, and lodged it as a detainer at McNeil Island on May 29, 1973. Plaintiff’s parole has not yet been revoked, nor has he received a hearing on such revocation. Instead, the Board has expressed its intention of waiting until plaintiff has served out his entire ten-year sentence before deciding whether or not to revoke his parole.
Under recent Supreme Court decisions, plaintiff may challenge the legality of a detainer lodged against him even though the lifting of that detainer would not thereby secure his immediate release from prison. Braden v. 30th Judicial Circuit Court of Kentucky,
Plaintiff’s claim that the defendant lost jurisdiction to revoke his parole when it surrendered him to Virginia аnd federal warrants is clearly without merit. It is firmly established that a parole board secures its jurisdiction over a parolee by issuing a violation warrant beforе the date of parole expiration, and that such jurisdiction is not lost simply because the board chooses to delay revoking parole until an intervеning criminal sentence has been fully served. Shelton v. United States Bd. of Parole,
Plaintiff’s due process claim, on the other hand, raises a substantial constitutional quеstion. It has long been recognized in this Circuit that “the issuance of a violator warrant triggers a process which, as a matter of fundamental fairness, must be pursued with rеasonable diligence and with reasonable dispatch.” Shelton v. United States Bd. of Parole, supra, at 574.
See also
Hyser v. Reed,
In 1967, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit exempted from this requirement of a prompt revocation hеaring all warrants citing a criminal conviction as the
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reason for revocation, declaring that no hearing at all is required in such cases because the fact of violation has already-been established by a court. Shelton v. United States Bd. of Parole,
supra,
The D. C. Board of Parole, like the United States Parole Board under discussion in
Shelton,
retains full discretion to place a parolee back on the street even though he has clearly violated the conditions of his parole. See D.C. Code § 24-206; 18 U.S.C. § 4207. The Board must consider mitigating circumstances and rehabilitative potential as well as the existence of parole violаtions before determining that reincarceration is appropriate.
Cf.
United States ex rel. Hitchcock v. Kenton,
In light of these considerations, the Court holds that plaintiff had a right to a prompt parole revocation hearing on the contested warrant.
Shel~ ton
nо longer requires a contrary result, because it has been effectively overruled by the Supreme Court’s decision in Morrissey v. Brewer,
Because more than five months have passed since the contested detainer was lodged at McNeil Island, it is now too late for defendant to cure its error by affording plaintiff a revocation hearing. The Federal Courts have indicated that an unjustified delay
*
of more than
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three months in providing a parole revocation hearing requires the issuanсe of a writ of habeas corpus releasing the parolee from the Parole Board’s custody. See cases cited in Marchand v. Director, U. S. Probation Office,
Defendant therefore is directed to cancel its warrant for parole violation against plaintiff and to direct the authorities at the McNeil Island Federal Penitentiary to withdraw that warrant from plaintiff’s files.
So ordered.
Notes
The mere fact that plaintiff is incarcerated far from the District of Columbia would not excusе such a delay even if he were under state authority,
see
Braden v. 30th Judicial
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Circuit Court of Kentucky,
supra,
