Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA _________________________________________
)
CURTIS L. WATSON, )
)
Plaintiff, )
) v. ) Civil Action No. 11-2044 (JDB) )
UNITED STATES PAROLE COMMISSION, )
)
Defendant. )
_________________________________________ )
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter is before the Court on defendant’s motion to dismiss. For the reasons discussed below, the motion will be granted. [1]
I. BACKGROUND
In 1978, in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia, plaintiff was sentenced to an aggregate term of 30 years to life imprisonment. [2] Compl. at 1. While in the District of *2 Columbia’s custody and serving his sentence at its Lorton Reformatory, on August 30, 1988, plaintiff “walked away from a Work Release program and . . . remained on escape status until [October 30, 1995] when he was arrested in Arizona.” Mem. of P. & A. in Supp. of Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss (“Dеf.’s Mem.”), Ex. E (Hearing Summary dated October 21, 2011) at 3. Plaintiff was convicted of escape and on March 15, 1996, he was sentenced to a 12-month term of imprisonment pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 751 to be served consecutively to the Superior Court sentence. Cоmpl., Ex. (Order, United States v. Watson , No. 1:88cr201 (E.D. Va. Dec. 28, 2007)) at 1.
Plaintiff’s first parole hearing took place in 2004. Compl. at 3. As of November 8, 2004, he had been incarcerated for 316 months. id. , Ex. (Notice of Action dated November 16, 2004) at 1. The United States Parole Commission (“Commission”) denied parolе, see id. , noting that an upward departure from the applicable parole guidelines was “warranted because . . . [plaintiff had] a 12-month consecutive term to follow [his] current sentence.” Id. After a reconsideration hearing in Octоber 2007, plaintiff ostensibly had been granted “[p]arole effective December 9, 2007 after service of 353 months to the consecutive 12 month term.” Id. , Ex. (Notice of Action dated November 20, 2007) at 1. The Commission, however, voided its decision beсause “[t]he Bureau of Prisons . . . determined that [plaintiff was] not eligible for consolidate this indictment with the earlier indictment covering the 1976 assaults. Following a jury trial, [plaintiff] was convicted on counts contained in both indictments, viz., first-degree murder whilе armed . . . , carrying a pistol without a license . . ., two counts of first-degree burglary while armed . . . , assault with a dangerous weapon . . . , and two counts of assault with intent to kill while armed . . . . Following the denial of his motion for a new trial, [plaintiff] was sentenсed to an aggregate term of thirty years to life imprisonment.
Watson v. United States
,
parole until [April] 27, 2012.” [3] Id. , Ex. (Notice of Action dated December 18, 2007) at 1. A hearing was to be scheduled within nine months of petitioner’s new parole eligibility date. Id.
Plaintiff’s next parole hearing ocсurred on October 21, 2011. Def.’s Mem., Ex. E (Hearing Summary dated October 21, 2011) at 1. According to the Commission, as of October 30, 2011, plaintiff had been incarcerated for only 314 months. See Compl., Ex. (Notice of Action dated November 30, 2011) at 1. The Commission again denied parole, and continued the matter for another three years, to October 2014. Id.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Plaintiff’s Claims It is no easy task to decipher the claims plaintiff presents. The Court begins with plaintiff’s assertion that he has “been resentenced by the whims of a roguе agency.” Compl. at 4. The introductory statement to his complaint reads:
PETITONER [sic] CHALLENGES AS UNCONSTITUTIONAL THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNITED STATES PAROLE COMMISSION TO GRANT OR DENY PAROLE TO THIS OLD LAW D.C. PRISONER WHEN THE D.C. SENTENCE HAS BEEN SERVED IN ITS ENTIRETY.
Id. at 1 (emphasis in original). The Court interprets this statement as a challenge to the Commission’s authority to deny him parole and as a claim that he has servеd his entire Superior Court-imposed aggregate sentence. He thus contends, apparently, that his continued custody is unlawful and presumably he demands his immediate release.
In addition, plaintiff makes a passing reference, see Compl. at 3, to Sellmon v. Reilly , 551 F. Supp. 2d 66 (D.D.C. 2008), presumably for the purpose of alleging “that [thе Commission] retroactively applied its own parole guidelines and practices so as to significantly increase the risk that [he] would serve [a] longer term [ ] of incarceration,” id. at 68. Plaintiff further alleges that Sellmon in effect “voided all parole hearings from 2000 to 2008,” and he demands a new parole hearing on this basis. Compl. at 3 (emphasis in original). He also appears to argue that his 2011 parole hearing was invalid not only because it was deemed an initial hearing (notwithstanding prior parole hearings in 2004 and 2007), but also because the Commission applied the wrong parole regulations to his case. See id. at 3-4. Plaintiff demands “injunctive relief to stop this conduct.” Id. at 4.
B. The Commission Is Authorized to Deny Plaintiff Parole
According to plaintiff, the Commission lacks the authority to deny him pаrole, see Compl. at 1, and in effect it has “resentenced” him, id. at 4. Plaintiff is mistaken.
It is well settled that the Commission “has had jurisdiction over parole matters of District
of Columbia felons since August 1998.”
Ray v. U.S. Parole Comm’n
, No. 11-2127, 2012 WL
252238, at *2 (D.D.C. Jan. 26, 2012) (citations omitted);
see Franklin v. District of Columbia,
C. The Relief Plaintiff Demands Sounds in Habeas
Plaintiff challenges the calculation of his sentence and claims to have served his Superior Court sentence in full. Compl. at 1-2; see also “Plaintiff[’s] . . . Formal Request to be Transferred to the Jurisdiction of this Court for Consideration of Release Having Served the D.C. and Federal Sentences” [Dkt. #8] at 1-2.
Where, as here, a prisoner “challeng[es] the very fact or duration of his physical
imprisonment, and the relief he seeks is a determination that he is entitled to immediate release
or a speedier release from that imprisonment, his sole federal remedy is a writ of habeas corpus.”
Preiser v. Rodriguez
,
Furthermore, habeas actions are subject to jurisdictional and statutory limitations.
See
Braden v. 30th Judicial Cir. Ct. of Ky.
,
The relief that plaintiff demands sounds in habeas and therefore is not available by means of a civil action seeking a declaratory judgment and injunctive relief. Nor is this district court the proрer forum for adjudication of plaintiff’s habeas claim.
D. The Commission Properly Applied Its 2000 Guidelines
Plaintiff objects to the Commission’s decisions to treat the October 21, 2011 parole hearing as an initial hearing and to apply its own parole guidelines. Compl. at 3. Plaintiff does nоt articulate, nor has the Court identified, a statutory or constitutional violation with regard to the Commission’s acknowledgement of an apparent error in the calculation of plaintiff’s parole eligibility date. The 2004 and 2007 hearings оccurred prematurely according to the BOP’s calculation of plaintiff’s sentence, and it follows that the Commission conducted the October 21, 2011 hearing as an initial hearing in anticipation of plaintiff’s correct parole eligibility date, April 27, 2012.
Turning to the complaint’s reference to
Sellmon
, the Court presumes that plaintiff raises
an
ex post facto
claim that the Commission “is applying later-adopted laws that disadvantage him
instead of the laws that were in effect at the time he committed the offenses.”
Austin v. Reilly
,
Nothing in the record of this case suggests that the former Parole Board’s regulations
apply to plaintiff. “[A] plaintiff may invoke
ex post facto
protection only on the basis of the
parole regime that was in effect at the timе he committed his offense[s].”
Austin
, 606 F. Supp.
2d at 7-8 (citation omitted). Plaintiff committed his offenses in or about 1976,
see Watson
, 508
A.2d at 76, years before the Parole Board promulgated the regulations at issue in
Sellmon
. At
the time plaintiff committed the offenses for which he now is sеrving his sentence, “parole
eligibility was determined by a D.C. Parole Board that operated with nearly complete
discretion,”
Wilson v. Fulwood
,
Accordingly, the Court will grant defendant’s motion to dismiss. An Order accompaniеs this Memorandum Opinion.
JOHN D. BATES United States District Judge DATE: June 26, 2012
Notes
[1] Plaintiff’s “Formal Request to be Transferred to the Jurisdiction of this Court for Consideration of Release Having Served the D.C. and Federal Sentences” [Dkt. #8] will be denied as moot.
[2] Plaintiff’s criminal history has been summarized as follows: [Plaintiff] was indicted in 1976 on several charges related to two separate incidents occurring at 1926 Quincy Street, N.E.: the May 30, 1976 assault on Richard Knight and the June 6, 1976 shootings of Cynthia Durham and Robert Swearinger. The matters came to triаl in 1977, but a mistrial was soon declared because several jurors had been exposed to publicity surrounding the murder of Timothy Reeves, which had also taken place at the Quincy Street premises. [Plaintiff] was later indicted for the Reеves’ murder and a related weapons charge. The trial court subsequently granted the government’s motion to
[3] The aggregate sentence imposed by the Superior Court in 1978 was 30 years to life
imprisonment.
See Watson
,
[4] Plaintiff currently is incarcerated at the United States Penitentiary in Coleman, Florida. Recently the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida considered, and rejected, plaintiff’s challenge to the calculation of his release date and parole eligibility date. Order Denying Petition, Watson v. Warden, FCC Coleman – USP I , Nos. 5:09-cv-112 & 5:09- cv-200 (M.D. Fla. May 3, 2012), appeal docketed , No. 12-12618 (11th Cir. May 15, 2012).
