MINATEE v. New Jersey

710 F. Supp. 2d 487, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 41082, 2010 WL 1707053
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedApril 26, 2010
DocketCivil Action 10-770 (PGS)
StatusPublished

This text of 710 F. Supp. 2d 487 (MINATEE v. New Jersey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MINATEE v. New Jersey, 710 F. Supp. 2d 487, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 41082, 2010 WL 1707053 (D.N.J. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

PETER G. SHERIDAN, District Judge.

IT APPEARING THAT:

1. On February 22, 2010, the Clerk received a document from Petitioner executed on a § 2254 form. See Docket Entry No. 1.

2. The content of the document received was not amenable to clear understanding. See id. Specifically, it was unclear which particular determination Petitioner was challenging (i.e., the determination issued by the state court on which particular date and with regard to which particular matter), whether Petitioner filed his application while being held in confinement pursuant to the very order he was wishing to challenge (or if Petitioner was held in confinement pursuant to a superceding order), whether Petitioner duly exhausted his claims in all three levels of the state court, as well as whether Petitioner has submitted his instant application timely. See id.

3. Consequently, this Court issued an order directing Petitioner to submit an amended petition clarifying the aforesaid ambiguous aspects of Petitioner’s challenges. In order to assist Petitioner in that endeavor, the order detailed to Petitioner the relevant legal requirements. See Docket Entry No. 2. The order also advised Petitioner of his Mason rights.

4. In response, Petitioner submitted an amended petition, see Docket Entry No. 3, the Clerk’s receipt of which resulted in a premature reopening of this matter in the sense that it was conducted without screening of the amended petition, and without a determination of whether the amended petition warranted issuance of an order directing responsive pleadings. See Docket Entry No. 4.

5. In light of the Clerk’s premature reopening of this matter, this Court screened the amended petition and-upon observing that Petitioner still failed to clarify the ambiguities of his original petition — found it prudent to administratively re-terminate the matter and allow Petitioner another opportunity to clarify the ambiguities of his application. See Docket Entry No. 5. Consequently, the Court vacated the order directing reopening and provided Petitioner with additional time to submit a superceding re-amended petition. See id.

6. Petitioner duly complied with the Court’s directive by submitting his re-amended pleading (“Petition”). See Docket Entry No. 7. While the Petition, still asserting jurisdiction under § 2254, is not a document stating Petitioner’s claims with absolute clarity, see id., the content of the Petition is sufficient for the Court to determine at least the gist of Petitioner’s claims and to address the dispositive aspects of his submission. See id. Specifically, it appears that Petitioner, being a civilly committed individual currently confined at the Special Treatment Annex, Avenel, New Jersey, was-at a certain point in time-allowed to participate in a certain state furlough program which envisioned a certain number of furlough periods (or, perhaps, an unlimited number of such furlough periods). It appears that Petitioner completed eleven of such furlough periods and was either about to start or even started the twelfth. It also appears that, during his eleventh furlough (or during one of Petitioner’s latest furloughs out of these eleven), Petitioner *490 was staying with his cousin and — either prior to Petitioner’s twelfth furlough or during that twelfth furlough — the state officials discovered that Petitioner’s cousin had a criminal conviction (or a charge and ensuing investigation) based on Petitioner’s cousin’s sexual misconduct. It also appears that this discovery caused the state officials great concern in light of Petitioner’s status as a sexually violent predator; that concern, it seems, triggered an investigation by state officials and state-retained psychiatrists. It appears from the Petition that Petitioner developed an impression that the aforesaid investigation would protract for about half a year or so, and then Petitioner would be allowed to continue with his furlough program, but Petitioner’s hopes did not materialize and — as of now — Petitioner is still prevented from partaking in the furlough program. (Petitioner, it seems, is of opinion that denial of continuous participation in the furlough program violates his rights.) It is unclear from the face of the Petition whether the investigation into Petitioner’s stay with his cousin has concluded or is still ongoing, but it appears sufficiently certain that Judge Peretti of the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, suspended Petitioner’s twelfth furlough on September 19, 2007, and such suspension were to protract until Petitioner would be re-cleared by the state officials for further participation in the furlough program. See generally, Docket Entries Nos. 1, 3 and 7. Since Petitioner’s hopes to restart participating in the furlough program have not, thus far, materialized, Petitioner is challenging Judge Peretti’s suspension order. See Docket Entry No. 7. Petitioner clarifies that he filed an application challenging Judge Peretti’s suspension order with the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, on or about March 21, 2008, 1 but — in no ambiguous terms — the Petition states that Petitioner did not take any appeals and, as of now, does not know about the current status of his challenge to Judge Peretti’s suspension order that was filed with the Law Division. See id. at 3.

7. To start, Petitioner’s challenges have to be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction in light of the Third Circuit law. While the federal courts in the country are split as to whether challenges to denial of furlough could be raised in a habeas action, the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit guided the district courts in this circuit that challenges based on denial of furlough fall outside the “core of habeas” and, hence, must be raised in a civil complaint. See Wright v. Cuyler, 624 F.2d 455 (3d Cir.1980). In Wright, prisoner brought two actions against prison superintendents asserting that they denied his participation in a home furlough program. The district court dismissed the prisoners’ claims as unexhausted. The Court of Appeals reversed finding that challenges based on denial to participation to home furlough program were attacking not the ultimate duration of his confinement but rather the conditions under which the prisoner was confined. See id. Therefore, under the holding of Wright, the instant application shall be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.

8. However, this Court cannot ignore the fact that the Court of Appeals’ decision in Wright was rendered in 1980, and that holding might have been altered by *491 the Court of Appeals’ later decisions. As the Court of Appeals observed lately,

“the precise meaning of ‘execution of a sentence’ [remains] hazy.” Woodall v. Fed. Bureau of Prisons, 432 F.3d 235, 242 (3d Cir.N.J.2005). In Woodall,

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Bluebook (online)
710 F. Supp. 2d 487, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 41082, 2010 WL 1707053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minatee-v-new-jersey-njd-2010.