State of Alaska, Department of Corrections v. Trevor Stefano ( 2022 )


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  •       Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.
    Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
    303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email
    corrections@akcourts.gov.
    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    STATE OF ALASKA,           )
    DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, ) Supreme Court No. S-17892
    )
    Petitioner,  ) Superior Court No. 3AN-19-09950 CI
    )
    v.                     ) OPINION
    )
    TREVOR STEFANO,            ) No. 7616 – September 2, 2022
    )
    Respondent.  )
    )
    Petition for Review from the Superior Court of the State of
    Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Peter R.
    Ramgren, Judge.
    Appearances: Anna Jay, Assistant Attorney General,
    Anchorage, and Treg R. Taylor, Attorney General, Juneau,
    for Petitioner. Trevor J. Stefano, pro se, Anchorage,
    Respondent. Emily L. Jura, Assistant Public Defender, and
    Samantha Cherot, Public Defender, Anchorage, for Amicus
    Curiae Public Defender Agency.
    Before: Winfree, Maassen, Carney, and Borghesan, Justices.
    [Bolger, Chief Justice, not participating.]
    BORGHESAN, Justice.
    I.    INTRODUCTION
    The Department of Corrections (DOC) allows some inmates to serve a
    portion of their prison sentence outside a correctional facility while wearing electronic
    monitoring equipment. Inmates serving a sentence on electronic monitoring live and
    work in the community, but are subject to restrictions on movement and conduct. If an
    inmate violates those restrictions, DOC may return the inmate to prison.
    This case presents a jurisdictional question: does the superior court have
    jurisdiction to hear an appeal of DOC’s decision to remove an inmate from electronic
    monitoring and return the inmate to prison? Within that jurisdictional question is a more
    fundamental question: is DOC’s decision subject to the constitutional guarantee that
    “[n]o person shall be deprived of . . . liberty . . . without due process of law?”1
    We hold that due process applies. Although we reject the argument that
    removal from electronic monitoring and remand to prison implicates the constitutional
    right to rehabilitation, as the inmate in this case argues, we conclude that serving a
    sentence on electronic monitoring affords a limited but constitutionally protected degree
    of liberty, akin to parole. Just as “a parolee may not be deprived of his limited liberty
    without due process of law,”2 an inmate serving a sentence on electronic monitoring may
    not be returned to prison without safeguards to ensure that liberty is not wrongly taken
    away.
    Nevertheless we hold that the superior court did not have appellate
    jurisdiction to review DOC’s decision in this case. Appellate review of an agency’s
    decision is possible only when the decision is the product of an adjudicative process in
    which evidence is produced, law is applied, and an adequate record is made. DOC’s
    decisional process in this case was not an adjudicative process and did not create a record
    1
    Alaska Const. art. I, § 7.
    2
    Bailey v. State, Dep’t of Corr., Bd. of Parole, 
    224 P.3d 111
    , 116 (Alaska
    2010).
    -2­                                       7616
    that permits appellate review.3 We therefore remand this case to the superior court to
    convert this case from an appeal to a civil action so that the parties can create the record
    necessary for judicial review of DOC’s decision.
    II.    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    A.     Facts
    Trevor Stefano was found guilty of second-degree murder at the age of 22;
    he was sentenced to 40 years in prison with 15 years suspended. In February 2018, after
    serving roughly twelve years of his sentence, he applied to serve the remainder of his
    sentence on electronic monitoring. Under DOC Policies & Procedures 903.06, which
    then governed the electronic monitoring program, an incarcerated person was normally
    ineligible for electronic monitoring if the person had more than three years remaining to
    serve.4 But there was an exception to the three-year rule for someone who “exhibit[ed]
    exceptional rehabilitative progress.” DOC determined that Stefano had demonstrated
    exceptional rehabilitative progress and in May 2018 released him on electronic
    monitoring in Fairbanks. Stefano’s electronic monitoring agreement with DOC required
    3
    See Welton v. State, 
    315 P.3d 1196
    , 1199 (Alaska 2014) (holding superior
    court lacked appellate jurisdiction to review DOC’s denial of prisoner grievance because
    grievance process “lacked several important hallmarks of an adjudication” and produced
    only “limited paper record . . . inadequate for appellate review”).
    4
    In March 2021 DOC Policies and Procedures 903.06 was repealed and
    replaced by Policies and Procedures 818.10. DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 903.06:
    NOTICE OF REPEAL (2021), https://doc.alaska.gov/pnp/pdf/903.06.pdf. The relevant
    language of the policy in effect at the time of Stefano’s removal is largely similar to that
    of the policy currently in effect. DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 903.06: COMMUNITY
    ELECTRONIC MONITORING (2017), https://web.archive.org/web
    /20191230020037/https://doc.alaska.gov/pnp/pdf/903.06.pdf; DOC, POLICIES AND
    PROCEDURES 818.10: SENTENCED ELECTRONIC MONITORING (2020), https://doc.alaska.
    gov/pnp/pdf/818.10.pdf.
    -3-                                       7616
    him to obtain prior approval from DOC before friends, family members, and associates
    could visit his residence and before having contact with a convicted felon.
    Stefano got married while in Fairbanks; he and his wife later moved to
    Anchorage. In early July 2019 Anchorage Police Department (APD) officers visited
    Stefano’s apartment in response to a report of domestic violence. After investigating, the
    officers arrested Stefano. The officers also observed that Stefano’s brother Connor was
    at Stefano’s home. Connor had previously been convicted of a felony but was no longer
    in DOC custody. The APD officers reported Connor’s presence to a probation officer.
    Stefano’s probation officer prepared an incident report. The report first
    cited Stefano for committing a “high-moderate infraction” as defined in 22 Alaska
    Administrative Code (AAC) 05.400(c)(19) (2018) by “refusing to obey a direct order of
    a staff member.” It then stated that Stefano had “violated the Terms and Conditions of
    the Anchorage Electronic Monitoring (EM) program and has been terminated from the
    program.” It explained that Stefano had violated term 9, prohibiting unauthorized
    contact with friends and family members, and term 21, prohibiting unauthorized contact
    with convicted felons. With respect to Stefano’s termination from electronic monitoring,
    the report stated:
    Correspondence . . . indicated that [criminal charges against
    Stefano] had been dropped. I requested and reviewed the
    related court documents which indicated the Municipal
    Attorney had declined to prosecute. Collateral information
    indicated that the victim had requested the charge not be
    pursued against [inmate] Stefano. I determined that [inmate]
    Stefano had initiated contact with the victim from the jail
    shortly after he was booked; I requested and reviewed copies
    of some of the recordings. In short, the recordings revealed
    that [inmate] Stefano manipulated and directed the victim to
    request the charge be dropped. . . . The victim indicated that
    what she had told the police was true and she was fearful of
    him and worried that he would kill her or have her killed. . . .
    -4-                                     7616
    Additional recordings are pending review however,
    considering the totality of the situation it is my professional
    opinion that the victim[’]s concern[s] for her safety are
    adequately supported. My opinion is supported by the facts
    of the above incident, the victim[’]s statements to police, the
    injury documented in the report, the recordings reviewed
    after [inmate] Stefano’s booking and both offender[s’]
    history. Ultimately the behaviors demonstrated by [inmate]
    Stefano are inconsistent with the expectations, directives and
    Terms and Conditions of the [electronic monitoring]
    program.
    B.     Administrative Proceedings
    Stefano appealed his termination from electronic monitoring. His appeal
    was denied by a probation officer, who explained that: (1) Stefano had been given
    permission to have only telephonic contact, not in-person contact, with his brother
    Connor; and (2) although the domestic violence charges were dismissed, the officer had
    heard Stefano’s “inappropriate statements to [his] wife” in the recorded calls from prison.
    Stefano requested a classification hearing from DOC, asserting that he had
    a right to review of his removal from electronic monitoring because it is a rehabilitative
    program. DOC denied him a classification hearing, maintaining that “[electronic
    monitoring] is not a rehabilitati[ve] program.”
    Stefano received a disciplinary hearing on the (c)(19) infraction (“refusing
    to obey a direct order of a staff member”). Stefano requested that the recorded phone
    calls between him and his wife be entered into evidence, but the hearing officer denied
    his request, stating: “I don’t think the phone recordings have anything to do with you
    violating a (c)(19) or not violating a (c)(19).” The hearing officer also refused to call
    Stefano’s requested witnesses: Stefano’s wife, his brother, and the arresting APD
    officer. The hearing officer said that his purpose at the hearing was “to figure out . . . if
    [Stefano] violated those two conditions” [of the electronic monitoring program] by
    -5-                                        7616
    having his brother at his residence, and to determine whether Stefano “violated this
    infraction, (c)(19).” At the end of the hearing the hearing officer found Stefano guilty
    of the infraction and sentenced him to 30 days in punitive segregation.
    Stefano appealed the disciplinary decision that same day. He listed eight
    points in his appeal statement, including that he “was removed from [the] DOC
    [electronic monitoring] rehabilitative program with no classification hearing and no
    consideration to [his] rehabilitation.” The superintendent of the Anchorage Correctional
    Complex affirmed the disciplinary decision, addressing each of Stefano’s points in turn.
    Regarding Stefano’s termination from the electronic monitoring program without a
    classification hearing, the superintendent wrote only “[t]his is up to [the electronic
    monitoring program].”
    Stefano subsequently reapplied to electronic monitoring.          After his
    application was denied, he appealed and was again denied. The denial stated: “Based
    on the totality of your violations, to include the information included in the [(c)(19)
    incident report], I see no reason to allow you to reapply for [electronic monitoring]
    during the remainder of your incarceration.”
    C.     Superior Court Proceedings
    Stefano appealed the disciplinary action to the superior court. In his points
    on appeal he claimed that DOC had improperly refused to provide him with the evidence
    against him, refused to allow him to call witnesses in his defense, and prevented him
    from having his attorney at the hearing. He also claimed that DOC had “failed to follow
    [its] own policy and procedure regarding the electronic monitoring program and
    improperly discharged Stefano from that program.” Stefano later supplemented his
    points on appeal, adding a claim that his removal from electronic monitoring had violated
    his constitutional rights to due process and to rehabilitation.
    -6-                                      7616
    After briefing and oral argument, the superior court issued a written
    decision in Stefano’s favor. It first addressed DOC’s argument that the superior court
    lacked jurisdiction over Stefano’s termination from electronic monitoring. The superior
    court acknowledged that its appellate jurisdiction extends only to cases involving “an
    adjudicative record capable of review.” The court concluded that Stefano’s termination
    from electronic monitoring met this condition:
    Stefano was terminated from the [electronic monitoring]
    program and “written up” for his disciplinary infraction in a
    single document prepared by [his probation officer]. These
    incidents apparently stemmed from the same factual basis and
    involved similar considerations. Stefano immediately
    requested a classification hearing, and that request was
    denied. Instead, Stefano received a disciplinary hearing, the
    recording of which has been presented to this court as part of
    the record on appeal. The process Stefano received at that
    hearing is documented for this court, as are the forms Stefano
    submitted to DOC before and after that process. Stefano’s
    claims relating to his termination from the [electronic
    monitoring] program relate to the sufficiency of the process
    he received from DOC before and after his termination from
    the program. From this detailed record, the court is able to
    review the process Stefano received and rule on these claims
    on the merits. Stefano is not required to re-litigate these
    issues in a separate proceeding.
    The court then concluded that electronic monitoring is a rehabilitative
    program and that therefore Stefano was entitled to “some level of due process” upon
    being removed from electronic monitoring. Yet the court concluded that Stefano had not
    received adequate process because he had not been “permitted at his disciplinary hearing
    to challenge the basis for his termination from the [electronic monitoring] program.” As
    to DOC’s disciplinary ruling, the court held that DOC failed to provide a rationale as to
    why it cited Stefano for violating (c)(19) instead of another provision carrying less
    -7-                                     7616
    severe consequences that was also applicable to his conduct. It therefore concluded the
    disciplinary decision was arbitrary and violated Stefano’s substantive due process rights.
    The court vacated both DOC’s decision that Stefano was guilty of violating
    22 AAC 05.400(c)(19) and its decision terminating Stefano from electronic monitoring,
    remanding for further proceedings. Acknowledging that it lacked authority to order
    DOC to reinstate Stefano on electronic monitoring, the court held that “Stefano is entitled
    to adequate process (i.e., a classification hearing) prior to his termination from the
    program.”
    DOC petitioned for review of the superior court’s exercise of appellate
    jurisdiction over Stefano’s termination from electronic monitoring. We granted the
    petition and ordered full briefing.
    III.   DISCUSSION
    This matter requires us to decide whether the superior court had appellate
    jurisdiction to review DOC’s decision to remove Stefano from electronic monitoring.
    The appellate jurisdiction of the superior court is established in AS 22.10.020(d), which
    provides that “[t]he superior court has jurisdiction in all matters appealed to it
    from . . . [an] administrative agency when appeal is provided by law.” There is no statute
    providing for appeal of a DOC decision to terminate a person from electronic
    monitoring. However, we have held that administrative appeal of a DOC decision is
    proper “even when not authorized by statute” if the challenged decision implicates a
    “fundamental constitutional right[]” and is made “in an adjudicative proceeding
    producing a record capable of review.”5 We therefore consider whether DOC’s decision
    to terminate Stefano from the electronic monitoring program meets these criteria.
    5
    Brandon v. State, Dep’t of Corr., 
    938 P.2d 1029
    , 1031-32 (Alaska 1997)
    (citing Owen v. Matsumoto, 
    859 P.2d 1308
    , 1309 (Alaska 1993); Hertz v. Carothers, 
    784 P.2d 659
    , 660 (Alaska 1990); Dep’t of Corr. v. Kraus, 
    759 P.2d 539
    , 540 (Alaska 1988)).
    -8-                                      7616
    A.     Removing A Prisoner From Electronic Monitoring And Remanding
    The Prisoner To A Correctional Facility Implicates The Prisoner’s
    Fundamental Constitutional Rights.
    We first decide whether DOC’s decision to remove Stefano from electronic
    monitoring implicated a fundamental constitutional right.6 Two rights are arguably at
    issue: the right to rehabilitation and the right to liberty. We assess each in turn.
    1.     Removal from electronic monitoring does not implicate the
    constitutional right to rehabilitation.
    a.     Our prior decisions shed light on the contours of the
    constitutional right to rehabilitation.
    Stefano argues that his removal from electronic monitoring implicates his
    constitutional right to rehabilitation. To determine when and how that right comes into
    play, it is helpful to review our decisions applying it.
    We first discussed the constitutional right of rehabilitation in Abraham v.
    State.7 In that case, a prisoner argued that treatment for his alcoholism was essential to
    his reformation into a law-abiding person, but that this treatment “could not be supplied
    within the existing framework of prison programs.”8 We observed that the Alaska
    Constitution provides that criminal administration shall be based on “the principle of
    reformation” and “the need for protecting the public.”9 “Reformation,” we explained,
    “relates to something being done to rehabilitate the offender into a noncriminal member
    6
    
    Id.
    7
    
    585 P.2d 526
    , 531-33 (Alaska 1978).
    8
    Id. at 531.
    9
    Id. at 530 (quoting Alaska Const. art. I, § 12 (amended 1994)). This
    constitutional provision was amended in 1994 to add three more principles to guide
    criminal administration: community condemnation of the offender, the rights of victims
    of crime, and restitution from the offender. Alaska Const. art. I, § 12.
    -9-                                        7616
    of society.”10 We concluded that the inmate had “a constitutional right to rehabilitative
    treatment particularly with respect to his consumption of alcohol.”11 However, we did
    not attempt to define the contours of this right and instead remanded the matter to the
    superior court so that “the judiciary can take whatever steps are deemed necessary to
    make the constitutional right to reformation a reality.”12
    We next addressed the right to rehabilitation in Ferguson v. State,
    Department of Corrections.13 In that case an inmate’s participation in the Alaska
    Correctional Industries Program, through which he had a job at a meatpacking plant in
    Palmer, was terminated after he tested positive for drugs.14 He sued DOC, claiming
    among other things that the State had deprived him of his liberty right to participate in
    the program without due process.15 Addressing this claim, we reasoned that “prisoners
    have an enforceable interest in continued participation in rehabilitation programs” under
    the Alaska Constitution.16 We then concluded that “[t]he prison industries program from
    which [the inmate] was excluded is a rehabilitation program,” noting that participation
    10
    Abraham, 585 P.2d at 531.
    11
    Id. at 533.
    12
    Id.
    13
    
    816 P.2d 134
    , 139-40 (Alaska 1991).
    14
    
    Id. at 136
    .
    15
    
    Id. at 137
    . The Alaska Constitution provides that “[n]o person shall be
    deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” Alaska Const. art. I,
    § 7.
    16
    Ferguson, 816 P.2d at 139.
    -10-                                      7616
    was “voluntary, requires application and approval, and confers special privileges.”17
    “Since prisoners taking part in [the program] have a protected interest in the program,
    their participation cannot be terminated without a measure of due process of law.”18
    By contrast, we ruled in Hays v. State that DOC’s decision to remove an
    inmate from his job as prison librarian and reassign him to work shoveling snow did not
    implicate the right to rehabilitation.19 We reasoned that the inmate “d[id] not have an
    enforceable constitutional interest in continued employment as a prison librarian.”20 In
    a subsequent unpublished decision, we reasoned that “jobs within the prison entail no
    formal training program, specified objectives, or stated rehabilitative components”;
    “[t]hese institutional jobs are not part of any rehabilitative program.”21 Therefore,
    removing the inmate from his job in the prison library “d[id] not raise a fundamental
    constitutional question” and “[wa]s not reviewable on appeal.”22
    We reached the same conclusion about challenges to the denial of other
    benefits or privileges outside of formal rehabilitation programs. In Mathis v. Sauser we
    ruled that DOC’s denial of a prisoner’s request to have a computer printer in his cell did
    not implicate the right to rehabilitation.23 We reasoned that the inmate “ha[d] not argued
    17
    Id. at 140.
    18
    Id.
    19
    
    830 P.2d 783
    , 785 (Alaska 1992).
    20
    
    Id.
    21
    Moody v. State, Dep’t of Corr., No. S-12303, 
    2007 WL 3197938
    , at *2
    (Alaska Oct. 31, 2007).
    22
    
    Id.
    23
    
    942 P.2d 1117
    , 1124 (Alaska 1997).
    -11-                                      7616
    that he [was] involved in any rehabilitative program requiring the use of a printer in his
    cell,” nor did he “produce[] any evidence to support the proposition that the policy in
    question implicate[d] his rehabilitation.”24 In later unpublished decisions we similarly
    concluded that access to a word processor25 and permission to keep hobby and craft
    supplies in one’s cell26 do not implicate the right to rehabilitation. And in Antenor v.
    State, Department of Corrections we ruled that DOC’s decision to deny a prisoner access
    to a certain book on computer programming did not infringe his constitutional right to
    rehabilitation in light of the other educational materials and opportunities available to
    him in prison.27
    Brandon v. State, Department of Corrections presented the right to
    rehabilitation in a slightly different context.28 In that case a prisoner sought to challenge
    DOC’s decision to transfer him to a facility outside Alaska.29 We concluded that the
    prisoner’s challenge was “grounded on a fundamental constitutional right” to
    rehabilitation because of the potential to substantially impair his opportunity to have
    24
    
    Id.
    25
    Adkins v. Crandell, No. S-7794, 
    1999 WL 33958768
    , at *1 (Alaska Jan. 13,
    1999).
    26
    Moody, 
    2007 WL 3197938
    , at *2.
    27
    
    462 P.3d 1
    , 19 (Alaska 2020) (“Antenor likewise has not been denied all
    rehabilitative opportunities . . . . Denying him access to a specific book, therefore, does
    not violate his constitutional right to reformation.”).
    28
    
    938 P.2d 1029
    , 1032 (Alaska 1997).
    29
    Id. at 1030.
    -12-                                       7616
    visitation.30 However, we cautioned that “[o]ur recognition that visitation privileges are
    a component of the constitutional right to rehabilitation does not define their required
    scope or the permissible limits on their exercise.”31 We established one of these limits
    in Larson v. Cooper when we affirmed DOC limitations on physical contact during
    visitation.32    We recognized that “[s]ome physical contact may well promote
    rehabilitation” but rejected the suggestion that the Alaska Constitution “preclude[s]
    prisons from putting reasonable limits on contact visitation of maximum security
    prisoners.”33
    Finally, in Hertz v. Macomber we held that the constitutional right of
    rehabilitation did not give a prisoner the right to challenge particular conditions placed
    on his furlough.34 We recognized that “furloughs are explicitly designed to further the
    goal of rehabilitation.”35 But we also recognized that “the right to rehabilitation does not
    create a right to furlough for all prisoners.”36 We observed that DOC policies tie
    prisoners’ furlough eligibility to their classification categories — including community,
    minimum, medium, and close custody37 — and that “once in DOC custody, the
    30
    Id. at 1032 & n.2.
    31
    Id. at 1032 n.2.
    32
    
    90 P.3d 125
    , 133-34 (Alaska 2004).
    33
    
    Id. at 133
     (discussing article 1, section 12 of the Alaska Constitution).
    34
    
    297 P.3d 150
    , 157-58 (Alaska 2013).
    35
    
    Id. at 157
    .
    36
    
    Id.
    37
    DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 700.01: PRISONER CLASSIFICATION
    (2014), https://doc.alaska.gov/pnp/pdf/700.01.pdf.
    -13-                                      7616
    ‘decisions of prison authorities relating to classification of prisoners are completely
    administrative matters regarding which the inmate has no due process rights beyond the
    expectation of fair and impartial allocation of resources.’ ”38 By this logic, DOC’s
    classification decisions do not implicate prisoners’ right to rehabilitation for purposes of
    judicial review just because classification has a downstream effect on rehabilitative
    opportunities.
    Considering these decisions together, the following rules emerge. A
    prisoner has a protected interest in continued participation in formal rehabilitative
    programs,39 and participation cannot be terminated without some measure of due
    process.40   Outside of participation in formal rehabilitation programs, denial or
    withdrawal of a privilege or benefit does not implicate the right to rehabilitation unless
    the benefit has some clear connection to rehabilitation and its denial leaves the inmate
    without access to comparable rehabilitative opportunities.41 And DOC decisions about
    38
    Hertz, 297 P.3d at 157 (quoting McGinnis v. Stevens, 
    543 P.2d 1221
    , 1237
    (Alaska 1975)).
    39
    “Formal rehabilitative program” is defined infra at note 51 and
    accompanying text.
    40
    Ferguson v. State, Dep’t of Corr., 
    816 P.2d 134
    , 140 (Alaska 1991).
    41
    See, e.g., Hays v. State, 
    830 P.2d 783
    , 785 (Alaska 1992) (holding that job
    reassignment from prison librarian to snow shoveler did not implicate right to
    rehabilitation); Antenor v. State, Dep’t of Corr., 
    462 P.3d 1
    , 19 (Alaska 2020) (holding
    that denial of access to specific book did not implicate right to rehabilitation in light of
    other educational materials and opportunities available to inmate); Adkins v. Crandell,
    No. S-7794, 
    1999 WL 33958768
    , at *1 (Alaska Jan. 13, 1999) (ruling that denial of
    access to word processor did not implicate right to rehabilitation when inmate “was
    allowed to participate in post-secondary education as part of his rehabilitation,” was able
    to maintain passing grades without word processor, and “had access to a dictionary
    and/or thesaurus”).
    -14-                                       7616
    a prisoner’s classification generally do not implicate the right to rehabilitation even if
    they may affect rehabilitative opportunities: classification categories are not formal
    rehabilitative programs, nor do they typically leave prisoners without access to
    rehabilitative opportunities. However, if a classification decision will substantially
    impair access to rehabilitative opportunities — such as by making visitation practically
    impossible — then it will implicate the right to rehabilitation and trigger judicial
    review.42
    In light of these rules, we next consider whether electronic monitoring
    implicates the right to rehabilitation as either (1) a formal rehabilitative program or (2) a
    privilege or benefit with a clear connection to rehabilitation, the denial of which leaves
    the prisoner without access to comparable rehabilitative opportunities.
    b.     Electronic monitoring is not a formal rehabilitative
    program.
    The first question is whether electronic monitoring is formal rehabilitative
    programming. The Public Defender Agency, which has briefed this court as amicus
    curiae,43 urges us to adopt as a test for determining whether a program is rehabilitative
    the three factors we considered in Ferguson. In that case we found that a prison
    industries program, which gave employment opportunities to prisoners, was
    rehabilitative because it was “voluntary, require[d] application and approval, and
    confer[red] special privileges.”44 But these three factors have not been consistently
    applied as a “test” since Ferguson was decided thirty years ago and encompass programs
    42
    See Brandon v. State, Dep’t. of Corr., 
    938 P.2d 1029
    , 1032 & n.2 (Alaska
    1997).
    43
    We thank the Public Defender Agency for its helpful briefing on this
    matter.
    44
    816 P.2d at 140.
    -15-                                       7616
    that do not fit even the dictionary definition of “rehabilitative.”45 For instance, DOC
    Policies and Procedures 815.04 VII.D states that “Arts and Craft projects approved for
    work in the cell or living areas are limited to those approved by the Superintendents or
    designee,”46 indicating that keeping arts and crafts materials in one’s cell is “voluntary,
    requires application and approval, and confers special privileges.”47           But in an
    unpublished case decided 16 years after Ferguson, we held that “[t]he loss of in-cell
    hobby and craft privileges . . . does not raise a fundamental constitutional question.”48
    Instead a rehabilitative program is one that is designed to address “specific
    problems that impelled the prisoner’s antisocial conduct.”49 The constitutional principle
    of reformation “relates to something being done to rehabilitate the offender into a
    45
    See, e.g., Rehabilitation, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019)
    (defining rehabilitation as “[t]he process of seeking to improve a criminal’s character and
    outlook so that he or she can function in society without committing other crimes”).
    46
    DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 815.04: RECREATION AND PRISONER
    ACTIVITIES (2014), https://doc.alaska.gov/pnp/pdf/ 815.04-Arts.pdf.
    47
    See Ferguson, 816 P.2d at 140.
    48
    Moody v. State, Dep’t of Corr., No. S-12303, 
    2007 WL 3197938
    , at *2
    (Alaska Oct. 31, 2007).
    49
    Brandon v. State, Dep’t of Corr., 
    938 P.2d 1029
    , 1034 (Alaska 1997)
    (Rabinowitz, J., dissenting in part). In adopting Justice Rabinowitz’s definition of a
    rehabilitative program from his partial dissent in Brandon, we do not undercut the court’s
    decision in that case. Justice Rabinowitz believed that the right to rehabilitation attached
    only to formal programming. Id. at 1034-35. The court disagreed, ruling that the right
    to rehabilitation may also be implicated by administrative decisions unrelated to
    rehabilitative programming if those decisions substantially impair an inmate’s
    opportunity for rehabilitation. Id. at 1031-32 (majority opinion). Nothing in our
    decision today calls the court’s decision in Brandon into question. We merely endorse
    Justice Rabinowitz’s definition of a formal rehabilitative program.
    -16-                                       7616
    noncriminal member of society,”50 so a rehabilitative program is one designed to address
    the factors that may lead to criminal behavior, such as addiction, lack of remunerative
    skills, lack of education, or deviant proclivities.51 To determine whether a program is
    rehabilitative, we have considered both the statutory framework for these programs52 and
    DOC’s policies and procedures governing them.53
    The existing statutory framework does not suggest that electronic
    monitoring is a rehabilitative program.54 The statute governing electronic monitoring,
    50
    Abraham v. State, 
    585 P.2d 526
    , 531 (Alaska 1978).
    51
    See Brandon, 938 P.2d at 1034 (Rabinowitz, J., dissenting in part)
    (“[F]ormal [rehabilitative] program[s] address[] . . . the specific problems that impelled
    the prisoner’s antisocial conduct [such as] alcohol abuse . . . [and] a lack of job skills.”).
    52
    See, e.g., Hertz v. Macomber, 
    297 P.3d 150
    , 157 (Alaska 2013) (citing to
    language of statute governing furloughs to hold that “furloughs are explicitly designed
    to further the goal of rehabilitation”).
    53
    See, e.g., Moody, 
    2007 WL 3197938
    , at *2 (noting that DOC Policies and
    Procedures 808.04 lists “employment in Alaska Correctional Industries programs,” but
    not intra-prison jobs, as rehabilitative).
    54
    One thing that does seem clear from the statutory text is the legislative
    intent that DOC’s decision to take a prisoner off electronic monitoring not be subject to
    judicial review. The statute provides that a decision to place a prisoner on electronic
    monitoring “does not create a liberty interest in that status for the prisoner.”
    AS 33.30.065(c). This proviso suggests the legislature did not wish electronic
    monitoring decisions to be subject to due process. However, if the electronic monitoring
    program is in fact rehabilitative — implicating the constitutional right to rehabilitation
    that cannot be deprived without due process — the legislature cannot simply override
    constitutional protections by declaring otherwise. See Alaska Pub. Int. Rsch. Grp. v.
    State, 
    167 P.3d 27
    , 43 (Alaska 2007) (“The judiciary alone among the branches of
    government is charged with interpreting the law.” (citing Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S.
    (1 Cranch) 137, 177 (1803)); Marbury, 5 U.S. at 177 (“It is emphatically the province
    and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.”)). In fact, the legislative
    (continued...)
    -17-                                        7616
    AS 33.30.065, provides little detail about the content of the program or the procedures
    for administering it. Notably, the statutory text governing furloughs55 — which like
    electronic monitoring permit inmates to serve a period of their sentence outside prison
    walls — reflects a clear intent to use furloughs for rehabilitation, permitting them for
    reasons such as “counseling and treatment for alcohol or drug abuse,” employment,
    education, making “preparations for release,” or “any other rehabilitative purpose.”56
    There is no similar statement of rehabilitative purpose for the electronic monitoring
    program. The statute does require the commissioner to consider “the prospects for the
    prisoner’s rehabilitation” in deciding whether an individual may participate in electronic
    monitoring.57 Yet this proviso does not clearly suggest the program is intended to be
    rehabilitative. It may instead indicate an intent that only prisoners unlikely to re-offend
    — i.e., prisoners with good prospects for rehabilitation — should be released on
    54
    (...continued)
    history indicates that the legislature itself knew that this statement was likely ineffective.
    The bill sponsor’s staffer stated: “[W]hether the legislature says it or intends it, the court
    will decide whether there is a liberty interest or not.” Minutes, H. Jud. Standing Comm.
    Hearing on H.B. 272, 20th Leg., 2d Sess. Tape 98-23, Side A, at 274 (Feb. 23, 1998)
    (testimony of Kevin Jardell, Legislative Administrative Assistant to Rep. Joe Green),
    http://www.akleg.gov/basis/Meeting/Text?Meeting=HJUD%
    201998-02-23%2013:07:00. The staffer added that “[t]he whole statement is somewhat
    superfluous, when you really get down to the legal dynamics of it.” Id. at 368. In any
    event, DOC does not argue that this proviso in AS 33.30.065(c) precludes us from ruling
    that removal from electronic monitoring implicates fundamental constitutional rights.
    55
    AS 33.30.901 defines furlough as “an authorized leave of absence from
    actual confinement for a designated purpose and period of time.”
    56
    AS 33.30.101(a).
    57
    AS 33.30.065(b)(2).
    -18-                                        7616
    electronic monitoring. In other words, this proviso serves the goal of protecting the
    public at least as much as it serves the goal of reformation.
    The legislative history suggests that the legislature’s primary purpose in
    creating the electronic monitoring program was “to provide the Department of
    Corrections an additional tool to help ease overcrowding and relieve some budget
    problems.”58 The bill file contains a few references to rehabilitation59 and to related
    concepts like reducing recidivism,60 “promot[ing] a crime-free lifestyle,”61 and keeping
    families together.62 Ultimately, neither the statutory text nor legislative history provided
    strong support for the notion that the electronic monitoring program, at least in its current
    form, is a program designed to address the specific problems that lead to criminal
    behavior.
    We next turn to DOC’s policies and procedures governing electronic
    monitoring, which shed light on whether DOC operates the program as a rehabilitative
    58
    Minutes, H. Jud. Standing Comm. Hearing on H.B. 272, 20th Leg., 2d Sess.
    Tape 98-19, Side B, at 595 (Feb. 18, 1998) (testimony of Kevin Jardell, Legislative
    Administrative Assistant to Rep. Joe Green), http://www.akleg.gov/basis/Meeting/
    Text?Meeting=HJUD%201998-02-18%2013:05:00.
    59
    See Harry N. Boone, Jr., Electronic Home Confinement: Judicial and
    Legislative Perspectives, PERSPS., Fall 1996, at 18, 20-23 (available in H. Fin. Comm.
    bill file); Written Testimony of Sharon L’Heureux, Fairbanks Native Ass’n (Apr. 7,
    1998) (available in H. Fin. Comm. bill file).
    60
    See Boone, supra note 59, at 23; ADMIN. OF JUST. SERVS., DEVELOPMENT
    OF AN AGENCY BASED SELF-EVALUATION INSTRUMENT FOR ELECTRONIC MONITORING
    PROGRAMS 9 (1996) (available in H. Fin. Comm. bill file).
    61
    See
    NEB. PROB. SYS., INTENSIVE SUPERVISION                          PROBATION
    GOALS/OBJECTIVES, at 3 (available in H. Fin. Comm. bill file).
    62
    See Boone, supra note 59, at 21.
    -19-                                       7616
    program. At first blush, aspects of these policies and procedures suggest the program is
    rehabilitative. The first line of the DOC Policies & Procedures governing electronic
    monitoring states: “It is the policy of the Department of Corrections (DOC) to utilize
    electronic monitoring (EM) as a tool to effectively manage offenders for their successful
    re-entry and transition to the community.”63 “Successful re-entry and transition to the
    community” is clearly a rehabilitative purpose. Further, unless an exception is obtained,
    the electronic monitoring program requires participants to obtain education or
    employment, both of which we have previously indicated may foster rehabilitation.64 By
    allowing participants to live with partners or family members and hold outside
    employment, electronic monitoring also facilitates contact with the community, which
    we recognized in Brandon was a significant component of rehabilitation.65 At the same
    time, electronic monitoring participants are prohibited from interacting with certain
    63
    DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 818.10: SENTENCED ELECTRONIC
    MONITORING (2020), https://doc.alaska.gov/pnp/p df/818.10.pdf; see supra note 4.
    64
    Ferguson v. State, Dep’t of Corr., 
    816 P.2d 134
    , 140 (Alaska 1991) (“The
    prison industries program from which Ferguson was excluded is a rehabilitation
    program.”); Adkins v. Crandell, No. S-7794, 
    1999 WL 33958768
    , at *1 (Alaska Jan. 13,
    1999) (“It is clear from Adkins’s complaint that he was allowed to participate in post­
    secondary education as part of his rehabilitation.”).
    65
    Brandon v. State, Dep’t of Corr., 
    938 P.2d 1029
    , 1032 n.2 (Alaska 1997)
    (quoting sources suggesting that visitation “is the most direct link for the inmate with the
    world left behind,” “is indispensable to any realistic program of rehabilitation,” and
    facilitates “the ultimate rehabilitation of the prisoner by strengthening his ties with the
    ‘free world’ ”; that “[p]reservation of the family unit is important to the reintegration of
    the confined person”; and that “[s]trained ties with family and friends increase the
    difficulty of making the eventual transition back to the community”).
    -20-                                       7616
    people, presumably to protect them from bad influences and thus further their
    rehabilitation.66
    Yet allowing a prisoner to serve a sentence on electronic monitoring does
    not address specific behaviors or problems that lead to criminal conduct any more than
    classification at a particular custody level. Although serving a sentence on electronic
    monitoring instead of inside a correctional facility allows a prisoner greater freedom, so
    does serving a sentence in a minimum rather than a maximum security facility. Apart
    from the freedom to live outside a correctional facility, the purpose, rules, and
    opportunities of electronic monitoring are similar in kind to the purpose, rules, and
    opportunities — available in varying degrees — at the different custody levels in prison
    (from the most restrictive “close custody” status to the least restrictive “community
    custody” status).67 And, as discussed above, classification decisions to move a prisoner
    from one custody level to another generally do not implicate the right to rehabilitation.68
    Take, for example, DOC’s stated purpose for its electronic monitoring
    program: “[T]o effectively manage offenders for their successful re-entry and transition
    66
    See DOC, FORM 818.10B: ELECTRONIC MONITORING TERMS AND
    CONDITIONS (2022), https://doc.alaska.gov/pnp/pdf/ 818.10b.pdf?new (“I will obtain
    prior approval from [electronic monitoring] officers before having visits from friends,
    family members, and/or associates to my residence with the exception of unannounced
    visits . . . . I agree to have no non-employment related, non-reentry related contact with
    a convicted felon without the permission of [electronic monitoring] officers.”).
    67
    See DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 700.01: PRISONER CLASSIFICATION
    (2014), https://doc.alaska.gov/pnp/pdf/700.01.pdf (describing the four custody levels and
    explaining that “[t]he custody status assigned to a prisoner is based on . . . the
    classification process”).
    68
    Hertz v. Macomber, 
    297 P.3d 150
    , 157 (Alaska 2013) (discussing McGinnis
    v. Stevens, 
    543 P.2d 1221
    , 1237 (Alaska 1975)).
    -21-                                      7616
    to the community.”69 Although this sounds rehabilitative, so does the stated policy of
    DOC’s classification program:
    Prisoners shall be classified to the least restrictive custody
    level based on the assessment of behavioral risk factors,
    supervision needs, rehabilitative needs, and institutional
    behavior. . . . The classification process shall identify
    prisoners’ rehabilitative and reentry requirements that
    promote public safety and provides for the responsible
    reformation and reintegration of offenders.[70]
    In fact, almost every DOC program or policy ultimately serves the constitutional goals
    of protecting the public and reforming the offender.71 Yet we have held that not every
    DOC policy implicates the right to rehabilitation.72 The fact that a correctional program
    or policy has an ultimate purpose of ensuring that offenders may successfully reenter
    society does not mean that a program is a formal rehabilitative program in which the
    offender has a protected interest in continued participation.
    Consider also electronic monitoring’s work requirement. The requirement
    that prisoners serving a sentence on electronic monitoring maintain employment or
    pursue education unless granted an exception is comparable to the rule that prisoners
    serving a sentence within a correctional facility must work when ordered to and may be
    69
    DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 818.10: SENTENCED ELECTRONIC
    MONITORING; see supra note 4.
    70
    DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 700.01: PRISONER CLASSIFICATION.
    71
    Alaska Const. art. I, § 12 (“Criminal administration shall be based upon . . .
    the need for protecting the public . . . and the principle of reformation.”).
    72
    See, e.g., Hertz, 297 P.3d at 157-58 (“[O]nce in DOC custody, the
    ‘decisions of prison authorities relating to classification of prisoners are completely
    administrative matters regarding which the inmate has no due process rights . . . .’ ”
    (quoting McGinnis, 543 P.2d at 1237)).
    -22-                                       7616
    punished for refusing to do so.73 Under DOC policies, employment within a correction
    facility includes “academic and vocational education.”74 So the requirement to obtain
    employment or education is not unique to electronic monitoring, but applies generally
    to prisoners across the board. And although our decisions have distinguished between
    work outside a prison through the Correctional Industries Program and jobs inside a
    prison, the feature that distinguished the two for purposes of the right to rehabilitation
    was that “jobs within the prison entail no formal training program, specified objectives,
    or stated rehabilitative components” and “are not part of any rehabilitative program.”75
    We have not been provided any evidence suggesting that the requirement to obtain
    education or employment while on electronic monitoring includes any formal training
    program or stated rehabilitative components. Thus we cannot conclude that there is a
    rehabilitative aspect of the electronic monitoring program’s work requirement that is
    distinct from the work requirements applicable to all prisoners.
    Finally, the electronic monitoring program resembles an extension, in many
    respects, of the in-custody classification system. DOC must consider a prisoner’s
    prospects for rehabilitation for both in-custody classification and release on electronic
    73
    AS 33.30.191(c) (“A prisoner who refuses to participate in productive
    employment inside a correctional facility when directed under this section is subject to
    disciplinary sanctions imposed in accordance with regulations adopted by the
    commissioner.”); DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 812.10: PRISONER EMPLOYMENT
    (1995), https://doc.alaska.gov/pnp/pdf/812.10.pdf (same).
    74
    DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 812.10: PRISONER EMPLOYMENT
    (“[P]roductive employment includes . . . academic and vocational education.”).
    75
    Moody v. State, Dep’t of Corr., No. S-12303, 
    2007 WL 3197938
    , at *2
    (Alaska Oct. 31, 2007).
    -23-                                      7616
    monitoring.76 Classification at a particular custody level and release on electronic
    monitoring both require prisoners to follow a host of rules and restrictions on movement
    that simultaneously protect others and promote orderly behavior.77 Although release on
    electronic monitoring facilitates contact with family that is important to rehabilitation,
    prisoners at all custody levels are allowed visitation with family and community
    members.78 And in both cases, visits are subject to approval from DOC.79 In short, the
    electronic monitoring program is comparable to a custody classification; the difference
    is largely in the degree of freedom. Electronic monitoring, by allowing the prisoner to
    live outside of prison, is essentially the least restrictive form of custody, apart from being
    released on parole (which does not typically entail the use of electronic monitoring
    equipment). Although electronic monitoring affords the prisoner the opportunity to
    76
    Compare AS 33.30.065(b)(2) (requiring DOC to consider, in deciding
    whether to allow prisoner to serve sentence on electronic monitoring, “the prospects for
    the prisoner’s rehabilitation”), with DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 700.01: PRISONER
    CLASSIFICATION (requiring DOC to “identify prisoners’ rehabilitative and reentry
    requirements that promote public safety and provides for the responsible reformation and
    reintegration of offenders” and to classify prisoner at least restrictive custody level based
    on assessment of “rehabilitative needs” among other factors).
    77
    For example, prisoners released on electronic monitoring must obtain prior
    approval from DOC before having visits from friends, family members, or associates at
    the prisoner’s residence; “remain in [the] approved residence at all times, except for
    those hours approved by the [electronic monitoring] officers to fulfill employment,
    school/training, medical/treatment programs, and/or special authorized leave”; not
    consume or possess alcoholic beverages or controlled substances; and submit to a search
    of prisoner’s person, property, residence, or vehicle upon request by DOC staff. DOC,
    POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 818.10b: SENTENCED ELECTRONIC MONITORING.
    78
    DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 810.02: VISITATION (2013), https://doc.
    alaska.gov/pnp/pdf/810.02.pdf.
    79
    See id.; DOC, POLICIES            AND   PROCEDURES 818.10b:           SENTENCED
    ELECTRONIC MONITORING.
    -24-                                        7616
    engage in rehabilitative programming (just like prisoners confined in a correctional
    facility), we have not been presented with evidence that the electronic monitoring
    program directly targets specific problems that cause criminal behavior. Therefore the
    electronic monitoring program, in its current form, is not a formal rehabilitative program
    to which a liberty interest attaches.
    c.     Removal from electronic monitoring does not
    substantially impair a prisoner’s access to rehabilitative
    opportunities.
    Removal from a formal rehabilitative program is not the only DOC action
    that implicates the constitutional right to rehabilitation. In Brandon we held that a
    prisoner had the right to appeal DOC’s classification decision, which entailed
    transferring him to a facility in Arizona, because that move could substantially impair his
    ability to have visitation — and thus his rehabilitation.80 Although our decision in
    Brandon did not address the issue of visitation in detail, it seems clear that what animated
    the decision was the likelihood that transfer to a prison in Arizona would make it
    practically impossible for the inmate to receive visits from family with any frequency,
    if ever.81 In other words, transfer to an Arizona prison practically meant the loss of
    visitation. In Larson, by contrast, we held that reasonable limits on contact visitation did
    not implicate the right to rehabilitation.82 Likewise, in Antenor we ruled that the denial
    of particular educational materials did not implicate the constitutional right to
    80
    Brandon v. State, Dep’t of Corr., 
    938 P.2d 1029
    , 1032 (Alaska 1997).
    81
    See id. at 1030 (noting prisoner’s argument that “transfer [to Arizona]
    interferes with [prisoner’s] rehabilitation because his family will not be able to visit him
    in Arizona”); see also id. at 1032 n.2 (“[V]isitation privileges are a component of the
    constitutional right to rehabilitation . . . .”).
    82
    Larson v. Cooper, 
    90 P.3d 125
    , 133-34 (Alaska 2004).
    -25-                                       7616
    rehabilitation because the prisoner had been afforded other educational materials and
    opportunities.83 Yet that decision also implied that the denial of “all rehabilitative
    opportunities” — or even the denial of all rehabilitative opportunities respecting the
    relevant problem— would implicate the constitutional right to rehabilitation.84 Together
    these decisions suggest that DOC actions implicate the constitutional right to
    rehabilitation, triggering judicial review, if they substantially impair or deny a prisoner’s
    access to rehabilitative opportunities like vocational training, education, treatment for
    addiction, or visitation.
    DOC argues that Stefano’s removal from electronic monitoring did not
    infringe his right to rehabilitation because there are other rehabilitative opportunities
    available to prisoners in custody. For example, DOC points out that there are
    opportunities for employment and substance abuse treatment in prison. Some prisoners
    may even be eligible to pursue those opportunities in a community setting while
    remaining incarcerated.85 And prisoners may maintain contact with family through
    visitation.86 In light of these opportunities available to prisoners in custody, DOC argues,
    removal from electronic monitoring does not substantially impair a prisoner’s access to
    rehabilitative opportunities.
    83
    Antenor v. State, Dep’t of Corr., 
    462 P.3d 1
    , 19 (Alaska 2020).
    84
    
    Id.
    85
    DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 812.10: PRISONER EMPLOYMENT
    (permitting minimum custody prisoners to obtain work and education outside
    correctional facility).
    86
    DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 810.02: VISITATION.
    -26-                                       7616
    We agree with DOC. DOC makes various educational, vocational, and
    other rehabilitative programs available to in-custody prisoners.87 Although prisoners
    who live with family when released on electronic monitoring clearly will have more
    opportunity for contact with those family members,88 DOC’s visitation rules for in-
    custody prisoners provide the opportunity for rehabilitative contact with family through
    visitation. Rehabilitative opportunities may well be more available to inmates outside
    the prison walls than within. But because prisoners have some access to education,
    vocational training, employment, treatment for addiction, and visitation while housed in
    a correctional facility (including some opportunity to obtain these rehabilitative programs
    outside the facility),89 removal from electronic monitoring does not implicate the
    constitutional right to rehabilitation.
    2.     A prisoner released on electronic monitoring has a liberty
    interest protected by the Alaska Constitution that cannot be
    taken away without some measure of due process.
    As noted above, the salient difference between serving a sentence on
    electronic monitoring and serving a sentence in a correctional facility is the degree of
    87
    Our analysis rests on DOC’s Policies and Procedures indicating that these
    opportunities are available to inmates within the prison walls. If rehabilitative
    opportunities are not actually available, that would present a different issue under the
    constitutional right to rehabilitation.
    88
    It is worth noting, however, that a prisoner released on electronic
    monitoring must obtain prior approval before having visits from family members at the
    prisoner’s residence.
    89
    E.g., DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 812.10: PRISONER EMPLOYMENT
    (allowing for “[w]ork [o]utside the [i]nstitution [p]erimeter”); 
    id.
     (“[E]mployment
    includes . . . academic and vocational education . . . .”); DOC, POLICIES AND
    PROCEDURES 807.10: SPECIAL HEALTH CARE PROGRAMS (1986), https://doc.
    alaska.gov/pnp/pdf/807.10.pdf (“Detox and withdrawal . . . treatment outside the
    institution may be prescribed.”).
    -27-                                      7616
    freedom afforded to the prisoner. That difference raises the question of whether a
    prisoner has a true liberty interest protected by the due process guarantee — rather than
    a rehabilitation-based liberty interest90 — in continuing to serve a sentence on electronic
    monitoring.
    Parole, in which a prisoner has an undisputed liberty interest,91 provides a
    helpful comparison in assessing a prisoner’s liberty interest in serving a sentence on
    electronic monitoring. Like electronic monitoring, parole gives prisoners freedom they
    would not otherwise have in confinement. The U.S. Supreme Court recognized the value
    of a parolee’s freedom in Morrissey v. Brewer.92 The Court emphasized that “[t]he
    liberty of a parolee enables him to do a wide range of things open to persons who have
    never been convicted of any crime.”93 The parolee “can be gainfully employed and is
    90
    The due process clause provides that “[n]o person shall be deprived
    of . . . liberty . . . without due process of law.” Alaska Const. art. I, § 7. As discussed
    above, the right to rehabilitation is a liberty interest protected by the due process clause.
    So too is the constitutional right to freedom from confinement. See, e.g., Morrissey v.
    Brewer, 
    408 U.S. 471
    , 482-84, 489 (1972) (discussing parolee’s protected liberty interest
    under federal due process clause in remaining out of confinement); Brandon v. State,
    Dep’t of Corr., 
    73 P.3d 1230
    , 1234 (Alaska 2003) (noting that due process guarantee of
    Alaska Constitution applies more broadly than that of its federal counterpart).
    91
    Bailey v. State, Dep’t of Corr., Bd. of Parole, 
    224 P.3d 111
    , 116 (Alaska
    2010) (“Even though parolees enjoy fewer rights than the general population, ‘under
    both the United States and Alaska Constitutions, a parolee may not be deprived of his
    limited liberty without due process of law.’ ” (quoting Paul v. State, 
    560 P.2d 754
    , 756
    (Alaska 1977))); McCracken v. Corey, 
    612 P.2d 990
    , 992 (Alaska 1980) (“It is clear that
    the parolee is entitled to certain due process rights at a parole revocation hearing,
    including the ‘opportunity to be heard in person and to present witnesses and
    documentary evidence.’ ” (quoting Morrissey, 
    408 U.S. at 489
    )).
    92
    
    408 U.S. at 482
    .
    93
    
    Id.
    -28-                                       7616
    free to be with family and friends and to form the other enduring attachments of normal
    life.”94 “Though the State properly subjects him to many restrictions not applicable to
    other citizens, his condition is very different from that of confinement in a prison.”95
    And because a parolee “may have been on parole for a number of years and may be
    living a relatively normal life at the time he is faced with revocation,”96 revocation
    “inflicts a ‘grievous loss’ on the parolee and often on others.”97 In light of those
    consequences, and because “the liberty of a parolee . . . includes many of the core values
    of unqualified liberty,” the Court concluded that “the [parolee’s] liberty is valuable and
    must be seen as within the protection of the Fourteenth Amendment.”98
    Much of that analysis applies with equal force to a prisoner serving a
    sentence on electronic monitoring. Serving the remainder of one’s sentence on electronic
    monitoring is, in a practical sense, very much akin to serving the remainder of one’s
    sentence on parole. A prisoner on electronic monitoring enjoys significantly greater
    freedom than in confinement. Although electronic monitoring places restrictions on
    prisoners, the restrictions are largely similar to those placed on parolees.99 Revoking the
    94
    
    Id.
    95
    
    Id.
    96
    
    Id.
    97
    
    Id.
    98
    
    Id.
    99
    The “Electronic Monitoring Terms And Conditions” that Stefano signed
    required him to, for instance, “obey all state, federal, and local laws . . . and court
    orders”; “only reside in [the] approved residence”; refrain from having any “non­
    employment-related, non-reentry related contact with a convicted felon” or “offenders
    who are under any kind of DOC supervision without the permission of [electronic
    (continued...)
    -29-                                      7616
    freedoms that accompany electronic monitoring inflicts great loss, much like revoking
    the freedoms that accompany parole. The due process protections that safeguard the
    valuable liberty of a parolee should logically extend to the valuable liberty of a prisoner
    released on electronic monitoring.
    There are two potential hurdles to recognizing that a prisoner has a liberty
    interest in continuing to serve a sentence on electronic monitoring: the legislature’s
    statement that a decision by DOC to place a prisoner on electronic monitoring “does not
    create a liberty interest in that status for the prisoner”;100 and our own decision in Diaz
    99
    (...continued)
    monitoring] officers”; and “not possess any firearms, ammunition, explosives, or deadly
    weapons.” Statutorily mandated conditions of parole require parolees to comply with
    all laws and court orders, to receive approval to change residences, to refrain from
    contacting felons without permission, and to refrain from possessing any firearms.
    AS 33.16.150.
    We also note that the criteria for whether to release an inmate on electronic
    monitoring and discretionary parole involve comparable considerations. Compare
    AS 33.16.100(a) (authorizing Parole Board to consider, in deciding whether to grant
    discretionary parole, whether “(1) the prisoner will live and remain at liberty without
    violating any laws or conditions imposed by the board; (2) the prisoner’s rehabilitation
    and reintegration into society will be furthered by release on parole; (3) the prisoner will
    not pose a threat of harm to the public if released on parole; and (4) release of the
    prisoner on parole would not diminish the seriousness of the crime”), with
    AS 33.30.065(b) (authorizing DOC to consider, in deciding whether to release prisoner
    on electronic monitoring, “safeguards to the public”; “the prospects for the prisoner’s
    rehabilitation”; “the nature and circumstances of the offense for which the prisoner was
    sentenced or for which the prisoner is serving a period of temporary commitment”; “the
    needs of the prisoner”; “the record of convictions of the prisoner”; and “the use of drugs
    or alcohol by the prisoner”).
    100
    AS 33.30.065(c).
    -30-                                       7616
    v. State, Department of Corrections, holding that release on electronic monitoring did
    not create a protected liberty interest under the federal constitution.101
    Although statements of legislative intent are generally entitled to great
    weight, the particular intent expressed here does not dictate the scope of Alaska’s
    Constitution. The legislature’s statement indicates it did not wish electronic monitoring
    decisions to be subject to the constitutional guarantee of due process. Yet it is ultimately
    not for the legislature to delineate the protections of Alaska’s Constitution. If the
    electronic monitoring program is structured in a way that affords a measure of liberty that
    our Constitution protects, the legislature cannot simply declare otherwise and override
    those constitutional protections with a statement of intent.102 Indeed, DOC does not
    argue that this proviso means that electronic monitoring implicates no constitutional
    rights, and DOC’s implicit concession on this point is well taken.
    As for Diaz, our decision pertained to the federal constitution only; we did
    not directly address the Alaska Constitution. The prisoner in that case had sued
    individual correctional officers under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    ,103 claiming among other things
    that their decision to remove her from electronic monitoring without a hearing violated
    her Fourteenth Amendment right to due process.104 In applying the federal due process
    framework, we cited Sandin v. Conner for the proposition that “[t]he point at which
    101
    
    239 P.3d 723
    , 725 (Alaska 2010).
    102
    See Alaska Pub. Int. Rsch. Grp. v. State, 
    167 P.3d 27
    , 43 (Alaska 2007)
    (“The judiciary alone among the branches of government is charged with interpreting the
    law.”), see also supra note 54.
    103
    Section 1983 provides individuals with a federal cause of action for money
    damages when a person acting “under color of” state law deprives them of any federal
    “rights, privileges, or immunities.”
    104
    Diaz, 239 P.3d at 725-27.
    -31-                                       7616
    restraints on a convicted prisoner’s freedomimplicate a federal-constitution-based liberty
    interest requiring due process of law is when her freedom is restrained in excess of her
    sentence in an unexpected manner.”105 We reasoned that under the federal constitution
    “due process requirements apply to parole revocations if a parolee returned to prison
    does not receive credit against her sentence for time spent subject to the conditions of
    parole.”106 We then contrasted parole with electronic monitoring, where time served is
    credited towards the sentence.107 Because removal from electronic monitoring entails
    return to a correctional facility without prolonging the sentence, we concluded that
    removal did not meet Sandin’s standard of “restraint exceeding the sentence in an
    unexpected manner.”108
    We also recognized in Diaz that the Fourteenth Amendment protects some
    liberty interests created by state law.109 The prisoner argued that removal from electronic
    monitoring “deprived her of her [state-created] liberty interest in rehabilitation.”110
    Because Diaz involved a suit under Section 1983, which provides a cause of action for
    violations of federal law, we considered the due process protections of the federal
    105
    Id. at 730 (citing Sandin v. Conner, 
    515 U.S. 472
    , 484 (1995)). Sandin
    involved a prisoner who was placed in disciplinary segregation for 30 days. 
    515 U.S. at 475-77
    .
    106
    Diaz, 239 P.3d at 730 (citing Morrissey v. Brewer, 
    408 U.S. 471
    , 480-82
    (1972)).
    107
    
    Id.
    108
    
    Id.
     at 730 n.33; see Sandin, 
    515 U.S. at 484
    .
    109
    Diaz, 239 P.3d at 730-31.
    110
    Id. at 731.
    -32-                                      7616
    constitution only.111 We again applied the standard articulated in Sandin, under which
    “the only state-created liberty interests protected by the Fourteenth Amendment are those
    in freedom from restraints which ‘impos[e] atypical and significant hardship on the
    inmate in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life.’ ”112 Because removal from
    electronic monitoring would only return the prisoner to “ordinary prison life” rather than
    to atypical hardship, we held that the Sandin standard had not been met; the Fourteenth
    Amendment did not protect the prisoner’s rehabilitation-based liberty interest.113
    We therefore had no occasion in Diaz to consider whether electronic
    monitoring creates liberty interests protected by the Alaska Constitution.114 And the
    Alaska Constitution affords prisoners more expansive protection than the Fourteenth
    Amendment, so Sandin’s framework is not a helpful guide to this question.115 We
    therefore consider whether the electronic monitoring program confers on prisoners a
    liberty interest protected by the due process guarantee of the Alaska Constitution.116
    111
    Id. at 731 n.44.
    112
    Id. at 731 (alteration in original) (quoting Sandin, 
    515 U.S. at 484
    ).
    113
    Id. at 731-32.
    114
    Id. at 731 n.44.
    115
    See Brandon v. State, Dep’t of Corr., 
    73 P.3d 1230
    , 1234 (Alaska 2003)
    (“[W]e have interpreted the due process guarantee under the Alaska Constitution more
    broadly than the United States Supreme Court has interpreted the identical provision of
    the United States Constitution.”); 
    id.
     (describing “parameters of state constitutional due
    process rights to be afforded to prisoners in disciplinary proceedings” under Alaska
    Constitution and explaining that the United States Supreme Court set “much narrower”
    parameters under the federal Constitution in Sandin).
    116
    In applying the Sandin standard, the Diaz decision focused on the fact that
    time spent on electronic monitoring is credited to the prisoner’s sentence, so that removal
    (continued...)
    -33-                                        7616
    As noted above, much of the Supreme Court’s explanation for why there
    is a protected liberty interest in parole applies with equal force to electronic monitoring.
    Although a prisoner on electronic monitoring is subject to restrictions, the prisoner lives
    in conditions “very different from that of confinement in a prison” and is able to live
    “with family and friends and to form the other enduring attachments of normal life.”117
    The First Circuit Court of Appeals observed, in ruling that prisoners serving a sentence
    on electronic monitoring have a protected liberty interest in that status, that electronic
    monitoring “allow[s] the appellees to live with their loved ones, form relationships with
    neighbors, lay down roots in their community, and reside in a dwelling of their own
    choosing (albeit subject to certain limitations) rather than in a cell designated by the
    government.”118 And although prisoners on electronic monitoring are subject to many
    116
    (...continued)
    from electronic monitoring does not prolong the sentence (unlike revocation of parole).
    239 P.3d at 730. Yet Diaz acknowledged that the U.S. Supreme Court subsequently held
    federal due process attached to Oklahoma’s pre-parole program — even though time
    spent on pre-parole was credited to the sentence. Id. at 730 n.34 (citing Young v. Harper,
    
    520 U.S. 143
    , 144-45 (1997)). Following Young, courts have held that removal from
    electronic monitoring implicates federal due process even when time is credited, albeit
    without directly addressing the point. González-Fuentes v. Molina, 
    607 F.3d 864
    , 890
    (1st Cir. 2010), following first appeal Rivera-Feliciano v. Acevedo-Vilá, 
    438 F.3d 50
    , 57
    (1st Cir. 2006) (discussing that state would “give credit for . . . time served in the
    [electronic surveillance program]”); Cox v. State, 
    706 N.E.2d 547
    , 548-50 (Ind. 1999);
    see In re McNeal, 
    994 P.2d 890
    , 893-98 (Wash. App. 2000).
    In any event whether time spent on parole or electronic monitoring is
    credited is not dispositive under Alaska’s due process clause, which affords more
    protection than the federal due process clause under Sandin. Brandon, 73 P.3d at 1234.
    117
    Morrissey v. Brewer, 
    408 U.S. 471
    , 482 (1972).
    118
    González-Fuentes, 
    607 F.3d at 887
     (observing that prisoner litigants were
    “living with either close relatives, significant others, or spouses, and in many cases with
    (continued...)
    -34-                                       7616
    restrictions, “[i]mplicit in the system’s concern with . . . violations is the notion that the
    [prisoner] is entitled to retain his liberty as long as he substantially abides by the
    conditions” set forth by DOC.119
    Taking this liberty away from the prisoner and remanding him to a
    correctional facility “inflicts a ‘grievous loss’ on the [prisoner] and often on others.”120
    According to Stefano, his removal from electronic monitoring resulted in separation from
    his wife and family; the loss of his job and the good faith of his employer; a large
    arrearage on his monthly rent; default on phone, insurance, and credit card bills he was
    suddenly unable to pay; and inability to care for his special-needs dog. These kinds of
    losses and setbacks will be common when a prisoner serving a sentence on electronic
    monitoring is returned to custody. Releasing a prisoner on electronic monitoring invites
    — and in fact requires — the prisoner to re-establish bonds with free society.121 Severing
    those bonds by returning the prisoner to custody results in a loss of freedom only
    somewhat less severe than placing the prisoner in custody in the first place. That
    freedom, like the freedom of a parolee, is a liberty interest protected by the Alaska
    Constitution’s due process guarantee — even though the same interest may not be
    protected by the federal constitution under the Sandin standard.
    Courts in other jurisdictions have similarly distinguished the Sandin
    standard and applied a different framework to electronic monitoring and comparable
    118
    (...continued)
    children”).
    119
    See Morrissey, 
    408 U.S. at 479
    .
    120
    See 
    id. at 482
    .
    121
    See DOC, POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 818.10: SENTENCED ELECTRONIC
    MONITORING (2020), https://doc.alaska.gov/pnp/p df/818.10.pdf.
    -35-                                        7616
    programs. The First Circuit, for example, recognized the value in comparing conditional
    release “with the liberty interest in parole as characterized by Morrissey.”122 The court
    then conceived of “a spectrum of liberty that extends from the ‘ordinary incidents of
    prison life’ at its lowest end to parole at its highest” and concluded that different legal
    standards apply at each end of the spectrum:
    When the challenged action concerns what can be fairly
    described as the transfer of an individual from one
    imprisonment to another, Sandin’s “atypical hardship”
    standard remains our lodestar; when, on the other hand, it
    concerns the disqualification of an individual from a
    supervised release program that begins to more closely
    resemble parole, Young and Morrissey will form part of the
    guiding constellation. The upshot is that in cases in which an
    individual is not incarcerated in prison, the extent of his
    existing liberty within the relevant program — and not just
    the extent of his reduced liberty in a challenged placement —
    must be taken into account.[123]
    That court viewed release on electronic monitoring as “sufficiently similar to traditional
    parole . . . to merit protection” under the federal due process clause.124 Other courts have
    likewise concluded that release on electronic monitoring or community custody
    programs confers on a prisoner a liberty interest that is protected by due process, even
    under the federal constitution.125
    122
    González-Fuentes, 
    607 F.3d at 887
     (quoting Holcomb v. Lykens, 
    337 F.3d 217
    , 221 (2d Cir. 2003)).
    123
    Id. at 889.
    124
    Id. at 890.
    125
    See McBride v. Cahoone, 
    820 F. Supp. 2d 623
    , 631 (E.D. Pa. 2011)
    (holding prisoner has constitutionally protected liberty interest in serving sentence on
    electronically monitored home confinement instead of prison: “[C]ourts . . . readily
    (continued...)
    -36-                                       7616
    In Young v. Harper the U.S. Supreme Court applied Morrissey’s holding
    to Oklahoma’s “pre-parole” program, explaining that the “minor difference” between the
    state’s system of parole and its system of pre-parole did not “alter the fundamentally
    parole-like nature of the” latter system.126 The same logic applies here. Because of the
    substantial similarity between release on parole and release on electronic monitoring
    described above, we conclude that a prisoner released on electronic monitoring has a
    liberty interest protected by the due process guarantee of the Alaska Constitution.127
    B.     DOC’s Decision In This Case Was Not The Product Of An
    Adjudicative Proceeding Producing A Record Adequate For Appellate
    Review.
    Showing that the challenged DOC decision implicates a fundamental
    constitutional right is not enough to establish appellate jurisdiction. Stefano must also
    125
    (...continued)
    acknowledge the existence of a constitutionally-significant difference between living at
    home, even with restrictions, and serving a sentence in institutional confinement.”
    (emphasis omitted)); Sallier v. Makowski, No. 00-10254-BC, 
    2002 WL 31772020
    , at *8
    (E.D. Mich. Nov. 6, 2002) (concluding that placement of inmate on home confinement
    under electronic monitoring “is the functional equivalent of parole” so that removal from
    program triggers due process under Morrissey v. Brewer); In re McNeal, 
    994 P.2d 890
    ,
    894-98 (Wash. App. 2000) (distinguishing between inmate disciplinary hearings and
    community custody revocations in holding that due process protections apply to
    revocations of community custody because it is similar to parole); Cox v. State, 
    706 N.E.2d 547
    , 549-50 & n.5 (Ind. 1999) (holding that due process protections applicable
    to probation revocation apply upon revocation of defendant’s placement in community
    corrections program entailing “residential and work release, electronic monitoring, day
    treatment, or day reporting”).
    126
    
    520 U.S. 143
    , 152 (1997).
    127
    That is not to say that the processes outlined in statute for a parole
    revocation hearing necessarily apply to removal from electronic monitoring, and we
    express no opinion on what process must be provided.
    -37-                                     7616
    show that the DOC decision was the result of an adjudicative proceeding that produced
    a record adequate for judicial review.128 We conclude that the challenged decision does
    not satisfy this requirement.
    We first address a threshold issue: which proceeding and records are we
    to consider? The superior court concluded that Stefano’s disciplinary proceeding,
    culminating in the hearing on July 30, could be the basis for appellate review of the
    electronic monitoring decision. Amicus curiae Public Defender Agency concurs in that
    approach, arguing that the transcript of the disciplinary hearing and associated
    documents “constituted a sufficient adjudicative record for review on appeal with regard
    to Stefano’s [electronic monitoring] claim.” DOC counters that the decision to terminate
    Stefano from electronic monitoring and the decision to discipline him for refusing to
    follow an order from staff are two separate decisions resting on different grounds and
    resulting from distinct processes. DOC has the better argument.
    First, the decision to terminate Stefano from electronic monitoring was
    made before the disciplinary hearing even took place. Stefano was terminated from
    electronic monitoring in the incident report dated July 17, appealed his electronic
    monitoring termination on July 19, and requested a classification hearing regarding his
    termination on July 22 — all before he even received notice of the disciplinary hearing
    on July 23. Stefano’s electronic monitoring appeal was then denied on July 24, six days
    before the disciplinary hearing on July 30.       The administrative proceeding that
    culminated in the hearing on July 30 could not have been the process that yielded the
    final decision on his removal from electronic monitoring six days earlier.
    Second, the two decisions were justified on different grounds. The
    disciplinary decision was based solely on Stefano’s contact with his brother Connor; the
    128
    Welton v. State, Dep’t of Corr., 
    315 P.3d 1196
    , 1198 (Alaska 2014).
    -38-                                     7616
    decision to remove Stefano from electronic monitoring was based on a wider range of
    factors. The incident report explaining Stefano’s removal from electronic monitoring
    referred explicitly to “the totality of the situation” stemming from the domestic violence
    arrest and referred to Stefano’s wife’s statements to police and the subsequent phone
    calls between Stefano and his wife. The superior court found that the language in the
    incident report “indicates conclusively that Stefano’s contact with Connor was not the
    sole basis for his dismissal from the [electronic monitoring] program.” By contrast, the
    hearing officer on July 30 repeatedly emphasized that the sole purpose of the disciplinary
    hearing was “to figure out . . . if [Stefano] violated these two conditions [of the program]
    by having [his] brother at [his] residence.” The hearing officer denied the admission of
    evidence that did not bear on this single question and refused to accept argument about
    the effect of the termination from electronic monitoring on Stefano’s rehabilitation.
    Because the two decisions rested on different grounds, the proceedings
    pertaining to the disciplinary proceeding cannot be the basis for appellate review of the
    electronic monitoring decision. For example, even if a reviewing court found no
    evidence that Stefano’s brother was at his house — the basis for the disciplinary decision
    — this conclusion would not negate the basis for the electronic monitoring decision,
    which rested on his arrest and the recordings in which Stefano allegedly pressured his
    wife to recant her accusations of domestic violence.
    The record of the electronic monitoring decision, considered alone, does
    not reflect an adjudicative proceeding and is not susceptible to meaningful appellate
    review. The “essential elements of adjudication” include:
    adequate notice to persons to be bound by the adjudication,
    the parties’ rights to present and rebut evidence and
    argument, a formulation of issues of law and fact in terms of
    specific parties and specific transactions, a rule of finality
    specifying the point in the proceeding when presentations end
    -39-                                       7616
    and a final decision is rendered, and any other procedural
    elements necessary for a conclusive determination of the
    matter in question.[129]
    We have also emphasized the importance of a “verbatim record of the proceedings” —
    in particular a recorded hearing — to “facilitate[] an administrative appeal.”130
    Stefano was terminated from electronic monitoring with few, if any, of
    these elements. A probation officer terminated Stefano’s participation in electronic
    monitoring upon concluding that Stefano’s behaviors were “inconsistent with the
    expectations, directives and Terms and Conditions of the [electronic monitoring]
    program.” The appeal process did not allow Stefano the opportunity to present and rebut
    evidence and argument, nor is there any indication that a burden of proof was employed.
    Rather, the probation officer determined that Stefano should be terminated from
    electronic monitoring based on the officer’s own evaluation of the totality of the
    circumstances.
    This process closely resembles the prisoner grievance process we deemed
    insufficient for appellate review in Welton v. State, Department of Corrections.131 As in
    that case, the process for removing Stefano from electronic monitoring lacked “several
    important hallmarks of an adjudication” and produced “only a paper record” that does
    not facilitate meaningful appellate review of DOC’s determination that Stefano’s conduct
    was inconsistent with the expectations of the electronic monitoring program.132
    129
    Brandon v. State, Dep’t of Corr., 
    938 P.2d 1029
    , 1032-33 (Alaska 1997).
    130
    Welton, 315 P.3d at 1199 (citing McGinnis v. Stevens, 
    543 P.2d 1221
    , 1236
    (Alaska 1975); Dep’t of Corr. v. Kraus, 
    759 P.2d 539
    , 540 (Alaska 1988)).
    131
    
    Id.
    132
    See id. at 1198-99 (“[T]he limited paper record produced by the DOC’s
    (continued...)
    -40-                                      7616
    Because Stefano was not terminated from electronic monitoring in an
    adjudicative proceeding producing a record sufficient for appellate review, his challenge
    to DOC’s decision does not fall within our precedent permitting appellate jurisdiction in
    the absence of statutory authority.
    C.     We Decline To Expand The Superior Court’s Appellate Jurisdiction.
    Amicus curiae Public Defender Agency argues that we should expand the
    superior court’s appellate jurisdiction to allow it to hear all claims that a DOC decision
    was rendered without minimal due process protections, regardless of whether an
    adjudicative record exists. The Agency suggests that the issues in such appeals —
    whether DOC’s decision implicates a fundamental constitutional right and whether it has
    afforded sufficient process to the prisoner — do not require an administrative record and
    are competently decided as matters of law. It contends that allowing appeals of this sort
    would eliminate procedural hurdles that come with filing a civil action in superior court,
    making litigation easier, quicker, and less expensive.
    We decline to broaden the existing jurisdictional exception. We are less
    confident than the Public Defender Agency that this proposed rule will be easily
    administrable. If we were to adopt the Agency’s rule, the superior court proceeding
    would turn on the nature of the prisoner’s legal theory: the court’s ability to hear the
    case would depend on whether the prisoner’s claim sounded in due process. But the
    nature of a prisoner’s challenge to a DOC decision — which will often be filed without
    the assistance of counsel — may not be readily apparent to the superior court at the
    outset. This approach would make uncertainty and procedural wrangling even more
    likely than under the current legal framework, where the action turns on the nature of
    132
    (...continued)
    informal grievance process is inadequate for appellate review, and the grievance process
    itself lacks several important hallmarks of an adjudication.”).
    -41-                                      7616
    DOC’s decision (which should be apparent from the initial paperwork). And a challenge
    to a DOC decision on both procedural grounds (the decision was the result of unfair
    process) and substantive grounds (the decision was wrong on the merits) would be
    subject to bifurcation, with the procedural challenge proceeding as an administrative
    appeal and the substantive challenge proceeding as a civil action.133 The additional
    complexity of expanding the jurisdictional exception is not warranted, as a prisoner may
    challenge an alleged violation of constitutional rights with an original action in superior
    court.134
    Because our precedents do not permit Stefano’s challenge to his removal
    from electronic monitoring to be heard as an administrative appeal, he must pursue this
    challenge as a civil action in superior court.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    That portion of the superior court’s decision pertaining to removal from
    electronic monitoring is VACATED. We REMAND to the superior court to allow
    Stefano to convert his appeal to an original action.
    133
    The Public Defender Agency counters that this bifurcation is no worse than
    the bifurcation that would result from holding that Stefano’s electronic monitoring claim
    cannot be heard as an administrative appeal even though his disciplinary claim may. We
    disagree. Stefano is challenging two distinct decisions; requiring these challenges to
    proceed along different paths is not unnatural or cumbersome. Challenging the same
    decision in two different proceedings is a far more convoluted process.
    134
    See Owen v. Matsumoto, 
    859 P.2d 1308
    , 1310 (Alaska 1993) (“Any alleged
    violation of fundamental constitutional rights must be afforded judicial review.
    However, Owen has not shown that review by administrative appeal is the proper avenue
    for judicial review of an alleged miscalculation of his sentence.”).
    -42-                                      7616