Claiming that he was denied a speedy revocation hearing and sentence under 18 U.S.C. § 4208(a)(2), Wickham appeals a judgment remanding him to custody for the duration of his original sentence.
He presents two principal issues: (1) the correctness of his revocation proceedings; and (2) the legality of the sentence imposed upon the revocation of his probation. Neither point justifies reversal.
Following his conviction upon a guilty plea, Wickham had been sentenced on January 27, 1975, to a term of ten years with parole at the discretion of the parole commission pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 4208(a)(2). 1 This section of the code was then understood as making prisoners eligible for early parole. 2
On March 28, 1975, in response to a Rule 35 motion, the sentencing court suspended the balance of all but six months of the ten-year sentence and placed Wickham on probation for five years. Whether by design or oversight, the (a)(2) provision was omitted from the amended order. Because the order provided for virtually immediate probation, Wickham did not complain of the omission of the (a)(2) reference, and indeed it is difficult to see that it had any place in the order.
During the probation period, on December 8, 1976, the court issued a warrant for Wickham’s arrest for absconding from supervision in California. The F.B.I. eventually arrested Wickham in Idaho. In January of 1978, when Wickham was arrested, there was also outstanding against him an Idaho state warrant for forgery. The arresting agents took Wickham to an Idaho county jail. State officers there told him of the forgery charge, and booked him for forgery. The federal warrant was lodged as a detainer. He remained in state custody for almost six months.
On June 8,1978, Wickham pleaded guilty to the Idaho forgery charge. He was then released into federal custody. After an identity hearing on June 16, Wickham was returned to the central district of California where a probation revocation hearing was commenced on July 31,1978. On August 1, 1978, the Idaho forgery conviction was added as another ground for revoking his probation. On August 14, 1978, Wickham moved to dismiss the revocation proceedings on the ground that his right to a speedy revocation hearing had been violated. The motion was denied, and on August 15,1978, the sentencing court ordered revocation of probation and the execution of the prior suspended sentence. This order, again, carried no mention of the (a)(2) provision.
Wickham maintains that the federal warrant was executed in January 1978 when he was arrested by federal agents for violating probation, even though the federal warrant was subsequently lodged as a detainer. He then argues that a revocation hearing seven months after his arrest does not comport with due process under
Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
*1309 Both parties agree that execution of the federal warrant is the event from which time for a probation revocation hearing is calculated. They disagree about the effect of the events in this case. Wickham contends that because he was apprehended by federal agents acting pursuant to the federal warrant, he was effectively in federal custody from that time forward. He then argues that he was entitled to speedy processing of his probation revocation regardless of the legitimate demands of the state in which he faced charges for new crimes.
The government, on the other hand, ignores the effect of Wickham’s January loss of liberty at the hands of federal agents acting on the federal warrant. Relying on
Moody v. Daggett,
If Wickham’s arrest had initially been made on the state forgery charge, with the federal warrant lodged as a detainer, the federal warrant would not then have been executed. Focusing upon substance rather than form, the real issue is not which warrant was “executed” first, but whether the federal government did anything to deny Wickham the due process requirements of
Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
The Supreme Court in
Morrissey
has required that the revocation hearing “be tendered within a reasonable time after the parolee is taken into custody.”
4
In his claim of unreasonable delay, Wick-ham emphasizes the fact that the alleged probation violation underlying the warrant was not his criminal conduct while on release, but violation of a noncriminal condition of probation. However, in
Johnson v. Chappell,
Wickham’s primary claim of prejudice
7
is this: Between the time of his arrest in Idaho and his revocation hearing in California, Wickham was convicted of a state felony. This conviction, he says, greatly increased the likelihood that a revocation would result in a substantial prison sentence. No doubt this is true, but we have found no case which recognizes this to be the type of prejudice on which to attack revocation proceedings. Ordinarily, to challenge a revocation proceeding, the delay must have been caused by government action that was not the result of the probationer’s own criminal conduct. In addition, the delay must have prejudicially affected the probationer’s ability to contest revocation. Prejudice might result from delays causing probationers difficulty in contesting the alleged facts constituting a violation of their release conditions; hardship in finding and presenting favorable witnesses; or inability to produce evidence of mitigating circumstances which might result in continued probation despite the violation.
See, e. g. United States v. Companion,
Wickham had every opportunity to challenge the charged forgery violation in the Idaho proceedings and to present mitigating evidence, if any existed, in the probation hearing on the issue of revocation. His argument of prejudice ultimately rests on his misconception that his noncriminal conduct in absconding fixed the limits of charges that could be considered as violations of probation. In fact, federal probation officers could have used his Idaho forgery conduct as a probation violation, and could have undertaken to prove that violation by substantial evidence without waiting for his actual state-court conviction for forgery.
United States v. Rilliet,
In sum, the seven month period between Wickham’s arrest for violating probation and his revocation hearing was not an unreasonable delay under the circumstances presented here. And, even if by some curious line of reasoning the delay could be said to have been unreasonable, the delay in this case was not prejudicial.
In addition to the foregoing arguments, Wickham has several others. First, he alleges a denial of his statutory right to a hearing “as speedily as possible”. 18 U.S.C. § 3653. Balancing the length of the delay he suffered, for which there is no limit that is unreasonable per se, against the factors identified in
United States v. Companion,
Wickham next complains about the modification made to his sentence on his Rule 35 motion in 1975. His original ten-year sentence was imposed, as noted, under the provision making him eligible for early parole, 18 U.S.C. § 4208(a)(2). When the judge, at Wickham’s request, suspended all but six months of his sentence (plus probation for five years), the (a)(2) provision bécame redundant and was deleted. Now that his probation has been revoked and the ten-year prison term ordered executed, he argues that the deletion of the (a)(2) provision increased his sentence in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Wickham relies on two cases in support of this contention. Both held that the parole board must give an (a)(2) prisoner meaningful parole consideration prior to or at the expiration of one third of the prisoner’s sentence.
Garafola v. Benson,
However, since the time of the sentences challenged in those cases, the parole commission has been operating under new guidelines. They were initially issued in 1973 (currently codified at 28 C.F.R. § 2.20), and purport to replace subjective determinations with objective ones.
Edwards v. United States,
“Under the Parole Commission and Reorganization Act, the scheduling of parole hearings in ‘(b)(2) cases is now defined by statute, 18 U.S.C. §§ 4208(a) and (h).’ Under this statutory scheme, both (b)(2) prisoners and those with statutory minimum periods of incarceration receive the same treatment in being considered for parole. Accordingly, Petrone’s reliance upon Grasso v. Norton,520 F.2d 27 (2d Cir. 1975) and Garafola v. Benson,505 F.2d 1212 (7th Cir. 1974), antedating the new statute, is misplaced.”603 F.2d at 780 .
Although the question before the Supreme Court in
United States v. Addonizio,
“The decision as to when a lawfully sentenced defendant shall actually be released has been committed by Congress * * * to the discretion of the Parole Commission. Whether wisely or not, Congress has decided that the Commission is in the best position, to determine when release is appropriate, and in doing so, to moderate the disparities in the sentencing practices of individual judges. The authority of sentencing judges to select precise release dates is, by contrast, narrowly limited: the judge may select an early parole eligibility date, but that guarantees only that the defendant will be considered at that time by the Parole Commission. * * * ” (Footnotes omitted.)442 U.S. at 188 ,99 S.Ct. at 2242 .
The Court’s dictum about guaranteed consideration did not become a holding in Petrone v. Kaslow, supra, where we remained consistent with the overall emphasis in United States v. Addonizio that the parole decision remains firmly in the hands of the Commission. As the Court noted:
“The import of this statutory scheme is clear: the judge has no enforcible expectations with respect to the actual release of a sentenced defendant short of his statutory term. The judge may well have expectations as to when release is likely. But the actual decision is not his to make, either at the time of sentencing or later if his expectations are not met. *1313 To require the Parole Commission to act in accordance with judicial expectations, and to use collateral attack as a mechanism for ensuring that these expectations are carried out, would substantially undermine the congressional decision to entrust release determinations to the Commission and not the courts.”442 U.S. at 190 ,99 S.Ct. at 2242, 2243 .
It can hardly be maintained, then, that Wickham’s amended sentence was heavier than his original, given the little-if-any difference an (a)(2) designation now has for prisoners sentenced since 1973. 10
Wickham’s final argument is a farfetched attack on his modified sentence. Relying on
United States v. Ellenbogen,
Even if the probation order constituted a defective sentence because it was not entered before Wickham started to serve his original sentence (18 U.S.C. § 3651), but instead upon a timely Rule 35 motion,
11
it was not void.
United States v. Kenyon,
Affirmed.
Notes
. In 1976, this section was recodified substantially intact at 18 U.S.C. § 4205(b)(2).
. In most cases, prisoners sentenced to a “straight” sentence under 18 U.S.C. § 4202 [now § 4205(a)] did not become eligible for parole until they had served one-third of their custodial term. A sentence containing a § 4208(a)(2) clause, on the other hand, made them eligible for parole “at such time as the board of parole [now “the Commission”] may determine.” A third sentencing alternative is available: the sentencing court designates a specific minimum term not more than one-third the maximum sentence set by the court, at which point the prisoner will be eligible for parole. § 4208(a)(1) [now § 4205(b)(1)],
. There are cases holding that a probation or parole violator warrant is not executed and
Morrissey-Gagnon
protections
(Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
. Prior to the revocation of his probation, Wickham did not specifically attack the lack of a preliminary, informal, and immediate hearing on whether there was probable cause to believe he had violated the condition of probation which formed the basis of the warrant. (Discovery in Idaho of a person supposedly under supervision in California constituted probable cause to believe that he had absconded.) Even if Wickham had raised the failure to grant him a preliminary hearing, the point has no relation to his present incarceration which stems solely from the revocation decision.
United States v. Companion,
. There is nothing in the record from which to suppose that Wickham would have been released were it not for the federal detainer.
See Moody v. Daggett,
. The question addressed in
Boswell
was whether the parole board could defer proceeding on a violator warrant filed as a detainer pending criminal proceedings and consequent service of sentence on an unrelated intervening charge which had not served as the basis for the violator warrant.
Moody
does not clearly answer this question affirmatively because in that case the intervening criminal conduct did constitute the charged violations.
“ * * * If the [Parole] Board intended to pursue the charge that the parole board’s order had been violated by failure to report, there is at least an issue whether it was reasonable to delay this determination for two and a half years merely because the parolee was In confinement on an unrelated Dyer Act charge.”128 U.S.App.D.C. at 318 ,388 F.2d at 573-74 .
The court’s analysis in Boswell applies whether the violator warrant was actually executed or simply lodged as a detainer.
. Appellant does not claim prejudice from a lack of timely notice that his forgery conviction would be added as a ground for revocation. It is not clear in the present case if and when, prior to formal amendment of the charged probation violation which occurred nearly simultaneously with the revocation hearing itself, Wickham was notified that his Idaho forgery conviction would be added as a ground for revocation. However, he could hardly claim surprise upon learning that his conduct in Idaho would be considered relevant when the sentencing court reviewed his behavior on probation. Indeed, he wrote to the district court in Pocatello, Idaho, on April 24, 1978: “I am also aware that a new criminal charge cannot be charged as a violation except upon conviction.”
. “The time ranges specified by the guidelines are established specifically for cases with good institutional adjustment and program progress.” 28 C.F.R. § 2.20(b). Thus, institu *1312 tional adjustment recently has been a factor only when it is poor, leading to release later than that projected.
As a result of recommendations that some incentive for good institutional behavior be restored to the guidelines, effective November 1, 1979, the commission may reduce custodial time upon a finding of “superior program achievement.” See 44 Federal Register No. 186, pp. 55002, 55003.
. See
also, Izsak v. Sigler,
.
Compare Geraghty v. United States Parole Commission,
. After August 1, 1979, the action taken in this case would have conformed, to amended Rule 35(b): “Changing a sentence from a sentence of incarceration to a grant of probation shall constitute a permissible reduction of sentence under this subdivision.”
See also United States v. Golphin,
