Illinоis inmate Willie Hadley, Jr., petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, alleging that his ability to earn credit for good conduct in prison has been restricted in violation of the United States Constitutiоn. The district court denied the petition on the ground that in state court Hadley had proeedurally defaulted his claims. Hadley filed a timely notice of appeal. We affirm on the grounds set forth in this order.
In 1976 Hadley pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and was sentenced to prison for an indeterminate term of 24 to 74
*663
years. When Hadley was sentenced, Illinois prisons allotted good time on a progressive scale that after six years reached a maximum ratio of six months’ credit for every year of imprisonment.
See McGee v. Snyder,
In 1983 the Supreme Court of IUinois interpreted the 1978 amendment as prohibiting the Director from granting more than a
total
of 90 days of disсretionary good time to any inmate during his or her term of incarceration, regardless of length.
Lane v. Sklodowski,
In September 1990 the legislаture again amended the governing statute, this time adding a provision allowing some prisoners to earn good-time credits for participating in educational and work programs. See 730 111. Comp. Stat. 5/3-6-3(a)(3). But this benefit was not extended to those, like Hadley, who are imprisoned for first-degree murder. The 1990 amendment did not revoke Hadley’s accumulated credits or reduce the rate at which he wоuld earn good time in the future; rather, the change simply aUowed other inmates to earn good time at a faster pace. See id.
Hadley eventually responded to these changes by pеtitioning for habeas corpus rehef in state court in 1999. He principally claimed that the 1990 amendment violated the Ex Post Facto Clauses of the federal and Illinois constitutions. See U.S. Const, art. I, § 9, cl. 3; 111. Const, аrt. I, § 16. Hadley also claimed that implementation of the Lane ruling violated his federal constitutional rights to due process and equal protection. The IUinois circuit court dismissed the petition, explaining that it did so “for reasons aUeged in the motion to dismiss” filed by the state. On appeal to the Appellate Court of IUinois, Hadley pressed his claim concerning Lane, but abandoned his ex post fаcto claim. The appellate court affirmed the dismissal, and the state supreme court summarily denied leave to appeal.
Hadley then turned to the federal courts, pressing the two claims he presented in his state-court petition. The district *664 court dismissed the petition, concluding that Hadley had procedurally defaulted both claims. Alternatively, the district court held that Hadley’s claims were mer-itless.
We start with Hadley’s second claim and agree with the district court that Hadley procedurally defaulted it. We review the district court’s procedural default ruling
de novo. See Moore v. Bryant,
Even if not defaulted, however, Hadley’s ex post facto claim is frivolous. His grievance is that the 1990 amendment allows
other
inmаtes not convicted of first- or second-degree murder to earn up to 180 days of discretionary credit, while both before and after the amendment he was limited to 90. A change in law violates thе federal Ex Post Facto Clause, however, only if it makes the punishment for a crime more onerous after its commission.
Collins v. Youngblood,
We turn, then, to Hadley’s first claim: that he is being denied due process and equal protection by the Director’s implementation of the Illinois supreme court’s holding in Lane that the 90-day cap on discretionary awards enacted in 1978 is a limit on the number of days that can be given during the entire term of imprisonment, not a limit on the number of days that could be given on any single occasion. The district court concluded that Hadley also defaulted this claim, but we do not decide this question. In our view, Had-ley’s first claim is not cognizable under § 2254, and should instead have been raised if at аll under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
In order to bring an action under § 2254, a prisoner must be “in custody” pursuant to the conviction or sentence being challenged.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254;
Maleng v. Cook,
The
Lane
decision did not result in Had-ley’s loss of good time already awarded, and both before and after the decision Hadley had no entitlement to — аnd no expectation of receiving — any discretionary good time. His complaint is really about the Director’s reliance on
Lane
to limit the amount of discretionary good time any prisonеr can receive, and such a challenge to the Director’s procedure in awarding discretionary good time is similar to an inmate’s attacks on the procedures states use to сonsider applications for parole. The Supreme Court has analyzed disputes about parole procedures under § 1983.
See Bd. of Pardons v. Allen,
District courts faced with a § 1983 suit brought under § 2254 should, rather than reach the merits, dismiss without prejudice to the possibility of а future § 1983 action or at least give notice that the suit will be converted to one under § 1983 if the plaintiff declines to dismiss voluntarily.
See Moran,
We hasten to add, however, that Hadley would be foolish to pursue this path because his claim that implementation of
Lane
has denied him due process and equal protection is frivolous. The prospective credit Hadley is requesting is entirely within the control of the Director, and there is no due process “protection for action that merely
might
affect the duration of the sentence.”
Zimmerman,
