Damous Nettles v. Randy Grounds , 830 F.3d 922 ( 2016 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    DAMOUS D. NETTLES,                    No. 12-16935
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    D.C. No.
    v.                 1:11-cv-01201-AWI-JLT
    RANDY GROUNDS, Warden,
    Respondent-Appellee.                 OPINION
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of California
    Anthony W. Ishii, Senior District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted En Banc March 22, 2016
    San Francisco, California
    Filed July 26, 2016
    Before: Sidney R. Thomas, Chief Judge and William A.
    Fletcher, Marsha S. Berzon, Johnnie B. Rawlinson, Richard
    R. Clifton, Consuelo M. Callahan, Sandra S. Ikuta,
    N. Randy Smith, Mary H. Murguia, Jacqueline H. Nguyen
    and Andrew D. Hurwitz, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Ikuta;
    Partial Concurrence by Judge Hurwitz;
    Dissent by Judge Berzon
    2                     NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    SUMMARY*
    Habeas Corpus / Prisoner Civil Rights
    The en banc court vacated the district court’s dismissal of
    a matter, brought as a habeas corpus petition by a California
    state prisoner serving a life sentence, challenging a
    disciplinary violation on constitutional grounds and claiming
    that the failure to expunge this violation from his record
    could affect his eligibility for parole.
    The en banc court held that a 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     action is
    the exclusive vehicle for claims brought by state prisoners
    that are not within “the core of habeas corpus.” Preiser v.
    Rodriguez, 
    411 U.S. 475
    , 487 (1973). In so holding, the en
    banc court overruled Docken v. Chase, 
    393 F.3d 1024
     (9th
    Cir. 2004), and Bostic v. Carlson, 
    884 F.2d 1267
     (9th Cir.
    1989), to the extent they are inconsistent with this rule.
    The en banc court held that the prisoner’s claim does not
    fall within “the core of habeas corpus” because success on the
    claim would not necessarily lead to immediate or speedier
    release since the expungement of the challenged disciplinary
    violation would not necessarily lead to a grant of parole.
    The en banc court joined sister circuits in holding that a
    district court may construe a petition for habeas corpus to
    plead a cause of action under § 1983 after notifying and
    obtaining informed consent from the prisoner.
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                      3
    The panel remanded for further proceedings.
    Concurring in part, Judge Hurwitz joined Parts I, II(A),
    III, and IV of Judge Ikuta’s opinion. He wrote that Skinner
    v. Switzer, 
    562 U.S. 521
     (2011), is an unambiguous
    indication of the Supreme Court’s view on the issue in this
    case, and that parsing the language or history of 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
     is unnecessary.
    Judge Berzon dissented. She wrote that the majority’s
    response – that if the prisoner were successful on his claim,
    it “would not necessarily lead to his immediate or earlier
    release from confinement,” because the parole board could
    deny him parole even without considering the disciplinary
    proceeding at issue – flouts this court’s normal approach to
    alleged violations of procedural rights and is inconsistent
    with the statutes and precedents governing petitions for
    habeas corpus.
    COUNSEL
    John P. Balazs (argued), Sacramento, California; Monica
    Knox, Assistant Federal Defender; Heather Williams, Federal
    Defender; Office of the Federal Defender, Sacramento,
    California; for Petitioner-Appellant.
    Phillip J. Lindsay (argued), Supervising Deputy Attorney
    General; Jennifer A. Neill, Senior Assistant Attorney
    General; Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General of California;
    Office of the Attorney General, Sacramento, California; for
    Respondent-Appellee.
    4                   NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    OPINION
    IKUTA, Circuit Judge:
    Damous Nettles, a prisoner serving a life sentence in
    California prison, appeals the district court’s dismissal of his
    habeas petition for lack of jurisdiction. The petition
    challenged a disciplinary violation on constitutional grounds
    and claimed that the failure to expunge this violation from his
    record could affect his eligibility for parole. We conclude
    that because Nettles’s claim does not fall within the “core of
    habeas corpus,” Preiser v. Rodriguez, 
    411 U.S. 475
    , 487
    (1973), it must be brought, if at all, under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    .
    I
    In 1990, Nettles was convicted in California of attempted
    first degree murder with the use of a firearm and other
    offenses. The victim was a woman who had filed a complaint
    against Nettles’s brother. In order to prevent her from
    testifying, Nettles took the victim down an alley, ordered her
    onto her hands and knees, and told her “You’re not going to
    testify against my brother. I’m going to kill you.” Nettles
    then shot her twice in the left ear and left her in the alley.
    The victim did not die, but was seriously injured and
    disfigured.
    Nettles was convicted for attempted murder and
    dissuading and conspiring to dissuade a witness from
    attending or giving testimony at trial. He was sentenced to
    prison for a determinate term of twelve years and a life term
    with the possibility of parole.
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                              5
    Under California law, prisoners with life terms like
    Nettles may not be released before their minimum eligible
    parole date (MEPD). 
    Cal. Penal Code § 3041
    (a)(4). One
    year before a prisoner’s MEPD, a panel of the Board of
    Parole Hearings will meet with the prisoner and determine if
    the prisoner is suitable for parole. 
    Id.
     § 3041(a)(2). “[A] life
    prisoner shall be found unsuitable for and denied parole if in
    the judgment of the panel the prisoner will pose an
    unreasonable risk of danger to society if released from
    prison.” 
    Cal. Code Regs. tit. 15, § 2281
    (a). In determining
    the prisoner’s suitability for parole, the panel must consider
    “all relevant” information, 
    id.
     § 2281(b), including
    disciplinary actions received during imprisonment. If the
    prisoner is suitable for parole and has reached the MEPD, the
    prisoner is entitled to release. 
    Cal. Penal Code § 3041
    (a).1 If
    the panel determines that the prisoner is unsuitable for parole,
    the Board of Parole Hearings will schedule a future hearing
    that could take place from three to fifteen years after the
    previous hearing, as directed by statutory criteria. 
    Id.
    § 3041.5(b)(3). Once every three years, an inmate may
    request the board to exercise its discretion to accelerate the
    next hearing. Id. § 3041.5(d).
    An initial parole consideration hearing for Nettles was
    held in 2004 after the presiding parole commissioner
    determined that Nettles’ MEPD was October 19, 2005.
    Before that hearing, prison staff had issued some thirty-nine
    rules violations reports to Nettles. These reports are issued
    for misconduct that “is believed to be a violation of law or is
    1
    Before state law changed on January 1, 2016, a prisoner’s post-
    conviction credits were a factor in determining the date the prisoner was
    entitled to release. 
    Cal. Penal Code § 3041
    (a) (2015). This is no longer
    the case.
    6                      NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    not minor in nature.” 
    Cal. Code Regs. tit. 15, § 3312
    (a)(3).
    Nettles also received numerous citations for lesser types of
    misconduct. See 
    id.
     § 3312(a)(2). At Nettles’s initial parole
    hearing in 2004, the Board of Prison Terms (now the Board
    of Parole Hearings, or Board)2 deemed Nettles to be
    unsuitable for parole. It scheduled the next parole suitability
    hearing for 2006, but the date was postponed several times.
    After 2004, Nettles received seven additional rules
    violations reports. On February 26, 2008, staff issued Nettles
    a rules violation report for threatening to stab a corrections
    officer. After an investigation of the incident and a hearing,
    Nettles was found guilty and given a four-month term in the
    segregated housing unit. He also lost thirty days of post-
    conviction credit.
    On July 30, 2009, the Board convened a second parole
    suitability hearing for Nettles. At the hearing, the presiding
    commissioner first described the facts of Nettles’s crime of
    conviction, characterizing it as “one of the most atrocious and
    cruel acts I’ve read” and stating that Nettles’s motive was
    “ridiculously heinous.” The commissioner then reviewed
    Nettles’s prior criminal history. Nettles had a long string of
    convictions beginning at age seventeen and had been in and
    out of prison for offenses including possession of drugs,
    assault with a deadly weapon, battery on a peace officer, and
    robbery. Nettles was on parole for the robbery conviction
    when he committed the attempted murder for which he was
    sentenced to life imprisonment. The commissioner stated that
    2
    At the time of the hearing, the Board was referred to as the Board of
    Prison Terms. This entity was replaced by the Board of Parole Hearings
    in 2005. See Cal. Gov’t Code § 12838.4.
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                        7
    Nettles’s lengthy criminal history illustrated his inability to
    learn from prior incarcerations.
    The commissioner next explained the hearing panel’s
    concerns about Nettles’s mental state and attitude about the
    crime. In the hearing panel’s view, Nettles’s letter to the
    victim did not express true remorse. Further, Nettles had not
    taken responsibility for his conduct and lacked insight that
    would enable him to change his behavior. The commissioner
    discussed a May 2007 psychological report, which gave
    Nettles “a rating of overall moderate likelihood to become
    involved in a violent offense if released.” Finally, the
    commissioner stated that Nettles was argumentative and
    stubborn, “challenge[d] authority at every given opportunity,”
    and refused to restrain himself, as evidenced by his numerous
    rules violations. The commissioner noted the forty-six rules
    violation reports that had been issued to Nettles while he was
    in prison. Nettles “continued to display negative behavior
    while incarcerated,” and as a result was placed in segregated
    housing. Moreover, Nettles had not taken any significant
    steps to gain skills to function outside of prison.
    Nevertheless, a deputy commissioner noted some positive
    steps Nettles had taken, including a slight reduction in the
    number of rules violations reports issued to Nettles in recent
    years.
    The panel of the Board of Parole Hearings concluded that
    Nettles was unsuitable for parole because he “still pose[d] an
    unreasonable risk of danger if released from prison.” This
    finding was “based on weighing the considerations provided
    in the California Code of Regulations.” As authorized by the
    regulations, the commissioner made recommendations
    regarding “what steps may be undertaken to enhance the
    possibility of a grant of parole at a future hearing,” Cal. Code
    8                      NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    Regs. tit. 15, § 2304, telling Nettles that “[f]or next time, you
    certainly need to become and remain disciplinary free.”
    On January 23, 2009, Nettles filed a habeas petition in the
    state trial court claiming, in relevant part, that the 2008 rules
    violation report was illegal and that the disciplinary
    proceedings held in connection with the 2008 rules violation
    report violated his due process rights. The court denied the
    petition, concluding that Nettles failed to exhaust his
    administrative remedies concerning these claims.3 The
    California Court of Appeal and California Supreme Court
    then summarily denied the petition.
    On June 10, 2011, Nettles filed a habeas petition in
    federal court seeking expungement of the February 26, 2008
    rules violation report and “restoration of good time,”
    presumably referring to the loss of thirty days of post-
    conviction credits as a result of the 2008 disciplinary
    decision. After being ordered to respond, the state moved to
    dismiss the petition, arguing that the court lacked jurisdiction
    to entertain the petition because the 2008 disciplinary
    decision did not impact the fact or duration of Nettles’s
    confinement and so was not cognizable in habeas. Nettles
    opposed the motion, arguing that the disciplinary decision
    impacted the duration of his confinement because it delayed
    his parole hearing and constituted grounds for future denial
    of parole.
    The district court dismissed Nettles’s petition, holding
    that he could not show that expungement of the 2008 rules
    3
    As the state acknowledges, it did not argue to the district court that
    Nettles’s claim was procedurally barred. Nor does the state raise this issue
    on appeal. Therefore, we do not address it.
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                        9
    violation report was likely to accelerate his eligibility for
    parole. Nettles timely appealed the district court’s decision.
    We review de novo a district court’s decision to deny a
    petition for habeas corpus. Bailey v. Hill, 
    599 F.3d 976
    , 978
    (9th Cir. 2010). We also review de novo a district court’s
    determination that it does not have jurisdiction over a habeas
    corpus petition. 
    Id.
    II
    The Supreme Court has recognized that “[f]ederal law
    opens two main avenues to relief on complaints related to
    imprisonment: a petition for habeas corpus, 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    ,
    and a complaint under the Civil Rights Act of 1871 . . .
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    .” Muhammad v. Close, 
    540 U.S. 749
    , 750
    (2004) (per curiam). “Challenges to the validity of any
    confinement or to particulars affecting its duration are the
    province of habeas corpus; requests for relief turning on
    circumstances of confinement may be presented in a § 1983
    action.” Id. (internal citation omitted). The Court has long
    held that habeas is the exclusive vehicle for claims brought by
    state prisoners that fall within the core of habeas, and such
    claims may not be brought in a § 1983 action. See, e.g.,
    Wilkinson v. Dotson, 
    544 U.S. 74
    , 81–82 (2005)
    (characterizing the Court’s precedents as holding “that a state
    prisoner’s § 1983 action is barred (absent prior
    invalidation)—no matter the relief sought (damages or
    equitable relief), no matter the target of the prisoner’s suit
    (state conduct leading to conviction or internal prison
    proceedings)—if success in that action would necessarily
    demonstrate the invalidity of confinement or its duration”).
    Based on our review of the development of the Court’s case
    law in this area, we now adopt the correlative rule that a
    10                 NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    § 1983 action is the exclusive vehicle for claims brought by
    state prisoners that are not within the core of habeas corpus.
    A
    The Supreme Court first addressed the scope of § 1983
    vis-a-vis the scope of habeas in the leading case of Preiser v.
    Rodriguez, 
    411 U.S. 475
     (1973). In Preiser, state prisoners
    who had lost good-time credits as a result of disciplinary
    proceedings brought an action under § 1983 for restoration of
    the credits on the ground that the proceedings violated their
    due process rights. Id. at 476–77. The prisoners would have
    been entitled to immediate release from prison if their good-
    time credits had been restored, and the Court therefore
    concluded that habeas was the exclusive remedy for these
    claims. Id. at 500. Although “the literal terms of § 1983
    might seem to cover” claims that a prisoner’s confinement
    violated the Constitution, id. at 489, the language of the
    habeas statute is more specific, and the writ’s history makes
    clear that it traditionally “has been accepted as the specific
    instrument to obtain release from [unlawful] confinement,”
    id. at 486. Further, “habeas corpus actions require a
    petitioner fully to exhaust state remedies, which § 1983 does
    not.” Wilkinson, 
    544 U.S. at
    79 (citing Preiser, 
    411 U.S. at
    490–91). Based on “[t]hese considerations of linguistic
    specificity, history, and comity,” the Court concluded that
    Congress intended to make “an implicit exception from
    § 1983’s otherwise broad scope for actions that lie ‘within the
    core of habeas corpus.’” Id. (quoting Preiser, 
    411 U.S. at 487
    ). The claims at issue in Preiser, which would have
    resulted in immediate release if successful, fell within the
    core of habeas corpus and therefore had to be brought, if at
    all, in habeas. See 
    id.
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                       11
    In a series of cases after Preiser, the Supreme Court
    distinguished between different sorts of state prisoner claims,
    indicating which claims were in the “core of habeas corpus,”
    Preiser, 
    411 U.S. at 489
    , and thus could be brought only in a
    habeas petition, and which claims fell outside that core and
    could be brought in a § 1983 action. In Wolff v. McDonnell,
    the Court considered a § 1983 class action brought by state
    prisoners challenging prison rules, practices, and procedures
    and seeking restoration of good-time credits, injunctive relief,
    and damages. 
    418 U.S. 539
    , 542–44 (1974). The Court held
    that the plaintiffs’ claims for restoration of good-time credits
    were in the core of habeas and therefore outside the scope of
    § 1983. Id. at 554. By contrast, claims challenging a prison’s
    “procedures for depriving prisoners of good-time credits” and
    seeking damages or a prospective injunction—claims which
    would not necessarily lead to an earlier release—could be
    brought in a § 1983 action. Id. at 554 (emphasis added).
    In Heck v. Humphrey, a state prisoner brought a § 1983
    action for compensatory and punitive money damages against
    state officials who had allegedly engaged in unconstitutional
    procedures in their investigation and handling of evidence.
    
    512 U.S. 477
    , 478–79 (1994). Analogizing the prisoner’s
    § 1983 action to the common-law cause of action for
    malicious prosecution, id. at 484, the Court held that a
    plaintiff could not bring a § 1983 action “that necessarily
    require[d] the plaintiff to prove the unlawfulness of his
    conviction or confinement,” id. at 486. To bring such an
    action, the plaintiff would first have to prove that the
    conviction or sentence was eliminated, including “by a
    federal court’s issuance of a writ of habeas corpus.” Id. at
    486–87. By contrast, an action that, “even if successful, will
    not demonstrate the invalidity of any outstanding criminal
    judgment” falls within § 1983’s scope. Id. at 487. This
    12                     NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    favorable termination rule polices “the intersection of the two
    most fertile sources of federal-court prisoner litigation—
    [§ 1983], and the federal habeas corpus statute,” id. at 480, by
    ensuring that a court cannot address a § 1983 claim if doing
    so would require it to first resolve a claim that falls within the
    core of habeas corpus.
    In Edwards v. Balisok, the Court held that a state
    prisoner’s challenge under § 1983 that “would necessarily
    imply the invalidity of the disciplinary hearing and the
    resulting [deprivation of good-time credits]” fell within
    habeas’s exclusive domain and was barred by the rule in
    Heck, while a claim seeking an injunction barring future
    unconstitutional procedures was within the scope of § 1983
    action. 
    520 U.S. 641
    , 644, 648 (1997). The court later
    clarified, in Muhammad v. Close, that such challenges to
    disciplinary proceedings are barred by Heck only if the
    § 1983 action would be “seeking a judgment at odds with [the
    prisoner’s] conviction or with the State’s calculation of time
    to be served.” 
    540 U.S. at
    754–55. If the invalidity of the
    disciplinary proceedings, and therefore the restoration of
    good-time credits, would not necessarily affect the length of
    time to be served, then the claim falls outside the core of
    habeas and may be brought in § 1983. See id.4
    4
    According to the dissent, Balisok held that Heck bars a prisoner from
    bringing a § 1983 claim to challenge the procedures used in a disciplinary
    hearing, even if the claim would not necessarily affect the prisoner’s
    sentence. Dissent at 35–36. But Muhammad rejected this “mistaken
    view” that Heck applies to “all suits challenging prison disciplinary
    proceedings,” and clarified that Heck applies only to administrative
    determinations that “necessarily” have an effect on “the duration of time
    to be served.” 
    540 U.S. at
    754–55; see also Wilkerson v. Wheeler,
    
    772 F.3d 834
    , 840 (9th Cir. 2014) (holding that after Balisok, Muhammad
    clarified that Heck does not bar a § 1983 claim that “threatens no
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                            13
    In this series of cases, the Court made clear that habeas is
    the exclusive vehicle for claims brought by state prisoners
    that fall within the core of habeas and that such claims may
    not be brought under § 1983, but the Court did not have
    occasion to address the question whether § 1983 was the
    exclusive vehicle for claims outside the core of habeas. In
    subsequent cases, the Court began suggesting that § 1983 was
    the sole remedy for such claims. See, e.g., Muhammad,
    
    540 U.S. at
    754–55. In Muhammad, the Supreme Court
    limited the applicability of Heck by holding that a state
    prisoner was entitled to challenge administrative
    determinations that did not “raise any implication about the
    validity of the underlying conviction” or “necessarily” affect
    “the duration of time to be served” under § 1983 because
    such a challenge “raised no claim on which habeas relief
    could have been granted on any recognized theory.” Id. In
    other words, Muhammad suggested, without holding, that the
    scope of habeas is limited to claims in the core of habeas and
    does not extend to a claim that does not necessarily challenge
    the validity or duration of the underlying conviction or
    sentence.
    This suggestion that § 1983 and habeas are mutually
    exclusive vehicles for prisoner claims appeared again in
    Wilkinson v. Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at 82
    . In Dotson, state
    prisoners brought a § 1983 action to challenge the state’s
    practice of applying new parole procedures retroactively. Id.
    at 76–77. Like earlier cases that had distinguished between
    state prisoner claims that were in the “core of habeas,” and
    thus could be brought only in a habeas petition, and those
    which could be brought in a § 1983 action, Dotson concluded
    consequence for [an inmate’s] conviction or the duration of [his or her
    sentence]”).
    14                  NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    that habeas was the exclusive vehicle for state prisoner claims
    where “success in that action would necessarily demonstrate
    the invalidity of confinement or its duration.” Id. at 82. But
    a § 1983 action would lie where success on a claim means
    only that a prisoner will be eligible for parole review, “which
    at most will speed consideration of a new parole application.”
    Id. In rejecting the dissent’s argument that habeas was
    available for challenges to parole procedures and therefore
    provided the exclusive vehicle for them, the Court suggested
    that habeas was available only for claims that seek
    “invalidation (in whole or in part) of the judgment
    authorizing the prisoner’s confinement.” Id. at 83. The
    concurring opinion in Dotson picked up this suggestion that
    habeas was available only for claims in the core of habeas,
    stating that it “would utterly sever the writ from its common-
    law roots” to hold that “the habeas statute authorizes federal
    courts to order relief that neither terminates custody,
    accelerates the future date of release from custody, nor
    reduces the level of custody.” Id. at 86 (Scalia, J.,
    concurring).
    Dotson’s suggestion that a § 1983 action is the exclusive
    vehicle for state prisoner claims that are not within the core
    of habeas was echoed more strongly in the Supreme Court’s
    most recent pronouncement on this issue, Skinner v. Switzer.
    
    562 U.S. 521
     (2011). There, a state prisoner moved in state
    court for DNA testing of certain crime scene evidence. 
    Id.
     at
    527–29. After the state court denied the motions, the prisoner
    brought a federal action for injunctive relief under § 1983,
    alleging a due process violation. Id. at 529. The district court
    dismissed the action on the ground that “postconviction
    requests for DNA evidence are cognizable only in habeas
    corpus, not under § 1983.” Id. The Court disagreed and
    indicated that the correct analysis was the exact opposite:
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                               15
    because an action for DNA testing was not within the core of
    habeas, it could be brought only in § 1983. Id. at 533–34,
    535 n.13. In reaching this conclusion, the Court relied first
    on the Dotson concurrence and its indication that habeas was
    available only for claims in the core of habeas corpus. “It
    suffices to point out that [the state] has found no case, nor has
    the dissent, in which the Court has recognized habeas as the
    sole remedy, or even an available one, where the relief sought
    would ‘neither terminat[e] custody, accelerat[e] the future
    date of release from custody, nor reduc[e] the level of
    custody.’” Id. at 534 (quoting Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at 86
     (Scalia,
    J., concurring)). Second, rejecting the state’s argument that
    a claim for DNA testing lay “at the core” of a criminal
    proceeding and had to be brought in habeas, the Court instead
    characterized its prior decision in Dotson as declaring “in no
    uncertain terms, that when a prisoner’s claim would not
    necessarily spell speedier release, that claim does not lie at
    “the core of habeas corpus,” and may be brought, if at all,
    under § 1983.” Id. at 535 n.13 (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Skinner also alluded to the existence of a firm line
    between habeas and § 1983, noting that the state’s argument
    “cannot be reconciled with the line our precedent currently
    draws” between habeas and § 1983, and suggested that the
    core of habeas defines the contours of that line. See id.5
    5
    While “courts originally confined habeas relief to orders requiring the
    petitioner’s unconditional release from custody,” we have recognized that
    “[i]n modern practice” courts may “employ a conditional order of release
    in appropriate circumstances, which orders the State to release the
    petitioner unless the State takes some remedial action, such as to retry (or
    resentence) the petitioner.” Harvest v. Castro, 
    531 F.3d 737
    , 741 (9th Cir.
    2008). Contrary to the dissent, see Dissent at 37, this modern practice is
    consistent with the standard for habeas relief noted in Dotson and Skinner,
    because “the prisoner who shows his sentencing was unconstitutional is
    actually entitled to release, because the judgment pursuant to which he is
    16                      NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    We read these statements as strongly suggesting that
    habeas is available only for state prisoner claims that lie at the
    core of habeas (and is the exclusive remedy for such claims),
    while § 1983 is the exclusive remedy for state prisoner claims
    that do not lie at the core of habeas. Although the Supreme
    Court has not provided an express ruling on the scope of
    habeas, “we afford ‘considered dicta from the Supreme Court
    . . . a weight that is greater than ordinary judicial dicta as
    prophecy of what the court might hold.’” Managed
    Pharmacy Care v. Sebelius, 
    716 F.3d 1235
    , 1246 (9th Cir.
    2013) (quoting United States v. Montero-Camargo, 
    208 F.3d 1122
    , 1132 n.17 (9th Cir. 2000) (en banc)); see also United
    States v. Baird, 
    85 F.3d 450
    , 453 (9th Cir. 1996) (“Although
    the Daniel construction . . . may be dictum, we treat Supreme
    Court dicta with due deference, and see no reason not to
    apply the Court’s construction in the case at bar.”).
    The dissent heavily relies on cases where prisoners in
    federal custody brought habeas petitions under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2241
     claiming that the Bureau of Prisons acted contrary to
    a federal statute that authorized it to shorten the sentence of
    a federal prisoner under certain circumstances. Dissent at
    33–34, 45–47. See, e.g., Rodriguez v. Copenhaver, — F.3d
    —, No. 14-16399, 
    2016 WL 3003423
    , at *4 (9th Cir. May 25,
    2016); Close v. Thomas, 
    653 F.3d 970
    , 973–74 (9th Cir.
    2011); Crickon v. Thomas, 
    579 F.3d 978
    , 982 (9th Cir. 2009).
    None of these cases addressed the scope of habeas relief
    available to federal prisoners under § 2241, and therefore they
    shed no light on the issue before us. Nor do the Supreme
    Court’s recent cases addressing the scope of habeas petitions
    confined has been invalidated; the conditional writ serves only to ‘delay
    the release . . . in order to provide the State an opportunity to correct the
    constitutional violation.’” Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at 86
     (Scalia, J., concurring).
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                               17
    vis-à-vis § 1983 involve the rights of federal prisoners. See,
    e.g., Skinner, 
    562 U.S. at 527
    ; Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at 82
    .
    Because the case before us involves a state prisoner’s action
    under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    , we need not address how the
    standard suggested in Skinner and adopted here applies to
    relief sought by prisoners in federal custody.6
    B
    Other factors support our adoption of the Supreme
    Court’s strong suggestion that a § 1983 action is the exclusive
    vehicle for claims that are not within the core of habeas.
    First, such a conclusion is consistent with the analytical
    framework in Preiser. In holding that § 1983 did not extend
    to claims within the core of habeas, Preiser put great weight
    on congressional intent in determining that Congress had
    amended the habeas statutes to require the “exhaustion of
    6
    Different rules apply to state and federal prisoners seeking relief. “The
    general rule is that a motion under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
     is the exclusive
    means by which a federal prisoner may test the legality of his detention,
    and that restrictions on the availability of a § 2255 motion cannot be
    avoided through a petition under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2241
    .” Stephens v. Herrera,
    
    464 F.3d 895
    , 897 (9th Cir. 2006) (internal citation omitted). By its terms,
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
     applies only to prisoners “claiming the right to be
    released” upon one of a few enumerated grounds. A federal prisoner may
    file a § 2241 petition “if, and only if, the remedy under § 2255 is
    inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of his detention” such as when
    a prisoner “(1) makes a claim of actual innocence, and (2) has not had an
    unobstructed procedural shot at presenting that claim.” Marrero v. Ives,
    
    682 F.3d 1190
    , 1192 (9th Cir. 2012) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    As a further distinction, § 1983 is generally unavailable to federal
    prisoners challenging prison conditions, but such prisoners may have
    recourse under Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents, 
    403 U.S. 388
    (1971) and the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA).
    18                      NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    adequate state remedies as a condition precedent to the
    invocation of federal judicial relief under those laws” as a
    way to further Congress’s policy goal of avoiding
    “unnecessary friction between the federal and state court
    systems.” 
    411 U.S. at
    489–91. The Court held that it should
    respect this congressional intent, 
    id.
     at 492 n.10, and that “[i]t
    would wholly frustrate explicit congressional intent to hold
    that the respondents in the present case could evade this
    requirement by the simple expedient of putting a different
    label on their pleadings,” 
    id.
     at 489–90.
    Just as Congress’s amendments to the habeas statute
    indicated an intent to make habeas the exclusive remedy for
    claims at the core of habeas, see 
    id.,
     Congress’s enactment of
    the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA), Pub. L. No. 104-
    134, 
    110 Stat. 1321
     (1996), indicated an intent to make
    § 1983 the exclusive remedy for “all inmate suits about prison
    life,” Porter v. Nussle, 
    534 U.S. 516
    , 532 (2002). The PLRA
    was intended “to promote administrative redress, filter out
    groundless claims, and foster better prepared litigation of
    claims aired in court.” 
    Id. at 528
    . Before the PLRA,
    plaintiffs pursuing actions under § 1983, including “[p]risoner
    suits alleging constitutional deprivations while incarcerated”
    did not have to “exhaust administrative remedies before filing
    suit in court.” Id. at 523 (citing Wilwording v. Swenson,
    
    404 U.S. 249
    , 251 (1971) (per curiam)). But Congress
    “enacted § 1997e(a) to reduce the quantity and improve the
    quality of prisoner suits” by requiring exhaustion of
    prisoners’ § 1983 claims. Id. at 524.7 Congress intended this
    7
    42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a), provides: “No action shall be brought with
    respect to prison conditions under section 1983 of this title, or any other
    Federal law, by a prisoner confined in any jail, prison, or other
    correctional facility until such administrative remedies as are available are
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                               19
    exhaustion requirement to have a broad scope: “[T]he
    PLRA’s exhaustion requirement applies to all inmate suits
    about prison life, whether they involve general circumstances
    or particular episodes, and whether they allege excessive
    force or some other wrong.” Id. at 532.
    Congress’s intent that state prisoners satisfy PLRA
    requirements for all § 1983 suits about prisoner life (other
    than claims at the core of habeas) suggests that Congress
    wanted § 1983 to be the exclusive vehicle for such claims.
    As in Preiser, “[i]t would wholly frustrate explicit
    congressional intent” to hold that prisoners could evade the
    requirements of the PLRA “by the simple expedient of
    putting a different label on their pleadings.” 
    411 U.S. at
    489–90.      Moreover, because Congress enacted the
    Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996
    (AEDPA), Pub L. No. 104-132, 
    110 Stat. 1214
    , at the same
    time as it enacted the PLRA, we infer that Congress did not
    intend to make § 1983 and habeas regimes interchangeable or
    overlapping. AEDPA added procedural requirements for
    prisoners bringing habeas corpus petitions that are separate
    and distinct from those imposed on § 1983 claims by the
    PLRA, see Woodford v. Ngo, 
    548 U.S. 81
    , 97 (2006),
    indicating an intent to make these regimes independent and
    mutually exclusive.8
    exhausted.”
    8
    The procedural requirements imposed by AEDPA and the PLRA are
    distinct in substantial respects. The PLRA attempts to “filter out
    nonmeritorious claims,” Jones v. Bock, 
    549 U.S. 199
    , 213 (2007), by
    requiring judicial screening of prisoner litigation, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1915
    (e), and
    depriving a prisoner of the right to file in forma pauperis if the prisoner
    incurs three “strikes,” defined as dismissals “on the grounds that [the
    claim] was frivolous, malicious, or fails to state a claim upon which relief
    20                     NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    In effect, these Congressional enactments channel
    prisoner litigation through the set of procedures that is best
    suited to address the type of prisoner grievance at issue.
    Many suits about prison conditions can be addressed
    effectively and speedily by correction officials through
    internal grievance procedures, which “might improve prison
    administration and satisfy the inmate, thereby obviating the
    need for litigation.” See, e.g., Porter, 
    534 U.S. at 525
    . And
    if such claims are not resolved by corrective action at the
    prison, “adjudication could be facilitated by an administrative
    record that clarifies the contours of the controversy.” 
    Id.
    Thus, a § 1983 action subject to the PLRA exhaustion
    requirements, which mandate that a prisoner first exhaust the
    prison’s administrative processes to the extent they are
    available, is the best means of addressing such claims. On
    the other hand, habeas corpus is the exclusive remedy to
    attack the legality of the conviction or sentence, and for these
    sorts of claims the exhaustion requirement gives a state court
    “an opportunity to correct its own constitutional errors”
    before a federal court orders release, thus respecting
    may be granted,” id. § 1915(g). AEDPA does not have any similar
    requirements. AEDPA and the PLRA also impose different exhaustion
    requirements. Under AEDPA, a state prisoner must pursue and exhaust
    all remedies available in state court before a federal court may entertain
    a petition, unless corrective process is unavailable in the state or is
    ineffective in protecting the prisoner’s rights. Id. § 2254(b)(1). Under the
    PLRA, by contrast, prisoners must exhaust state administrative remedies
    by filing a grievance within the state prison system unless administrative
    remedies are not “available,” but the plaintiff need not exhaust state
    judicial remedies before filing in federal court. Id. § 1997e(a); Woodford,
    
    548 U.S. at 85
    ; McBride v. Lopez, 
    807 F.3d 982
    , 986 (9th Cir. 2015).
    Furthermore, AEDPA bars second or successive petitions challenging the
    same state court judgment, with some narrow exceptions for claims that
    were not presented in the prior petition, see 
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (b), but the
    PLRA contains no analogous limitation.
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                           21
    traditional notions of federal-state comity. Preiser, 
    411 U.S. at 484
    , 490–91. Our holding that a § 1983 action is the
    exclusive vehicle for suits about prison life furthers
    Congress’s efforts to direct prisoner litigation to the
    appropriate procedural channel.
    C
    We are also persuaded to adopt the rule that habeas is
    available only for actions in the “core of habeas” because it
    has the benefits of clarity and administrability. Our pre-
    Skinner opinions addressing this issue struggled to draw a
    line between habeas and § 1983 actions, and we have not
    provided clear direction to state prisoners bringing such
    challenges or district courts addressing them. We have long
    held that prisoners may not challenge mere conditions of
    confinement in habeas corpus, see Crawford v. Bell, 
    599 F.2d 890
    , 891–92 (9th Cir. 1979),9 but we have reached
    inconsistent results in our efforts to delineate more precisely
    the claims which may not be brought in habeas. Thus, while
    we stated in Ramirez v. Galaza that a prisoner could not bring
    a habeas petition to seek expungement of a disciplinary
    charge where “a successful challenge to a prison condition
    will not necessarily shorten the prisoner’s sentence,”
    
    334 F.3d 850
    , 859 (9th Cir. 2003) (emphasis added), we
    subsequently stated, inconsistently, that prisoners could bring
    claims in a habeas petition “challenging aspects of their
    9
    The Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and Tenth Circuits have reached the same
    conclusion. See Luedtke v. Berkebile, 
    704 F.3d 465
    , 465–66 (6th Cir.
    2013); Glaus v. Anderson, 
    408 F.3d 382
    , 386 (7th Cir. 2005); Carson v.
    Johnson, 
    112 F.3d 818
    , 820–21 (5th Cir. 1997); McIntosh v. U.S. Parole
    Comm’n, 
    115 F.3d 809
    , 811–12 (10th Cir. 1997). But see Aamer v.
    Obama, 
    742 F.3d 1023
    , 1031–32 (D.C. Cir. 2014).
    22                     NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    parole review” so long as success on the claims “could
    potentially affect the duration of their confinement,” Docken
    v. Chase, 
    393 F.3d 1024
    , 1031 (9th Cir. 2004) (emphasis
    added); see also Bostic v. Carlson, 
    884 F.2d 1267
    , 1269 (9th
    Cir. 1989) (holding that a prisoner could bring a petition in
    habeas to seek relief from various disciplinary decisions that
    resulted in “forfeiture of statutory good time or segregation
    from the general prison population,” where the relief was for
    “expungement of the incident from his disciplinary record” so
    long as such “expungement is likely to accelerate the
    prisoner’s eligibility for parole.” (emphasis added)).
    By contrast, Skinner’s core-of-habeas standard is a well-
    tested one that does not require the sort of probabilistic
    analysis found in some of our prior precedent, such as
    whether success on a claim would be “likely” to lead to an
    earlier release, Bostic, 
    884 F.2d at 1269
    , or “could potentially
    affect the duration of their confinement,” Docken, 
    393 F.3d at 1031
     (emphasis added). The standard suggested in Skinner
    does not require us to guess at the discretionary decisions of
    state officials in order to determine whether an action sounds
    in habeas or § 1983, and which prerequisites must be met.
    And it follows Skinner’s suggestion “that habeas might not
    even be available for ‘probabilistic’ claims.” Davis v. U.S.
    Sentencing Comm’n, 
    716 F.3d 660
    , 665 (D.C. Cir. 2013).10
    This rule will likewise give needed clarity to state prisoners.
    If the prisoner’s claim challenges the fact or duration of the
    conviction or sentence, compliance with AEDPA is
    10
    The dissent cites to Fifth, Sixth and D.C. Circuit cases holding that
    “there is some degree of permissible overlap between § 1983 and habeas,”
    Dissent at 43, but each was decided before Skinner suggested a different
    standard. Davis is the only out-of-circuit case to date to consider
    Skinner’s suggestion regarding the scope of habeas relief.
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                               23
    mandated, while if the claim challenges any other aspect of
    prison life, the prisoner must comply with the PLRA.11
    Accordingly, we now resolve the inconsistency in our
    case law and adopt the Supreme Court’s suggestion that if a
    state prisoner’s claim does not lie at “the core of habeas
    corpus,” Preiser, 
    411 U.S. at 487
    , it may not be brought in
    habeas corpus but must be brought, “if at all,” under § 1983,
    Skinner, 
    562 U.S. at
    535 n.13. We therefore overrule Docken
    v. Chase, 
    393 F.3d 1024
    , and Bostic v. Carlson, 
    884 F.2d 1267
    , to the extent they are inconsistent with this rule.
    III
    We now apply this standard to Nettles’s federal habeas
    petition, which challenged the disciplinary proceedings held
    in connection with the 2008 rules violation report. Nettles
    argues that his claims affect the duration of his sentence
    because if he succeeded in expunging his 2008 rules violation
    report, the Board would more likely set his next parole
    hearing at an earlier date, 
    Cal. Penal Code § 3041.5
    (b)(4), and
    would be more likely to give him a favorable parole ruling.12
    11
    The dissent suggests that this rule deprives petitioners of a remedy for
    procedural violations. See Dissent at 33. To the contrary, our holding
    channels prisoner claims through the appropriate procedures, rather than
    foreclosing relief. Thus, if a state prisoner’s success in challenging a
    procedural violation would necessarily result in immediate or speedier
    release from custody, the prisoner’s claim would sound in habeas, while
    a state prisoner could challenge other procedural violations by bringing an
    action under § 1983.
    12
    Nettles also argued that once granted parole, the panel’s calculation
    of the time he must serve before release will necessarily be affected by the
    reinstated postconviction credits. But after January 1, 2016, the effective
    date of the new law, the panel no longer calculates a release date, making
    24                    NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    We disagree. Success on the merits of Nettles’s claim
    would not necessarily lead to immediate or speedier release
    because the expungement of the challenged disciplinary
    violation would not necessarily lead to a grant of parole.
    Under California law, the parole board must consider “[a]ll
    relevant, reliable information” in determining suitability for
    parole. 
    Cal. Code Regs. tit. 15, § 2281
    (b). A rules violation
    is merely one of the factors shedding light on whether a
    prisoner “constitutes a current threat to public safety,” In re
    Lawrence, 
    190 P.3d 535
    , 553 (Cal. 2008). Because the parole
    board has the authority to deny parole “on the basis of any of
    the grounds presently available to it,” Ramirez, 
    334 F.3d at 859
    , the presence of a disciplinary infraction does not
    compel the denial of parole, nor does an absence of an
    infraction compel the grant of parole.
    Here, the panel of the Board of Parole Hearings
    considered a range of relevant factors bearing on Nettles’s
    future dangerousness, including his inability to learn from
    prior imprisonments, his lack of insight and remorse
    regarding his crimes, and his argumentative and stubborn
    attitude. The presiding commissioner discussed at great
    length the factors that led him to conclude that Nettles was
    not suitable for parole, including the heinous nature of
    Nettles’s crime of conviction, a psychological report on
    Nettles, and Nettles’s attitude. While the presiding
    commissioner did note the multiple rules violations reports
    issued to Nettles, his remarks gave no indication that
    Nettles’s 2008 violation report was an important, let alone
    determinative, factor in his decision.
    this argument no longer relevant. See 
    Cal. Penal Code § 3041
    (a).
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                       25
    Under California law and the circumstances of Nettles’s
    case, the panel could deny parole to Nettles even if he
    succeeded in expunging the 2008 rules violation report.
    Furthermore, since the decision to grant an earlier release
    date on the basis of new information is placed in the
    discretion of the parole board, 
    Cal. Penal Code § 3041.5
    (d)(1), success on Nettles’s claim would not even
    necessarily lead to an earlier parole hearing.
    Because success on Nettles’s claims would not
    necessarily lead to his immediate or earlier release from
    confinement, Nettles’s claim does not fall within “the core of
    habeas corpus,” Skinner, 
    562 U.S. at
    535 n.13, and he must
    instead bring his claim under § 1983.
    IV
    Although Nettles’s claims are not cognizable in habeas,
    we must still consider whether the district court may construe
    Nettles’s habeas petition as pleading a cause of action under
    § 1983.
    The Supreme Court has long held that habeas petitions
    “may . . . be read to plead causes of action under [§ 1983]”
    and that prisoners bringing the wrong action are “entitled to
    have their actions treated as claims for relief under the Civil
    Rights Acts.” Wilwording, 
    404 U.S. at 251
    . The Seventh and
    Eighth Circuits have also concluded that under certain
    circumstances, a court may convert a habeas petition into a
    civil rights claim under § 1983 or Bivens v. Six Unknown
    Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics, 
    403 U.S. 388
    (1971). See Spencer v. Haynes, 
    774 F.3d 467
    , 471 (8th Cir.
    2014) (stating that habeas petitions can be recharacterized as
    § 1983 or Bivens actions); Robinson v. Sherrod, 
    631 F.3d 26
                      NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    839, 841 (7th Cir. 2011) (same); Glaus v. Anderson, 
    408 F.3d 382
    , 388 (7th Cir. 2005) (stating that such recharacterization
    is not “utterly out of the question”).
    The rule in Wilwording, however, was developed long
    before the enactment of the PLRA, during a time when a
    court could allow a pro se litigant to replead a habeas claim
    as a § 1983 claim or merely ignore the error in pleading.
    Glaus, 
    408 F.3d at 388
    . After the PLRA became effective, “a
    habeas corpus action and a prisoner civil rights suit differ in
    a variety of respects—such as the proper defendant, filing
    fees, the means of collecting them, and restrictions on future
    filings—that may make recharacterization impossible or, if
    possible, disadvantageous to the prisoner compared to a
    dismissal without prejudice of his petition for habeas corpus.”
    Robinson, 631 F.3d at 841; see also Glaus, 
    408 F.3d at 388
    (noting that recharacterizing a prisoner’s action as a civil
    rights action may make it subject to the PLRA’s three-strikes
    rule and different exhaustion requirements, as well as
    requiring the complaint to name a different defendant, such
    as the individual official responsible for the wrong rather than
    the warden).
    In the reverse situation, where a district court
    recharacterized a pro se litigant’s civil rights claim as a
    habeas petition, the Supreme Court warned courts to avoid a
    recharacterization that disadvantaged a petitioner by, for
    example, subjecting the petitioner to restrictions on second or
    successive habeas petitions. Castro v. United States,
    
    540 U.S. 375
    , 382–83 (2003). Accordingly, Castro held that
    before recharacterizing a civil rights claim, a district court
    must “notify the pro se litigant that it intends to
    recharacterize the pleading, warn the litigant that this
    recharacterization means that any subsequent § 2255 motion
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                         27
    will be subject to the restrictions on ‘second or successive’
    motions, and provide the litigant an opportunity to withdraw
    the motion or to amend it so that it contains all the § 2255
    claims he believes he has.” Id. at 383; see also United States
    v. Seesing, 
    234 F.3d 456
    , 464 (9th Cir. 2000) (holding that a
    court should not recharacterize a prisoner’s pro se filing as a
    federal habeas petition when doing so would be to the
    prisoner’s disadvantage).
    We agree with the Seventh Circuit that “the same logic
    should apply to the potential conversion of a habeas corpus
    petition into a civil rights claim.” Glaus, 
    408 F.3d at 388
    . “If
    the complaint is amenable to conversion on its face, meaning
    that it names the correct defendants and seeks the correct
    relief, the court may recharacterize the petition so long as it
    warns the pro se litigant of the consequences of the
    conversion and provides an opportunity for the litigant to
    withdraw or amend his or her complaint.” Id.; see also
    Robinson, 631 F.3d at 841 (warning district courts “not to
    recharacterize a prisoner’s petition for habeas corpus as a
    prisoner civil rights complaint without his informed
    consent”); Spencer, 774 F.3d at 471 (“[T]he better practice
    will be for district courts to first obtain the consent of the pro
    se individual before converting their claims from a habeas
    proceeding to a Bivens action.”).
    Joining our sister circuits, we hold that a district court
    may construe a petition for habeas corpus to plead a cause of
    action under § 1983 after notifying and obtaining informed
    consent from the prisoner. Accordingly, we vacate the
    district court’s dismissal of this matter and remand it to the
    district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    VACATED AND REMANDED.
    28                  NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    HURWITZ, Circuit Judge, concurring in part:
    Until 2011, the Supreme Court had not yet spoken clearly
    on the issue reserved in Preiser v. Rodriguez: the availability
    of habeas corpus relief “as an alternative remedy to a proper
    action under § 1983.” 
    411 U.S. 475
    , 500 (1973). But, things
    have changed.
    In Wilkinson v. Dotson, the Court confirmed that a suit
    under42U.S.C. § 1983 “will not lie when a stateprisoner
    challenges the fact orduration of his confinement, and seeks
    either immediate release from prison, or the shortening of his
    term of confinement.” 
    544 U.S. 74
    , 79 (2005) (citations and
    quotation marks omitted). As in Preiser, the Dotson majority
    did not address whether 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
     habeas corpus
    jurisdiction is confined to such challenges, contenting itself
    to find that the respondents’ claims fell outside the “implicit
    habeas exception” and were cognizable under § 1983. Id. at
    82. But, Justice Scalia’s concurrence squarely addressed the
    issue now before us. He contended that allowing suits like
    the one before us today to proceed under § 2254 “would
    require us to broaden the scope of habeas relief beyond
    recognition.” Id. at 85 (Scalia, J., concurring). Justice Scalia
    perceived a bright-line test for habeas jurisdiction:
    It is one thing to say that permissible habeas
    relief, as our cases interpret the statute,
    includes ordering a quantum change in the
    level of custody, such as release from
    incarceration to parole. It is quite another to
    say that the habeas statute authorizes federal
    courts to order relief that neither terminates
    custody, accelerates the future date of release
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                       29
    from custody, nor reduces the level          of
    custody.
    Id. at 86 (citation and quotation marks omitted). Expanding
    habeas jurisdiction to cover such claims, Justice Scalia
    warned, “would utterly sever the writ from its common-law
    roots.” Id.
    Until 2011, Justice Scalia’s concurrence (joined by Justice
    Thomas) was simply the view of two Justices on an
    undecided issue. But, then came Skinner v. Switzer, 
    562 U.S. 521
     (2011). That case, likePreiser and Dotson,involved the
    scope of § 1983 jurisdiction; the Court concluded that a
    prisoner claiming a denial of due process because of the
    state’s refusal to give him access to DNA samples could seek
    relief under the civil rights statute. Id. at 534. But, in
    explaining that decision, the six-Justice Skinner majority
    expressly rejected the respondent District Attorney’s
    argument (adopted by the three dissenters) that “Skinner’s
    request for DNA testing must be pursued, if at all, in an
    application for habeas corpus, not in a § 1983 action.” Id.
    Most importantly for today’s purposes, the Court did so by
    citing Justice Scalia’s Dotson concurrence with approval:
    It suffices to point out that Switzer has found
    no case, nor has the dissent, in which the
    Court has recognized habeas as the sole
    remedy, or even an available one, where the
    relief sought would “neither terminat[e]
    custody, accelerat[e] the future date of release
    from custody, nor reduc[e] the level of
    custody.” Dotson, 
    544 U.S., at 86
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 1242
     (Scalia, J., concurring).
    30                  NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added) (brackets in original). The Court later
    reinforced the point, again citing Justice Scalia’s concurrence
    with approval:
    Dotson declared, however, in no uncertain
    terms, that when a prisoner’s claim would not
    “necessarily spell speedier release,” that claim
    does not lie at “the core of habeas corpus,”
    and may be brought, if at all, under § 1983.
    
    544 U.S., at 82
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 1242
     (majority
    opinion) (internal quotation marks omitted);
    see 
    id.,
     at 85–86, 
    125 S. Ct. 1242
     (Scalia, J.,
    concurring).
    
    Id.
     at 535 n.13.
    I find Skinner an unambiguous indication of the Supreme
    Court’s view on the issue before us. The statements quoted
    above are, to be sure, technically dicta—the question before
    the Court was whether Skinner could bring a § 1983 claim,
    not a habeas petition. But, in rejecting the District Attorney’s
    contention that Skinner had a potential remedy in habeas
    alone, the Court expressly adopted the reasoning in Justice
    Scalia’s Dotson concurrence that § 2254 relief is limited to
    claims that would necessarily spell speedier release,
    accelerate future release from custody, or reduce the level of
    custody. Nettles does not pose such a claim.
    Supreme Court dicta as carefully considered as that in
    Skinner is special; it should be followed absent compelling
    reasons to the contrary. This case presents none. Were we
    engaged in an “Erie guess” today about how a state supreme
    court might decide an issue, we would not pause a moment
    in light of the kind of statements in Skinner. We should give
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                              31
    the Supreme Court similar deference in these circumstances;
    we best perform our duties as an Article III “inferior” court
    by not treating the carefully considered Skinner statements,
    consciously used to reject an argument that habeas was an
    available remedy, as idle musings.
    Were we approaching this matter on a clean slate,
    traditional principles of statutory construction might lead me
    to a different result. But we are not. Parsing the language or
    history of § 2254 is unnecessary to determine where the
    Supreme Court stands on the issue before us. I therefore join
    Parts I, II(A), III, and IV of Judge Ikuta’s opinion.
    BERZON, Circuit Judge, joined by THOMAS, Chief Judge,
    and FLETCHER, MURGUIA, and NGUYEN, Circuit Judges,
    dissenting:
    Damous Nettles was denied parole. He argues the parole
    board’s decision was based at least in part on a disciplinary
    proceeding in which he was denied due process. Today’s
    majority opinion responds that if Nettles were successful on
    his claim, it “would not necessarily lead to his immediate or
    earlier release from confinement,” because the parole board
    could deny him parole even without considering the
    disciplinary proceeding at issue. Pr. Op. at 25.1 The majority
    therefore holds that Nettles cannot seek a writ of habeas
    corpus. This response flouts our normal approach to alleged
    1
    Only some portions of Judge Ikuta’s opinion have the support of a
    majority of the en banc court. So it is the majority opinion in some
    respects and a plurality opinion in others. For clarity, I cite it in this
    dissent as the “Principal Opinion” (“Pr. Op.”).
    32                 NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    violations of procedural rights and is inconsistent with the
    statutes and precedent governing petitions for habeas corpus.
    I therefore respectfully dissent.
    I
    When the violation of a procedural right is alleged, the
    constitutional claim cannot be dismissed just by noting that
    the proceeding in question might have come out the same
    way absent the alleged violation. “[T]he right to procedural
    due process is ‘absolute’ in the sense that it does not depend
    upon the merits of a claimant’s substantive assertions . . . .”
    Carey v. Piphus, 
    435 U.S. 247
    , 266 (1978). In other words,
    the rights Nettles has going into a hearing may be invoked
    “whatever the ultimate outcome of [the] hearing” may be. 
    Id.
    (quoting Fuentes v. Shevin, 
    407 U.S. 67
    , 87 (1972)) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    This principle exists both to protect individual rights and
    to maintain the public good stemming from the scrupulous
    enforcement of impartial procedures. The individual right to
    a public trial, for instance, has long been “recognized as a
    safeguard against any attempt to employ our courts as
    instruments of persecution.” In re Oliver, 
    333 U.S. 257
    , 270
    (1948). The right to an opportunity to be heard in
    administrative hearings helps hold government officials
    accountable for their assertions. See Joint Anti-Fascist
    Refugee Comm. v. McGrath, 
    341 U.S. 123
    , 170–71 (1951).
    These systemic benefits would not accrue if the
    Constitution’s procedural safeguards were allowed to lapse
    where we thought it likely they would not affect the outcome
    of a hearing or trial. See Carey, 
    435 U.S. at 266
    .
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                       33
    The standard announced by today’s majority circumvents
    this basic facet of procedural justice. The majority opinion
    holds that habeas petitions are not available unless a
    claimant’s success “would necessarily demonstrate the
    invalidity of confinement or its duration.” Pr. Op. at 9–10
    (emphasis added) (internal quotations omitted). Where a
    claimant alleges a procedural violation, as Nettles does here,
    the majority uses the fact that the proceeding might have
    resulted in the same outcome anyway to close the door to
    habeas relief entirely.
    This approach, if taken seriously, will foreclose habeas
    relief on many procedural claims. Petitions for a writ of
    habeas corpus may be brought by those alleging they are “in
    custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of
    the United States.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2241
    (c)(3); see also
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (a). We regularly interpret this language to
    include prisoners who assert their confinement to be
    predicated on the violation of a procedural right, even if the
    proceeding in question might have come out the same way
    had constitutionally proper procedures been followed. See,
    e.g., Dixon v. Williams, 
    750 F.3d 1027
    , 1032 (9th Cir. 2014)
    (right to due process); United States v. Withers, 
    638 F.3d 1055
    , 1063 (9th Cir. 2011) (right to a public trial); Holley v.
    Yarborough, 
    568 F.3d 1091
    , 1098 (9th Cir. 2009) (right to
    confront witnesses); Bonin v. Calderon, 
    59 F.3d 815
    , 824 (9th
    Cir. 1995) (right to assistance of counsel); Campbell v.
    Blodgett, 
    978 F.2d 1502
    , 1508 (9th Cir. 1992) (right to be
    present during voir dire). The successful invocation of some
    procedural rights, like the right to effective assistance of
    counsel, may depend on an affirmative showing that the
    outcome of the proceeding in question was prejudiced in
    some way. See, e.g., Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    ,
    693 (1984). But it will almost always be the case that the
    34                 NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    proceeding could have resulted in the same outcome even
    absent the alleged defect.
    Just as the prisoners in the cited cases argued that they
    were in custody in violation of the law due to a trial
    prejudiced by procedural violations, Nettles argues he is in
    custody in violation of the law due to a parole hearing
    prejudiced by procedural violations. We have regularly heard
    post-conviction claims brought in habeas by prisoners even
    when the relief sought would not necessarily result in a
    speedier release.
    Earlier this year, for instance, in Rodriguez v.
    Copenhaver, we granted relief to a federal prisoner under
    § 2241 even though such relief “would not necessarily lead to
    his immediate or earlier release from confinement.” Pr. Op.
    at 25; see Rodriguez v. Copenhaver, __ F.3d __ , No. 14-
    16399, 
    2016 WL 3003423
     (9th Cir. May 25, 2016). In that
    case, Rodriguez contested the BOP’s rejection of his request
    to get credit applied to his sentence for time served in state
    custody. 
    Id. at *3
    . In evaluating Rodriguez’s request, the
    BOP considered a letter from a judge who had been recused
    from Rodriguez’s case. 
    Id.
     at *3–4. We held that by
    incorporating the letter into its decision, the BOP violated
    both due process and a federal statute. 
    Id. at *4
    .
    Importantly, Rodriguez did not indicate that Rodriguez
    was entitled to have credit applied to his sentence. To the
    contrary, we noted that the BOP’s decision was an exercise of
    discretion. 
    Id. at *3
    ; see also 
    18 U.S.C. § 3621
    (b). As a
    result, we simply remanded with directions for the Bureau of
    Prisons (BOP) to reconsider Rodriguez’s request anew,
    without regard to the judge’s letter. Rodriguez, 
    2016 WL 3003423
    , at *4.
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                       35
    Rodriguez is not the only habeas petition we have
    entertained relating to early release where the petitioner’s
    success “would not necessarily spell immediate or speedier
    release.” Wilkinson v. Dotson, 
    544 U.S. 74
    , 81–82 (2005);
    see, e.g., Close v. Thomas, 
    653 F.3d 970
     (9th Cir. 2011);
    Crickon v. Thomas, 
    579 F.3d 978
     (9th Cir. 2009).
    The Supreme Court has also heard at least two such cases,
    California Department of Corrections v. Morales, 
    514 U.S. 499
    , 504 (1995), and Edwards v. Balisok, 
    520 U.S. 641
    (1997). In Morales, the petitioner, Morales, brought a habeas
    action via 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
     arguing that a statute violated the
    Constitution’s prohibition on ex post facto laws. 
    514 U.S. at 504
    . The statute in question meant that Morales was eligible
    for parole suitability hearings every three years rather than
    each year. 
    Id. at 503
    .
    Edwards v. Balisok, a case the majority discusses, is
    another relevant example and hints at the implications of the
    majority’s standard. Pr. Op. at 12. In Balisok, the Supreme
    Court required the respondent, Balisok, to bring his due
    process challenge to the prison’s disciplinary procedures
    under the habeas statute, rather than § 1983. 
    520 U.S. at 648
    .
    Balisok did not dispute the result of his disciplinary hearing,
    admitting that the prison likely could revoke his good-time
    credit in a procedurally proper hearing. 
    Id.
     at 644–45,
    647–48. However, because Balisok’s procedural challenges
    “impl[ied] the invalidity of the punishment imposed,” he was
    required to proceed in habeas, even though the validity of his
    underlying judgment of conviction was not at stake, and even
    though success on his claim would not necessarily have
    resulted in speedier release. 
    Id. at 648
    . The majority’s
    standard apparently would leave similarly situated plaintiffs
    36                     NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    without a remedy, barring them from seeking relief using the
    only route the Supreme Court left open.2
    For Morales, Rodriguez, and Balisok, as well as for many
    who challenge the adequacy of procedures used at the trial
    resulting in their conviction, the procedural violation may not
    have been the cause of their confinement. They might well
    have been confined absent the violation. But the Supreme
    Court has never held — or even suggested — that petitioners
    such as these have not successfully alleged they are “in
    custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of
    the United States,” 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 2241
    (c)(3), 2254(a). To the
    contrary, the cases just discussed suggest that a petitioner
    meets this statutory language and may seek a writ of habeas
    corpus if they are (1) in custody, and (2) their custody “could
    potentially” end or be shortened if an unconstitutional
    procedure were voided and a new proceeding ordered. See
    Docken v. Chase, 
    393 F.3d 1024
    , 1031 (9th Cir. 2004)
    (emphasis omitted).3
    2
    Each of these examples counters the suggestion by both the majority
    and Judge Hurwitz’s concurrence that there exists “no case . . . in which
    the Court has recognized habeas as the sole remedy, or even an available
    one, where the relief sought would neither terminat[e] custody,
    accelerat[e] the future date of release from custody, nor reduc[e] the level
    of custody.” Pr. Op. at 15 (quoting Skinner v. Switzer, 
    562 U.S. 521
    , 534
    (2011)) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); Concurring Op.
    at 29–30 (same).
    3
    Again, it is possible that habeas relief could be denied in a case such
    as this one on lack of prejudice grounds, if the prejudice standard
    appropriate to the circumstances were not met. The present issue,
    however, is whether the petitioner was entitled to bring a habeas petition
    at all.
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                       37
    This understanding of the habeas statutes is also more
    consonant with the relief that courts typically grant a habeas
    petitioner. A petitioner’s success on their habeas claim often
    does not meet the majority’s standard of “immediate or
    speedier release.” Pr. Op. at 24. Frequently, federal courts
    allow the prisoner to remain confined while the relevant
    proceeding is redone. See, e.g., Rodriguez, 
    2016 WL 3003423
    , at *4. These remedies are consistent with
    Congress’s directive that courts sitting in habeas “shall . . .
    dispose of the matter as law and justice require.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2243
    . Consonant with this language, the Supreme Court
    has rejected “the notion that immediate physical release [is]
    the only remedy under the federal writ of habeas corpus.”
    Peyton v. Rowe, 
    391 U.S. 54
    , 67 (1968). Federal courts have
    “broad discretion in conditioning a judgment granting habeas
    relief,” Hilton v. Braunskill, 
    481 U.S. 770
    , 775 (1987), and,
    as a practical matter, the granting of a writ often does not
    result in either “immediate” or “speedier” release. Pr. Op. at
    24. The majority opinion thus declares a standard that is
    inconsistent with both the language of §§ 2241 and 2254 and
    our historical treatment of petitions for habeas corpus.
    II
    The majority attempts to justify its departure from statute
    and precedent by asserting that its holding is consistent with
    congressional intent and the Supreme Court’s “strong
    suggestion” that habeas relief and relief under § 1983 are
    mutually exclusive. Pr. Op. at 17. But today’s opinion
    misreads the pertinent cases and the Supreme Court’s
    jurisprudence, and it contorts the relationship between habeas
    and § 1983 that the Supreme Court explicated in Preiser v.
    Rodriguez, 
    411 U.S. 475
     (1973), and its progeny.
    38                  NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    A. The proper relationship between habeas and § 1983 is
    based on the familiar principle of statutory interpretation that
    “the specific governs the general.” See, e.g., Long Island
    Care at Home, Ltd. v. Coke, 
    551 U.S. 158
    , 170 (2007).
    Section 1983 provides a broad vehicle for relief from illegal
    state action in general, while the writ of habeas corpus is a
    remedy for relief from illegal confinement in particular.
    Preiser, 
    411 U.S. at 490
    . Preiser held that the specific
    remedy provided by the habeas statute “must override the
    general terms of § 1983.” Id. In other words, when prisoners
    directly challenge the fact or duration of their confinement,
    that challenge must be brought under habeas.
    The justification for so limiting § 1983 actions is that the
    habeas remedy is “sufficiently comprehensive” to
    “demonstrate congressional intent to preclude the remedy of
    suits under § 1983” for certain claims by prisoners.
    Middlesex Cty. Sewerage Auth. v. Nat’l Sea Clammers Ass’n,
    
    453 U.S. 1
    , 20 (1981); Docken, 
    393 F.3d at
    1026 n.2. Those
    claims, held Preiser, are those that are “within the core of
    habeas corpus.” 
    411 U.S. at 487
     (emphasis added). Preiser
    defined that core to contain claims where “a state prisoner is
    challenging the very fact or duration of his physical
    imprisonment.” 
    Id. at 500
    . Preiser did not hold that habeas
    jurisdiction is confined to what it described as the “core” of
    habeas; had it meant to do so, its references to the “core” of
    habeas corpus, as distinct from the overall reach of the writ,
    would have been pointless. Preiser reinforced the limited
    nature of its holding by cautioning that the exact scope of the
    overlap between § 1983 and habeas was “not before us,” id.;
    had Preiser meant the “core of habeas corpus” to equate with
    the entire breadth of the writ, that caution would have been
    unnecessary. And as Justice Thomas noted in his dissent in
    Skinner v. Switzer, 
    562 U.S. 521
    , 538 (2011), the Court “has
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                              39
    never purported to fully circumscribe the boundaries of
    § 1983,” as distinct from habeas corpus.
    The justification for limiting § 1983 out of consideration
    for habeas does not work in reverse. The existence of a broad
    statute does not imply a congressional desire to limit a more
    specific one, especially one largely enacted later.4 “[T]he
    specific governs the general,” Long Island Care, 
    551 U.S. at 170
    , not vice versa. Consistent with that precept, the
    Supreme Court’s cases since Preiser have focused on whether
    and to what extent § 1983 should be limited by habeas, not
    the other way around. See, e.g., Dotson, 
    544 U.S. 74
    , 81
    (2005); Skinner, 
    562 U.S. at 534
    .
    The majority opinion maintains these cases should be
    seen as “strongly suggesting” that habeas and § 1983 do not
    overlap at all, even as to asserted violations of
    constitutionally required procedures that, if corrected, could
    — but will not necessarily — result in earlier release. Pr. Op.
    at 16. This reading of the precedents relies primarily on three
    Supreme Court cases: Muhammad v. Close, 
    540 U.S. 749
    4
    Section 1983 was enacted in the Civil Rights Act of 1871 and has
    existed in largely the same form to this day. See Preiser, 
    411 U.S. at 476
    ;
    Civil Rights Act of 1871, ch. 22, 
    17 Stat. 13
     (1871). Although there was
    a federal habeas statute before 1871, it was initially much more limited
    than the modern statute and has been amended many times since. See
    generally Federal Habeas Corpus, 
    83 Harv. L. Rev. 1038
    , 1042–93
    (1970) (providing an overview of the history of federal habeas corpus).
    These amendments include legislation in 1966 inserting language that the
    Supreme Court noted “seem[ed] specifically to contemplate the possibility
    of relief other than immediate release from physical custody.” Carafas v.
    LaVallee, 
    391 U.S. 234
    , 239 (1968) (discussing the 1966 amendment
    providing for “release from custody or other remedy”); see also 
    28 U.S.C. § 2243
     (providing for disposition of habeas cases “as law and justice
    require”).
    40                 NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    (2004), Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at 74
    , and Skinner, 
    562 U.S. at 521
    .
    None of these cases focuses on limitations on habeas claims.
    Instead, each of these cases deals with limitations on actions
    brought under § 1983. See Skinner, 
    562 U.S. at 534
    ; Dotson,
    
    544 U.S. at 81
    ; Muhammad, 
    540 U.S. at
    754–55.
    Nor does the dicta in the three opinions regarding habeas
    cases, read in context, support the majority’s reading of the
    cases. For instance, the majority cites Muhammad’s
    statement that the claimant “raised no claim on which habeas
    relief could have been granted on any recognized theory,” and
    that the relief he sought would “not necessarily” have
    affected the duration of his confinement, to argue that habeas
    is not available for claims unless they necessarily challenge
    the duration of confinement. Pr. Op. at 13; Muhammad,
    
    540 U.S. at
    754–55. But in Muhammad, the lower court had
    “expressly found or assumed that no good-time credits were
    eliminated by the prehearing action Muhammad called in
    question.” 540 U.S. at 754. In other words, there was not
    even the possibility of speedier release if Muhammad
    prevailed. Muhammad sought only compensatory and
    punitive damages for an alleged wrongful disciplinary action.
    Id. at 753. Muhammad thus does not suggest anything at all
    about a case in which the duration of a prisoner’s
    confinement might be affected by a prisoner’s claim.
    Skinner and Dotson are similarly indeterminate, at best,
    as to potential limitations on habeas jurisdiction. Both cases
    concern whether a claim “may” be brought via § 1983, not
    whether it “must” be so brought because habeas is
    unavailable. Skinner, 
    562 U.S. at 524
    ; Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at 82
    . Notably, Dotson, in explaining why the § 1983 claims
    there at issue could go forward, reprised the Preiser standard:
    “Because neither prisoner’s claim would necessarily spell
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                       41
    speedier release, neither lies at ‘the core of habeas corpus.’”
    Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at 82
     (quoting Preiser, 
    411 U.S. at 489
    ).
    Dotson did not say, any more than did Preiser, that because
    of the character of the prisoner’s claim, they were outside the
    scope of habeas corpus altogether.
    Skinner confirmed that limitation on the observation in
    Dotson regarding habeas, stating that “[w]here the prisoner’s
    claim would not ‘necessarily spell speedier release,’ . . . suit
    may be brought under § 1983.” 
    562 U.S. at 525
     (emphasis
    added). Like the language quoted above in Muhammad, the
    statement that such claims may be brought via § 1983 does
    not suggest that they may not be also brought in habeas.
    Further, Boumediene v. Bush, 
    553 U.S. 723
     (2008), a case
    the majority does not mention, affirmatively indicated that
    habeas petitions may be brought for relief other than speedier
    release from confinement. Boumediene considered the core
    capacities that a tribunal must retain to maintain an adequate
    substitute for a writ of habeas corpus. Boumediene noted that
    while a court “must have the power to order the conditional
    release of an individual unlawfully detained[,] . . . release
    need not be the exclusive remedy and is not the appropriate
    one in every case in which the writ is granted.” 
    Id. at 779
    .
    The year after Boumediene, and just two years before
    Skinner, the Supreme Court characterized Dotson as holding
    that “prisoners who sought new hearings for parole eligibility
    and suitability need not proceed in habeas” — which would
    be very odd phrasing if Dotson’s import was that prisoners
    with such claims cannot proceed in habeas. Dist. Attorney’s
    Office for Third Judicial Dist. v. Osborne, 
    557 U.S. 52
    , 66
    (2009) (emphasis added). And throughout these cases, the
    Court has asked consistently whether a claim “lies at the core
    42                  NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    of habeas corpus,” (emphasis added) phrasing that, as I
    observed earlier, necessarily indicates there is some area
    beyond this “core” in which a habeas claim may also lie. See,
    e.g., Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at 79
     (quoting Preiser, 
    411 U.S. at 487
    ) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    To counter all of this precedent, the majority opinion
    (and, in part, Judge Hurwitz’s concurrence) rely on three
    words in a Skinner footnote that could, out of context, suggest
    that habeas is limited to its “core.” Quoting the same Dotson
    passage discussed above, Skinner states that “when a
    prisoner’s claim would not ‘necessarily spell speedier
    release,’ that claim does not lie at ‘the core of habeas corpus,’
    and may be brought, if at all, under § 1983.” 
    562 U.S. at
    535
    n.13 (quoting Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at 82
    ).
    Perhaps the phrase “if at all” could be read to suggest that
    such claims may only be brought under § 1983, and therefore
    may not be brought under habeas. But this language could
    also be read to refer simply to whether the claim may be
    brought at all — i.e., whether the claim is otherwise viable.
    So, for example, a claim cannot be brought “at all” under
    § 1983 if the statute of limitations has run, or if the
    procedural requirements of the PLRA have not been complied
    with. Cf. Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at
    87–88 (Scalia, J., concurring)
    (enunciating a similar caveat). On that understanding, the
    Skinner sentence means that otherwise viable claims not at
    “the core of habeas corpus” may be brought under § 1983 —
    not that they must be.
    Ambiguous dicta in a footnote is not enough to resolve
    the precise boundaries of habeas corpus and § 1983 — an
    issue the Supreme Court has explicitly noted and left
    unresolved for more than four decades, and that the Court
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                       43
    several times has indicated does not lie at the boundary
    between claims that could result in earlier release and those
    that will. See Preiser, 
    411 U.S. at 500
    . That same footnote,
    as well as Dotson itself, asserts that the Court has not
    “mov[ed] the line our cases draw,” confirming that neither
    Dotson or Skinner reached any new conclusions as to that
    line. 
    562 U.S. at
    535 n.13 (quoting Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at 84
    ).
    Skinner, Dotson, and the other relevant Supreme Court
    cases are thus entirely consistent with the notion that § 1983
    actions should be limited out of a concern for encroaching on
    habeas jurisdiction, but that it is permissible for habeas
    actions to overlap somewhat with claims properly brought
    under § 1983. The Fifth, Sixth, and D.C. Circuits have held
    that there is some degree of permissible overlap between
    § 1983 and habeas. See, e.g., Aamer v. Obama, 
    742 F.3d 1023
    , 1033 (D.C. Cir. 2014); Adams v. Bradshaw, 
    644 F.3d 481
    , 482–83 (6th Cir. 2011) (per curiam); Coleman v. Dretke,
    
    409 F.3d 665
    , 669–70 (5th Cir. 2005) (en banc) (per curiam).
    But see Hutcherson v. Riley, 
    468 F.3d 750
    , 754 (11th Cir.
    2006); Richmond v. Scibana, 
    387 F.3d 602
    , 605 (7th Cir.
    2004).
    B. In addition to its reading of Supreme Court precedent,
    Judge Ikuta’s opinion, in a discussion joined by only a
    plurality of the court, asserts that its position is consistent
    with congressional intent. Pr. Op. at 17–18. But that
    discussion points to no language in the habeas statute
    supporting the standard it announces today. Instead, it
    suggests that by requiring one set of procedures for § 1983
    claims under the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995
    (PLRA), 42 U.S.C. § 1997e et seq., and another set for habeas
    petitions brought pursuant to the Antiterrorism and Effective
    Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), 
    110 Stat. 1214
    ,
    44                  NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    Congress indicated its intent to have the two statutes govern
    entirely separate regimes. Pr. Op. at 18–19.
    The existence of distinct sets of procedures does not tell
    us that Congress intended to limit either procedure’s
    substantive scope. Rather, the evident intent was simply that
    to use either statute, a litigant must meet its procedural
    requirements.
    Even if more could be made of the procedural
    dissimilarities between § 1983 and federal habeas corpus —
    which I do not think it can — the plurality gives no reason to
    think that it is habeas that should be limited, rather than
    § 1983. As I have noted, § 1983 has been the focus of all
    prior cases addressing the overlap between the two.
    The plurality’s reliance on the PLRA and AEDPA is also
    ahistorical. Preiser’s discussion of habeas and § 1983 was
    written in 1973, well before either the PLRA or AEDPA were
    enacted in the mid-1990s. Congress is generally assumed to
    be “thoroughly familiar with” Supreme Court precedents
    when it legislates. Edelman v. Lynchburg Coll., 
    535 U.S. 106
    , 117 n.13 (2002) (quoting N. Star Steel Co. v. Thomas,
    
    515 U.S. 29
    , 34 (1995)). If Congress had intended to weigh
    in on the longstanding discussion concerning the relationship
    between habeas and § 1983 via the PLRA, AEDPA, or both,
    it would surely have done so explicitly, rather than relying on
    judges’ ability to read tea leaves. Absent any provision in
    either statute addressing the question, the creation of different
    procedural requirements for the two different claims cannot
    be read to limit the substance of the habeas remedy.
    More broadly, the PLRA’s restrictions on prisoner suits
    demonstrate the hazards of limiting habeas corpus due to
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                            45
    potential overlap with other remedies. The writ of habeas
    corpus is protected by the Constitution. See U.S. Const. art.
    I, § 9, cl. 2. There is no such explicit protection for the
    remedy afforded by § 1983 (which, indeed, did not even exist
    until after the Civil War). As the PLRA shows, Congress can
    alter § 1983 at will, to make it more or less available to
    particular groups like prisoners. Relying on the existence of
    alternative statutory remedies to justify narrowing the breadth
    of habeas thus may create gaps that widen over time as
    Congress alters those remedies. This potential problem is
    made more likely if we read the existence vel non of other
    statutory schemes to indicate Congress’s implicit intent to
    limit habeas’s scope. Such an arrangement risks encroaching
    on the “grand purpose” of one of the most important remedies
    of our legal order. Boumediene, 
    553 U.S. at 780
     (quoting
    Jones v. Cunningham, 
    371 U.S. 236
    , 243 (1963)).
    III
    The majority’s opinion also threatens the scope of habeas
    for federal prisoners. Such prisoners do not have recourse
    under § 1983. That statute applies only to violations
    undertaken “under color of” state law. 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    ; see,
    e.g., Ibrahim v. Dep’t of Homeland Sec., 
    538 F.3d 1250
    , 1257
    (9th Cir. 2008).
    The federal habeas statute, 
    28 U.S.C. § 2241
     et seq., is the
    basic statute empowering courts to hear petitions by both
    federal and state prisoners.5 Notably, we have heard many
    5
    Section 2241(a) provides that “[w]rits of habeas corpus may be granted
    by the Supreme Court, any justice thereof, the district courts and any
    circuit judge within their respective jurisdictions.” Section 2241(c)
    specifies five categories of prisoners eligible for federal habeas. See
    46                     NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    claims by federal prisoners petitioning under § 2241 where
    success “would not necessarily lead to [their] immediate or
    earlier release from confinement.” Pr. Op. at 25. In Crickon
    v. Thomas, 
    579 F.3d 978
    , 982 (9th Cir. 2009), for instance,
    Jerry Crickon, a federal prisoner, brought a habeas petition
    challenging the BOP’s determination that he was
    categorically ineligible for an early release incentive program
    due to his prior conviction. We held the BOP’s failure to
    articulate its reasoning was a violation of the Administrative
    Procedure Act, and remanded for the BOP to reconsider
    Crickon’s eligibility. 
    Id.
     at 988–89. Just as in Dotson,
    “[s]uccess for [Crickon] . . . mean[t] at most new eligibility
    review.” 
    544 U.S. at 82
    . But that was no obstacle to
    Crickon’s habeas petition.
    In Close v. Thomas, 
    653 F.3d 970
     (9th Cir. 2011), we
    heard a similar challenge brought by a federal prisoner under
    § 2241. Christopher Close, the petitioner, challenged the
    criteria used to rank prisoners on a waitlist for a drug
    treatment program, because admission to the program could
    speed his eligibility for early release. Id. at 972–73. As the
    opinion noted, id. at 975, the potential acceleration of
    participants’ release was discretionary — in other words,
    admission to the program “would not necessarily spell
    immediate or speedier release.” Dotson, 
    544 U.S. at 81
    . But
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2241
    (c)(1)–(5). The important section for present purposes
    is 2241(c)(3), which makes available writs of habeas corpus to both
    federal and state prisoners “in custody in violation of the Constitution or
    laws or treaties of the United States.” Sections 2244, 2254, and 2255 spell
    out some substantive differences in the writ’s scope for state and federal
    prisoners, as well as differences in the procedures required for state and
    federal prisoners to obtain the writ. Those differences are not relevant to
    the case at hand.
    NETTLES V. GROUNDS                       47
    Close’s claim was allowed to proceed via habeas petition
    nonetheless. See also Rodriguez, 
    2016 WL 3003423
    , at 4.
    As Crickon, Close, and Rodriguez indicate, federal
    prisoners have been able to bring habeas claims alleging
    procedural defects to the parole process whose resolution
    would not necessarily result in a speedier release. This
    practice is longstanding. See, e.g., John v. U.S. Parole
    Comm’n, 
    122 F.3d 1278
    , 1285 (9th Cir. 1997); Benites v. U.S.
    Parole Comm’n, 
    595 F.2d 519
    , 520 & n.1 (9th Cir. 1979); see
    also Elliott v. United States, 
    572 F.2d 238
    , 239 (9th Cir.
    1978) (per curiam) (holding that a federal prisoner’s
    challenge to a parole board’s failure to give “serious
    consideration” to an application for parole is properly brought
    via habeas corpus).
    Such cases will, presumably, continue to be allowed, as
    there is no alternative statutory remedy for federal prisoners,
    and so no possibility of statutory overlap. But the majority
    opinion points to no statutory language or precedent that
    suggests any difference in the substantive scope of habeas
    between federal and state prisoners for alleged constitutional
    violations. Nor does that opinion otherwise explain why the
    reach of § 2241(c) for federal prisoners should differ from the
    reach of the same statute for state prisoners.
    ***
    For all the reasons discussed, I would hold that habeas
    corpus relief is available to any claimant whose success
    “could potentially affect the duration of their confinement.”
    Docken, 
    393 F.3d at 1031
     (emphasis omitted). Such an
    approach is just as practically feasible as the standard in the
    48                  NETTLES V. GROUNDS
    majority opinion. In particular, it does not rely on the
    “probabilistic analysis” that opinion rejects. Pr. Op. at 22.
    My approach would, to be sure, permit some overlap
    between habeas and § 1983, although this case does not
    require us to decide the exact extent of that overlap. But such
    overlap is not cause for concern. To succeed under either
    statute, prisoners will have to conform with the requisite
    procedures. The state has given us no reason that it would be
    better off in general if cases like this one were brought under
    § 1983. If anything, state governments usually argue for
    more cases to be brought in habeas rather than under § 1983,
    as federal habeas petitioners, unlike plaintiffs under § 1983,
    are usually required to exhaust state judicial remedies, see
    Osborne, 423 F.3d at 1053, and federal habeas courts are
    often required to defer to the results of these state
    proceedings. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d).
    Notably, the rule adopted by the majority will not “give
    needed clarity to state prisoners.” Pr. Op. at 22. That rule
    departs from precedent and statute, and will generate
    confusion and delay among those seeking adjudication of
    their claims who mistakenly choose the wrong vehicle. When
    it comes to alleged procedural violations in particular, the
    majority’s announced rule would seem to sweep up a
    significant number of claims within its reach, creating a trap
    for unwary prisoners who have not satisfied the PLRA’s
    distinct requirements. See 42 U.S.C. § 1997e.
    In short, the majority’s standard, inconsistent with statute
    and precedent, will unnecessarily create problems for years
    to come. I therefore dissent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 12-16935

Citation Numbers: 830 F.3d 922

Filed Date: 7/26/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (53)

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