Davis v. Rardin

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Davis v. Rardin

Trial Court Opinion

                 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


 William Scott Davis, Jr.,          Case No. 22-cv-2854 (JRT/DLM)        

               Petitioner,                                               

 v.                                                                      
                                     ORDER AND REPORT AND                

                                       RECOMMENDATION                    
 Jared  Rardin,  Warden  F.M.C.  Rochester                               

 MN; Merrick Garland, U.S.A.G.; and                                      
 Colett S. Peters, Director F.B.O.P.,                                    

               Respondents.                                              


    This case has been referred to the undersigned United States Magistrate Judge for a 
Report and Recommendation pursuant to 
28 U.S.C. § 636
 and District of Minnesota Local 
Rule 72.1. Petitioner William Scott Davis, Jr., a federal prisoner, brings this petition for 
habeas corpus relief pursuant to 
28 U.S.C. § 2241
. Mr. Davis initially filed his petition in 
November of 2022 (Doc. 1), but in the weeks following, Mr. Davis filed a number of other 
documents that supplemented his petition (see, e.g., Docs. 18, 19, 20, 22, 23). Rather than 
consider matters piecemeal, the Court ordered Mr. Davis to file a single, consolidated 
petition setting forth all of the grounds on which he seeks habeas relief. (Doc. 27.) 
    In response, Mr. Davis filed an amended petition. (Doc. 42.) The amended petition 
enumerates exactly 50 grounds for relief, but a closer review of each reveals that some of 
those grounds are duplicative, while others can be reasonably construed as asserting several 
theories in one “ground.”1 All to say, Mr. Davis’s cataloguing is not particularly useful. 

1 For a comprehensive listing of Mr. Davis’s grounds for relief, see Doc. 111 at 2–4 n.2. 
Below,  the  undersigned  recategorizes  Mr.  Davis’s  petition  into  subject  matters, with 
reference to which of his enumerated grounds arguably are included in each category. 

    Regardless of the organization of Mr. Davis’s petition, it does not set forth any bases 
for relief. The overwhelming majority of Mr. Davis’s theories involve matters that are not 
cognizable in habeas, such as where he is serving his sentence. Others involve complaints 
that have no remedy, such as asserting that he has not received certain good time credits 
even though he is already at the statutory cap for credited time. And yet others are direct 
or veiled attacks on his underlying criminal sentence, something generally reserved for the 

sentencing court to consider via a motion to vacate his sentence (which Mr. Davis clearly 
knows, since he unsuccessfully sought this relief in his sentencing District). Finally, for 
those few grounds that actually may be considered on their merits, Mr. Davis puts forth 
only conclusory allegations that have been thoroughly dispelled by the government’s 
response. As such, it is recommended that Mr. Davis’s petition be denied in its entirety 

without an evidentiary hearing.2                                          
                         BACKGROUND                                      
    Mr. Davis is a federal inmate who is incarcerated at the Federal Medical Center in 
Rochester, Minnesota (“FMC-Rochester”). Federal Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) Inmate 
Locator, https://perma.cc/G78K-K3TM (last visited January 17, 2024). He is serving a 

144-month sentence after a jury found him guilty of one count of cyberstalking, in violation 
of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2261A(2)(B) and 2261(b)(5), and three counts of sending threatening 

2 Mr. Davis filed a number of motions as well, which remain outstanding. In Section X 
below, the Court addresses these matters.                                 
communications, in violation of 
18 U.S.C. § 875
(c). See United States v. Davis, No. 5:14-
cr-240, Doc. 906 (Judgment) (E.D.N.C. Mar. 29, 2018). Mr. Davis was originally arrested 

on his federal criminal matter on October 22, 2014. 
Id.,
 Doc. 8. The three and a half years 
between arrest and sentencing in Mr. Davis’s criminal case were marked by wide ranging 
proceedings, which included an overwhelming number of pro se filings (highlighted by 
attempts to recuse and threats to sue Mr. Davis’s district judge), competency proceedings, 
and, ultimately, a trial with standby counsel. See generally 
id.
 This single defendant 
criminal matter has resulted in, as of now, 1,131 separate docket entries. 
Id.
 These entries 

also include Mr. Davis’s motions to vacate his sentence pursuant to 
18 U.S.C. § 2255
, 
id.
 
at Docs. 919, 1046, and motions for compassionate release, 
id.
 at Docs. 993, 1027–28, 
1049, 1062.3                                                              
    Mr. Davis’s statutory release date—that is, the date that he is expected to be released 
if he were to receive all of the “good conduct time” credit set forth in 
18 U.S.C. § 3624
(b)—

is May 12, 2025. (Doc. 122-1 at 3.) However, Mr. Davis has also qualified for an additional 
365  days  of  early-release  credits  pursuant  to  the  First  Step  Act,4  moving  his  actual 
projected release date to May 12, 2024. (Doc. 126-1 at 3.) He filed a petition for habeas 
corpus relief with this Court on November 7, 2022. (Doc. 1.) As noted in the Court’s 
August 16, 2023 Order, Mr. Davis “has filed a multitude of motions since his petition was 


3 The district court in Mr. Davis’s criminal matter ultimately denied each of his § 2255 and 
compassionate release motions. United States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240, Docs. 1066, 
1079–80, 1106 (E.D.N.C.).                                                 
4 The First Step Act of 2018 introduced amendments to a number of statutes governing 
time credits, early release, and early prerelease custody for federal prisoners. See generally 
First Step Act of 2018, 
Pub. L. No. 115-391, 132
 Stat. 5194 (2018).       
filed,” (Doc. 128), including some which appeared to supplement his habeas petition. 
Subsequently (and in response to this Court’s direction), Mr. Davis filed an amended 

habeas petition, which included all of his grounds for relief, on March 6, 2023. (Doc. 42.) 
The government filed its response, together with a number of declarations and exhibits, on 
August 14, 2023 (Docs. 120 (Response), 121–26 (Declarations & Exhibits)). Any response 
by Mr. Davis was due within 30 days (Doc. 10), but none was filed. Instead, on August 24, 
2023, Mr. Davis filed a motion seeking “up until December 31st 2023” to reply to the 
government’s response. (Doc. 130.) The Court denied Mr. Davis’s motion for failure to 

comply with the Court’s prior Order requiring leave before filing any such motions. (Doc. 
131 (citing Doc. 128).) Mr. Davis has filed no reply at all to the government’s response—
timely or not—and the date for which he sought to move his deadline has now passed. 
Further background evidence will be set forth below as relevant to the analysis of Mr. 
Davis’s claims.                                                           

                           ANALYSIS                                      
I.   Mr. Davis’s collateral attacks on his criminal conviction and sentence are not 
    cognizable via this § 2241 petition.                                 

    In Mr. Davis’s amended petition, he checked the box “No” in answer to the question 
of whether he was challenging the validity of his conviction or sentence. (Doc. 42 at 2 
¶ 10.) However, as the government correctly notes, Grounds 6, 7, 22, 23, 28, 46, and 49 all 
concern the validity of his conviction and sentence: Ground 6 challenges Mr. Davis’s 
Presentence Report (“PSR”) as inaccurate; Ground 7 contends that his Judgment and 
Commitment order listed the wrong conviction; Ground 23 accuses the government of 
Brady5 violations; Ground 28 specifically attacks Mr. Davis’s sentence and conviction; 
Grounds 22 and 46 assert the BOP has improperly denied him access to his PSR (which he 

claims  he  needs  to  attack  his  conviction  and  sentence);  and  Ground  49  purports  to 
incorporate Mr. Davis’s “§ 2255 filings.” (Id. at 8, 11, 16–19, 23.) Mr. Davis also filed a 
standalone motion to attack his criminal conviction and sentence, separate from his habeas 
petition. (Doc. 54.)                                                      
    A prisoner seeking to challenge the validity of his conviction or sentence must file 
a motion to vacate pursuant to 
18 U.S.C. § 2255
. Nichols v. Symmes, 
553 F.3d 647, 649
 

(8th Cir. 2009). That motion must generally be filed in the district where the prisoner was 
sentenced. Jones v. Hendrix, 
599 U.S. 465, 472
 (2023). Petitions brought pursuant to 
18 U.S.C. § 2241
 are attacks on the execution of a prisoner’s sentence, generally brought 
where the person is incarcerated. Nichols, 
553 F.3d at 649
.               
    Mr. Davis has already sought § 2255 relief in his sentencing District. See United 

States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240, Docs. 919, 1046. He lost. Id. at Doc. 1080 (E.D.N.C. Apr. 
14, 2022). In Jones v. Hendrix, the Supreme Court recently clarified that the grounds for 
seeking § 2241 habeas relief rather than moving for relief via § 2255 are extremely narrow. 
599 U.S. at 471–78. There, the Court refused to extend § 2255(e)’s “saving clause” (that 
is, the section of § 2255 which allows a prisoner to forego a § 2255 motion if “the remedy 

by motion is inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of detention”) to all but the most 
exceptional § 2241 habeas petitions. Id. By Jones, a § 2241 attack on a prisoner’s sentence 


5 Brady v. Maryland, 
373 U.S. 83
 (1963).                                  
may be permitted where the prisoner could not bring a § 2255 claim because of logistical 
issues making it impracticable to do so, but not for much else. Id. at 475–76. 

    Mr. Davis does not suggest that his case falls within an exceptional circumstance 
making it impossible or impracticable to attack his sentence or conviction via a § 2255 
motion. In fact, he pursued that relief with his sentencing court not long before filing his 
original § 2241 petition with this court. United States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240, Doc. 1042 
(E.D.N.C. filed Feb. 22, 2022). As such, the Court finds no basis to entertain Mr. Davis’s 
collateral attacks on his sentence or conviction through the § 2241 habeas petition he filed 

in this District, nor through the related standalone motion within this action, which the 
Court recommends be denied.                                               
II.  Mr. Davis’s complaints about not being transferred to a halfway house or home 
    confinement are not cognizable habeas claims and otherwise have no merit. 

    In several areas of his petition, Mr. Davis complains that he has not been transferred 
to home confinement or to a halfway house (also known as a Residential Reentry Center 
or “RRC”) placement. In Grounds 4, 15, 18, and 32, he claims he should have already been 
released to a halfway house or home confinement because his good time has not been 
properly calculated. (Doc. 42 at 6, 10, 20.) In Grounds 7 and 21, he complains that he was 
not granted home confinement under the CARES Act. (Id. at 8, 11.) Ground 9 follows the 
theme, stating he should already be released to home confinement or a halfway house. (Id.) 
Similarly, in Grounds 20, 36, and 42, Mr. Davis complains that he was not placed on home 
confinement pursuant to the Elderly Home Confinement Program.6 (Id. at 11, 21-22.) In 


6 
34 U.S.C. § 60541
(g).                                                   
Grounds 13, 14, 16, and 46, Mr. Davis asserts that it is a failure of the BOP that he is not 
in a halfway house or on home confinement given his age and disabilities. (Id.) Ground 24 
asserts that he was denied a halfway house placement under the Second Chance Act7 for 

impermissible reasons, a theme repeated in Ground 41 as it relates to home confinement. 
(Id. at 12.) Ground 31 claims that the BOP failed to assess his individual needs in not 
granting him a halfway house placement, as does Ground 34 (but expanded to include 
denial of home confinement). (Id. at 20–21.) Finally, Ground 45 asserts that the BOP has 
failed to properly interpret 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(b), which governs the place of imprisonment. 

(Id. at 22.)                                                              
    In each of his assertions, Mr. Davis challenges his placement, preferring a halfway-
house or home confinement to being incarcerated at FMC-Rochester. In this Circuit and 
District, claims seeking that type of relief are generally considered claims challenging the 
place of confinement. See United States v. Houck, 
2 F.4th 1082, 1085
 (8th Cir. 2021) 

(discussing home confinement as a place of confinement); Elwood v. Jeter, 
386 F.3d 842, 846
 (8th Cir. 2004) (halfway house “is a penal or correctional facility and a place of 
imprisonment”); see also Williams v. Birkholz, No. 20-cv-2190 (ECT/LIB), 
2021 WL 4155614
, at *6 (D. Minn. July 20, 2021) (“A prisoner is transferred to home confinement 
not released to home confinement because home confinement is a place of incarceration.”) 

(citation omitted), R. & R. adopted, 
2021 WL 4155013
 (D. Minn. Sept. 13, 2021). And a 
“legal action seeking transfer from one form of BOP custody to another (like a legal action 


7 Second Chance Act of 2007, Pub. L. No. 110–199, 
122 Stat. 657
 (2008).   
seeking transfer from one BOP facility to another) is not a challenge to the fact or duration 
of confinement.” Johnson v. Birkholz, 21-cv-2017 (PJS/LIB), 
2022 WL 3135304
, at *1 (D. 

Minn. Aug. 5, 2022). The Court has no jurisdiction to entertain a challenge to a prisoner’s 
place of confinement via a habeas petition. 
Id.
                           
    Even if considered on the merits, Mr. Davis’s claims would fare no better. At 
bottom, his complaint is that the BOP has not placed him in a halfway house or on home 
confinement in violation of its statutory obligations, constitutional obligations, or both. But 
“[t]he BOP has the exclusive authority to designate where an inmate will serve [their] 

sentence,” and “placement decisions are not reviewable.” Blocher v. Eischen, No. 22-cv-
0678 (PJS/DTS), 
2022 WL 17406549
, at *3 (D. Minn. Nov. 3, 2022) (citing 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(b)), R. & R. adopted, 
2022 WL 17404447
 (D. Minn. Dec. 2, 2022); see also United 
States v. Vang, No. 16-cr-0277 (DWF/KMM), 
2020 WL 4704875
, at *2 (D. Minn. Aug. 
13, 2020) (“Courts have consistently held that placement questions are not reviewable.”) 

(citing 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(b)) (collecting cases). Thus, the BOP’s placement decisions—
including  whether  and  when  Mr.  Davis  is  placed  in  a  halfway  house  or  on  home 
confinement—are generally not subject to judicial review. Khdeer v. Paul, No. 18-cv-2112 
(ECT/BRT), 
2018 WL 6919637
, at *4 (D. Minn. Nov. 29, 2018), R. & R. adopted, 
2019 WL 79318
 (D. Minn. Jan 2, 2019); cf. United States v. Acosta-Cruz, No. 11-cr-002(4) 

(SRN/FLN), 
2018 WL 5801900
, at *3 (D. Minn. Nov. 6, 2018) (“[A] prisoner does not 
have an enforceable legal right to a 12-month pre-release RRC placement.”) (citation 
omitted).                                                                 
    To the extent that Mr. Davis’s claims could be broadly read to suggest BOP’s refusal 
to move him to community confinement was contrary to law or violated the Constitution 

(a  possible  exception  to  §  3625’s  bar  on  judicial  review  of  BOP  discretionary 
decisionmaking, see Khdeer¸ 
2018 WL 6919637
, at *5), his claims lack merit. On the 
contrary, the BOP’s decision not to move Mr. Davis to a halfway house is precisely because 
it conducted the individualized assessment required by 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(b): the BOP 
determined that Mr. Davis’s significant medical needs could not be accommodated by a 
halfway house, and he lacked a suitable release address for a home confinement placement. 

(Doc.  126  ¶¶  36–48.)  Finally,  because  Mr.  Davis  “does  not  have  a  constitutionally 
protected liberty interest in serving his sentence at a particular institution,” he “has no 
constitutional right to a pre-release RRC or home confinement placement.” Khdeer, 
2018 WL 6919637
, at *5 (citations omitted).                                    
III.  Mr.  Davis’s  compassionate release  claims  are  not  cognizable  through this 
    § 2241 habeas petition.                                              

    In at least three of his Grounds (19, 30, and 47), Mr. Davis suggests that he should 
be released (or, more accurately, that the government has violated his rights in not releasing 
him) pursuant to 
18 U.S.C. § 3582
(c)(1)(A). As relevant here, § 3582(c)(1)(A) permits a 
court  to  modify  a  prisoner’s  sentence  based  on  “extraordinary  and  compelling” 
circumstances.  Requesting  such  relief  is  commonly  referred  to  as  a  motion  for 
compassionate release. United States v. Sims, 
87 F.4th 917, 919
 (8th Cir. 2023). But 
because § 3582(c) motions seek to modify a person’s original sentence, they must be 

brought  before  the  original  sentencing  court.  Ybarra  v.  Kallis,  No.  21-cv-2062 
(ECT/KMM), 
2021 WL 5235335
, at *1 (D. Minn. Oct. 1, 2021), R. & R. adopted, 
2021 WL 5235141
 (D. Minn. Nov. 10, 2012); see also Chicoine v. Segal, No. 23-cv-1217 

(KMM/TNL), 
2023 WL 5337085
, at *2 (May 30, 2023), R. & R. adopted, 
2023 WL 5333772
 (D. Minn. Aug. 18, 2023). This Court “has no authority to modify pursuant to 
§ 3582(c)  a  sentence  imposed  in  another  venue.”  Boos  v.  Kallis,  No.  21-cv-2177 
(SRN/BRT), 
2022 WL 2541751
, at *1 (D. Minn. Jun. 15, 2022) (quoting Ybarra, 
2021 WL 5235335
, at *1), R. & R. adopted, 
2022 WL 2533374
 (D. Minn. Jul. 7, 2022). 
    As noted above, Mr. Davis was sentenced in the Eastern District of North Carolina. 

Any motion to modify his sentence must be considered by that court, not this one. Mr. 
Davis has, in fact, filed a number of compassionate-release motions seeking to modify his 
sentence with that court, see, e.g., United States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240, at Docs. 970, 
998, 993, 1027, 1028, 1041, 1049, 1052, 1062, 1069, 1072, including a Notice of Appeal 
that post-dated the filing of his habeas petition with this Court, 
id.
 at Doc. 1107 (E.D.N.C. 

filed Nov. 14, 2022). As such, there appears to be no impediment Mr. Davis seeking 
§ 3582(c) relief in his sentencing court, and no excuse for seeking it via § 2241 habeas 
petition here.                                                            
IV.  The BOP correctly computed Mr. Davis’s sentence.                     
    Mr.  Davis also  complains (in Grounds  4,  27,  and  arguably  35) that  the  BOP 

improperly calculated his sentence such that he is serving more time in custody than he 
should. These arguments are properly considered via a § 2241 habeas petition, since they 
involve the duration of confinement.                                      
    On March 22, 2018, Mr. Davis was sentenced to 144 months of imprisonment. 
United States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240 at Doc. 906 (E.D.N.C. Mar. 29, 2018).8 Under 
18 U.S.C. § 3585
, an offender like Mr. Davis is entitled to credit toward his sentence “for any 
time spent in official detention.” United States v. Tindall, 
455 F.3d 885, 888
 (8th Cir. 2006) 
(citing 
18 U.S.C. § 3583
(b)(2)). Once a federal court sentences an offender, it is up to the 
Attorney General to determine what time credit the offender receives toward that sentence. 
United States v. Wilson, 
503 U.S. 329
, 333–34 (1992).                     
    Mr. Davis was arrested for his underlying offense on October 22, 2014. United 

States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240 at Doc. 8 (E.D.N.C. Oct. 22, 2014); (see also Doc. 122-
2). He remained in some form or another of federal custody (between traditional pretrial 
detention and competency proceedings) continuously until his sentencing. (Doc. 122-3.) 
The period of Mr. Davis’s federal pretrial detention—from his October 22, 2014 arrest 
through March 22, 2018 sentencing—was 1,247 days. According to the inmate data sheet 

submitted by the government, Mr. Davis received 1,247 days of credit toward his sentence. 
(Doc. 122 ¶ 12; Doc. 122-1 at 3.) Given the unrefuted evidence that the BOP correctly 
calculated Mr. Davis’s sentence, there is no habeas relief available to Mr. Davis based on 
BOP calculation errors.                                                   




8 Although judgment  was entered  on March 29, 2018,  Mr. Davis’s sentencing court 
imposed that judgment at sentencing on March 22, 2018. See United States v. Davis, No. 
5:14-cr-240  at  Docs.  903  (E.D.N.C.  Mar.  22,  2018)  (minute  entry  for  sentencing 
proceeding), 906 (E.D.N.C. Mar. 29, 2018) (judgment and commitment order stating 
judgment imposed March 22, 2018).                                         
V.   There is no basis to grant relief for Mr. Davis’s concerns regarding his accrual 
    of First Step Act time credits.                                      

    In late 2018, the First Step Act was enacted into law, ushering in a number of 
changes to federal inmate programming and, as most relevant here, good time credits. If an 
inmate participates in evidence-based recidivism reduction programing, they may earn 
First Step Act time credits (“FTC”) at a rate of 10 or 15 days for every 30 days of 
programming. 
18 U.S.C. § 3632
(d)(4)(A)(i) & (ii). FTCs “shall be applied toward time in 
prerelease custody or supervised release.” 
18 U.S.C. § 3632
(d)(4)(C). A prisoner’s FTCs 
may be used to transfer them out of custody and onto supervised release up to 12 months 
early. 
18 U.S.C. § 3624
(g)(3).                                            
    Mr. Davis raises a number of issues related to his FTCs. In Grounds 3, 4, 9, 15, 18, 

and 40, he contends that if the BOP had applied his FTCs correctly, he would be at a 
halfway house or on home confinement by now. But as discussed in Section II above, Mr. 
Davis’s  preference  for  being  in  custody  somewhere  other  than  a  prison  (that  is,  in 
community confinement) is generally not a cognizable habeas claim.        
    In Grounds 3, 4, 15, 27, 32, 35, and 40, Mr. Davis asserts (in one way or another) 

that he ought to be released already entirely because, if correctly calculated, his FTCs 
eclipse the rest of his sentence.9 But the amount of FTCs that can be applied to early release 
is limited to 12 months’ worth, see 
18 U.S.C. § 3624
(g)(3), and Mr. Davis has already 
reached the maximum amount, (Docs. 126 ¶ 22; 126-8 at 1 (“FTC Towards Release: 365”). 


9 As noted above, a number of Mr. Davis’s Grounds for Relief can arguably be read as 
asserting discrete, sometimes overlapping arguments, explaining why certain Grounds are 
cited several times in different sections of this Report and Recommendation. 
The effect of this is that Mr. Davis’s FTCs have accelerated his release date to May 12, 
2024, rather than his statutory release date of May 12, 2025. (Docs. 122 ¶ 12; 122-1 at 3.) 

Habeas relief is not available to further reduce Mr. Davis’s incarcerative sentence beyond 
§ 3624(g)(3)’s 12-month cap.                                              
    There remains the question of whether Mr. Davis raises a justiciable claim that the 
BOP withheld some FTCs that could reduce his term of supervised release. He makes no 
such claim directly through his 50 Grounds for Relief. However, in Ground 9 he cites 
various provisions of the First Step Act, followed by the statement “Should have already 

been release[d] RRC/HC applied to supervised release.” (Doc. 42 at 8.) The Court, broadly 
and liberally construing this portion of the petition, see Frey v. Schuetzle, 
78 F.3d 359, 361
 
(8th Cir. 1996) (“as a general rule a pro se habeas petition must be given a liberal 
construction”), finds that the phrase “applied to supervised release” might be asserting that 
Mr. Davis has been unlawfully deprived of FTCs that could be used to shorten his term of 

supervised release.                                                       
    While Mr. Davis has reached the maximum number of FTC days for early release, 
he  has  accrued  an  additional  310  days  beyond  that.  (Doc.  126-8.)  The  government 
characterizes  these  as  “FTCs  toward  pre-release  placement  in  an  RRC  or  home 
confinement,” which is consistent with the description on the BOP’s FSA Time Credit 

Assessment document. (Docs. 120 at 67; 126-8 at 1.) If that description were accurate, 
there would be no relief for Mr. Davis since complaints about not being placed in a halfway 
house or on home confinement deal with the place of confinement, not the fact or duration 
of the sentence. But the government’s description is not altogether accurate. Rather, by 
statute,  these  residual  FTCs  “shall  be  applied  toward  time  in  prerelease  custody  or 
supervised release.” 
18 U.S.C. § 3632
(d)(4)(C). One court has ascribed to the view that the 

above language “provides that [FTCs] may be applied to [reduce] a term of supervised 
release.” Dyer v. Fulgham, No. 1:21-cv-0299 (CLC/CHS), 
2022 WL 1598249
, at *3 (E.D. 
Tenn. May 20, 2022). But there is a long and growing line of cases holding to the contrary, 
both within and outside this Circuit:                                     
    Since Dyer, other courts to consider this issue have declined to follow Dyer’s 
    reasoning. Orasco v. Yates, No. 2:22-cv-156, 
2022 WL 18027627
, at *3 n.4 
    (E.D. Ark. Dec. 12, 2022) (“[W]hile the [FSA’s time credit] program permits 
    early transfer to supervised release, it does not grant the BOP authority to 
    reduce or shorten a prisoner’s term of supervised release.”); Harrison v. Fed. 
    Bureau of Prisons, No. 22-14312, 
2022 WL 17093441
, at *1 (S.D. Fla. Nov. 
    21,  2022);  Pillow  v.  Bureau  of  Prisons,  No.  4:22-cv-713,  
2022 WL 13892877
, at *7 (E.D. Ark. Oct. 21, 2022); see also Mero v. Yates, No. 2:22-
    cv-72, 
2022 WL 17653228
, at *1 n.2 (E.D. Ark. Sept. 27, 2022) (“The  
    ‘earned time credits’ [defendant] seeks affect when he is eligible for transfer 
    into prelease custody, but do not reduce his sentence or his term of supervised 
    release.”);  Komando  v.  Luna,  No.  22-cv-425,  
2023 WL 310580
,  at  *3 
    (D.N.H. Jan. 13, 2023) (“FSA time credits, when applied, advance the date 
    when the prisoner will be placed in ‘prerelease custody’ (including home 
    confinement or residential reentry facilities), or accelerate the date when the 
    prisoner will leave BOP custody to start a term of court-imposed supervised 
    release.”).                                                          

United States v. Calabrese, No. 1:11-cr-00437, 
2023 WL 1969753
, at *2 (N.D. Ohio Feb. 
13, 2023). The Calabrese court’s statutory interpretation provides persuasive reasoning 
against reducing a prisoner’s supervised release term with FTCs:          
    If § 3632(d)(4)(C) provided that time credits shall be applied to reduce a term 
    of supervised release, then the Court might agree with the decision reached 
    in Dryer. But the statute provides that time credits shall be applied toward 
    supervised release. Use of the word “toward” means that credits can be 
    applied to bring “time in prerelease custody or supervised release” closer to 
    occurring because credits applied “toward” something generally means to 
    bring that something closer to happening. Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 
    2019) (defining “toward,” in relevant part, as “in the direction of; on a course 
    or line leading to (some place or something)”).                      

Id. at *2. Perhaps this is why “[e]very court to consider Dyer and Calabrese has sided with 
Calabrese.” United States v. Calhoun, No. 3:08-cr-0077 (DPJ/LGI), 
2023 WL 7930053
, at 
*3 (S.D. Miss. Nov. 16, 2023) (citing Gonzalez v. Pierre-Mike, No. 1:23-cv-11665 (IT), 
2023 WL 5984522
, at *5 (D. Mass. Sept. 14, 2023)).                        
    This Court agrees that “the Calabrese construction is more faithful to the statutory 
text.” 
Id. at *3
. Beyond that, this construction “aligns with the applicable regulation,” 
which permits FTCs to be applied toward early transfer to supervised release, not to 
shortening of supervised release. 
Id.
 (citing 
28 C.F.R. § 523.44
(d)). And finally, allowing 
FTCs to reduce a term of supervised release would contravene the purpose of supervised 

release, which “serves rehabilitative ends distinct from those served by incarceration.” 
Gonzalez, 
2023 WL 5984522
, at *5 (citation omitted); accord United States v. Johnson, 
529 U.S. 53, 59
 (2000) (refusing to apply excess prison time to reduce the length of 
supervised release). The First Step Act modified much when it comes to sentencing and 
detention, but it cannot reasonably be read as potentially eliminating supervised release, 

particularly for those serving the longest sentences who may need “supervised release to 
assist . . . in their transition to community life.”10 Johnson, 
529 U.S. at 55
. To the extent 
Mr. Davis’s habeas petition could be liberally construed to suggest he was entitled to 



10 Because FTCs accrue at a ratio based on days in programming, 
18 U.S.C. § 3632
(d)(4), 
prisoners serving longer sentences have the opportunity to earn the most FTCs (all other 
things being equal).                                                      
additional FTCs to shorten his supervised release, the Court finds no basis for granting 
such relief.                                                              

VI.  The government did not unlawfully prevent Mr. Davis from participating in 
    the BOP’s Residential Drug Abuse Program (“RDAP”) regimen.           

    Mr. Davis challenges the BOP’s determination that he was not eligible to participate 
in RDAP. To the extent he makes argument at all (See Doc. 42 at Grounds 5, 33, 43), Mr. 
Davis argues that he was wrongfully excluded from RDAP based on a prior assault 
conviction, which the BOP improperly classified as a disqualifying crime of violence. 
    By statute, the BOP is required to offer residential substance abuse treatment to 
“every prisoner with a substance abuse problem.” 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(e)(1)(C). Accordingly, 
the  BOP  screens  prisoners  for  participation  in  its  Residential  Drug  Abuse  Program, 
commonly referred to as RDAP. 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(e)(5)(B). If a person participates in and 
successfully completes RDAP, they are eligible to receive up to a year’s reduction in their 
prison sentence. 
Id.
 § 3621(e)(2)(B). “As several courts have noted, the RDAP has proved 
popular with prisoners because, beyond its rehabilitative potential, it also provides the 
possibility of a one-year early release.” Stanciel v. Holinka, No. 6-cv-3730 (PJS/SRN), 

2008 WL 304889
, at *2 (D. Minn. Jan. 31, 2008) (cleaned up, citations omitted). But this 
sentence-reduction incentive is only available to those RDAP graduates “convicted of a 
nonviolent offense.” 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(e)(2)(B). “The measure thus categorically denies 
early release eligibility to inmates convicted of violent offenses.” Lopez v. Davis, 
531 U.S. 230, 238
 (2001).                                                          
    The Supreme Court has long held that the BOP has some discretion to advance 
regulations to fill the gap in RDAP’s statutory scheme. 
Id.
 at 239–44. Mr. Davis does not 

quarrel with this proposition generally, but argues the BOP went too far in rejecting him 
from RDAP based on his prior record. Specifically, he appears to argue that the BOP used 
an overbroad definition of what is a crime of violence, then applied that definition to 
disqualify him from participating in RDAP as a violent offender. (Doc. 42 at Grounds 5, 
33, 43.)                                                                  
    Here, Mr. Davis’s contentions fail as a matter of fact. The government has submitted 

a declaration from Dr. Melissa Klein, the Chief of Psychology at FMC-Rochester. (Doc. 
124.) According to Dr. Klein, Mr. Davis was screened for RDAP on July 15, 2022. As 
mentioned above, one of the key qualifications for RDAP eligibility is that the prisoner 
actually have a substance abuse problem, 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(e)(5)(B), something the BOP 
tests through verifiable information focusing on the year before a person’s arrest. (Docs. 

124 ¶ 5; 124-1 at 27–28 (BOP Program Statement 5330. 1111)); see also Stanciel, 
2008 WL 304889
, at *2–4. For Mr. Davis, there was no such information. To the contrary, Mr. 
Davis’s PSR he had indicated “no history of substance abuse or treatment for substance 
abuse programs.” (Docs. 124 ¶ 8; 124-3 at 1.) It is true that Mr. Davis’s screening summary 
also indicates that his violent criminal history may preclude his participation in RDAP. 



11 Mr. Davis does not challenge the BOP’s authority or criteria for determining whether a 
person has a verifiable substance abuse disorder. Accord Frey, 
78 F.3d at 361
 (while courts 
must liberally construe pro se habeas petitions, “federal courts should not grant habeas 
relief to a petitioner based upon a legal theory that involves an entirely different analysis 
and legal standards than the theory actually alleged by the petitioner”). 
(Doc. 124-3 at 1.) But because Mr. Davis was otherwise ineligible for RDAP, the BOP’s 
characterization of his criminal history is of no moment: without evidence of a substance 

abuse problem, Mr. Davis would not be admitted into RDAP. He provided no such 
information,  rendering  it  unnecessary  to  reach  the  issue  of  whether  Mr.  Davis  was 
wrongfully excluded from RDAP based on the BOP’s characterization of his criminal 
history.12                                                                
VII.  Mr. Davis’s challenges to his disciplinary proceedings fail.        
    In Grounds 1 and 26 of his petition, Mr. Davis alleges that he was denied due process 

in prison disciplinary proceedings, resulting in the loss of good conduct time (“GCT”). 
(Doc. 42 at 7, 14–15.) Although Mr. Davis was the subject of at least nine disciplinary 
proceedings (Doc. 123-3), he primarily focuses on the proceedings associated with four 
incident  reports:  3145493,  3146610,  3229937,  and  3354941  (Doc.  42  at  15).  The 
government suggests that it was only these four incident reports that resulted in the loss of 

GCT, something borne out by the record (and which Mr. Davis does not dispute). (Docs. 
120 at 25; 123-3.) The Court agrees that its focus is appropriately trained only on those 
disciplinary proceedings for which Mr. Davis lost GTC. Accord Kruger v. Erickson, 
77 F.3d 1071, 1073
 (8th Cir. 1996) (“If the prisoner is not challenging the validity of his 



12 Even if Mr. Davis could show an entitlement to participate in RDAP, there would likely 
be no basis to grant his habeas petition to reduce his sentence. Davis v. English, No. 12-
cv-1483 (JNE/LIB), 
2013 WL 1149526
, at *6 (D. Minn. Feb. 27, 2013) (rejecting habeas 
petition seeking RDAP sentence reduction where petitioner was not even admitted to the 
program as “entirely speculative”), R. & R. adopted, 
2013 WL 1149769
 (D. Minn. Mar. 
19, 2013).                                                                
conviction or the length of his detention, such as loss of good time, then a writ of habeas 
corpus is not the proper remedy.”).                                       

    Courts have long held that a prisoner’s good time involves a constitutionally-
protected  liberty  interest,  which  cannot  be  forfeited  absent  due  process.  Wolff  v. 
McDonnell, 
418 U.S. 539
, 555–57 (1974). Because of the “distinctive setting of a prison,” 
however, the process due to prisoners facing the loss of good time may be less than in other 
circumstances. Superintendent, Massachusetts Corr. Inst., Walpole v. Hill, 
472 U.S. 445, 454
 (1985); Freitas v. Auger, 
837 F.2d 806, 808
 (8th Cir. 1988). A prisoner is entitled to 

(1) advance notice of the charges; (2) a hearing that includes the opportunity to present 
evidence (when consistent with the prison’s safety and correctional goals); and (3) a written 
statement by the factfinder of the evidence credited and the reasons for the disciplinary 
action. Hill, 
472 U.S. at 454
.                                            
    In order to prevent “arbitrary deprivations” of liberty, the notice of charges should 

be in writing and set forth at least some specific facts underlying the accusation, so that a 
prisoner can prepare a defense. See Dible v. Scholl, 
506 F.3d 1106, 1110
 (8th Cir. 2007) 
(holding that notice that contained no information about the victim, date, or place of alleged 
assault was not sufficient because if prisoner was innocent, “he would be uncertain of what 
evidence, such as an alibi, could refute the allegation”). “The adequacy of the notice hinges 

on whether it allows the inmate to ‘marshal the facts’ and prepare a defense.” Freitas, 
837 F.2d at 809
 (quoting Wolff, 
418 U.S. at 564
).                             
    Once a prisoner receives notice of the charges, they are generally entitled to a 
hearing on the matter. Hill, 
472 U.S. at 454
. Such a hearing may include the ability “to call 
witnesses and present documentary evidence,” so long as doing so “will not be unduly 
hazardous to institutional safety or correctional goals.” Wolff, 
418 U.S. at 566
; see also 
id. at 567
  (because  “[c]onfrontation  and  cross-examination  present  greater  hazards  to 
institutional  interests,”  the  procedures  are  not  constitutionally  required  in  prison 
disciplinary hearings). Prison officials have “broad discretion to limit an inmate’s right to 
call witnesses,” but may need to explain the reasons for doing so. Espinoza v. Peterson, 
283 F.3d 949, 953
 (8th Cir. 2002); Arias v. Barnes, No. 19-cv-1326 (JRT/KMM), 
2019 WL 9244885
, at *6 (D. Minn. Oct. 21, 2019), R. & R. adopted, 
2020 WL 3642313
 (D. 

Minn. July 6, 2020).                                                      
    As it relates to the evidence relied upon, “the requirements of due process are 
satisfied if some evidence supports the decision” to revoke GTC. Hill, 
472 U.S. at 455
. 
“Ascertaining whether this standard is satisfied does not require examination of the entire 
record, independent assessment of the credibility of witnesses, or weighing of the evidence. 

Instead, the relevant question is whether there is any evidence in the record that could 
support the conclusion reached by the disciplinary board.” 
Id.
 at 455–56. The evidence that 
supports a prison’s disciplinary decision may include testimony or written reports. 
Id.
 at 
456–57.                                                                   
    With  these  standards  in  mind,  the  Court  addresses  the  disciplinary  incidents 

resulting in the loss of Mr. Davis’s GCT. The BOP’s disciplinary process is the same for 
each of those incidents. The process begins when a staff member witnesses or reasonably 
believes a prisoner committed a prohibited act. 
28 C.F.R. § 541.5
(a). BOP staff then 
prepares an incident report, which should include all relevant details, and provides it to the 
inmate within 24 hours. Id.; see also BOP Program Statement (“PS”) 5270.09, Inmate 
Discipline Program, Ch. 2, § 541.5(a).13 BOP staff then undertake an investigation, which 

generally includes informing  the subject of the allegations of their rights to make a 
statement (or remain silent) and identify other evidence relevant to the investigation. 
28 C.F.R. § 541.5
(a)(1) & (2); PS 5270.09, Ch. 2. Once the investigation is complete, the 
matter is referred to the Unit Discipline Committee (“UDC”) for review and a hearing. 
28 C.F.R. § 541.7
. Members of the UDC “will not be victims, witnesses, investigators, or 
otherwise significantly involved in the incident.” 
Id.
 § 541.7(b). Typically, UDC hearings 

take place within five work days from issuance of the incident report. Id. § 541.7(c). The 
subject may appear in person or electronically for the UDC hearing, “except during UDC 
deliberations or when your presence would jeopardize institution security, at the UDC’s 
discretion.”  Id.  §  547.1(d).  An  inmate  is  entitled  to  make  a  statement  and  present 
documentary evidence at the UDC hearing, and the UDC will then decide the matter based 

on the greater weight of the evidence. Id. § 547.1(e).                    
    Depending on the seriousness of the charge, the UDC may (or for certain prohibited 
acts, must) refer the matter to a Discipline Hearing Officer (“DHO”) for further review. Id. 
§ 541.7(a)(3) & (4). Like the UDC, a DHO “will be an impartial decision maker who was 
not a victim, witness, investigator, or otherwise significantly involved in the incident.” Id. 

§ 541.8(b). The subject of the discipline is entitled to appear at the DHO’s hearing, except 
during deliberations or when institutional security is jeopardized. Id. § 541.8(e). The 


13 Available at https://perma.cc/ZR9F-ZW2F (last visited Jan. 18, 2024).  
subject may make a statement, present documentary evidence and, in some circumstances, 
present witnesses on their behalf. Id. § 541.8(f). The subject is also entitled to a staff 

representative to assist them at the DHO’s hearing. Id. § 541.8(d). An inmate may request 
the staff representative of their choice, but if that person is not available, the institution’s 
warden will appoint another one. Id. The DHO will decide whether the charged prohibited 
acts occurred based on the greater weight of the evidence. Id. § 541.8(f). If the DHO 
determines that the incident occurred, they will impose sanctions within the range that is 
set forth by regulation based on the type of prohibited act. Id. § 541.8(g); see also § 541.3 

(categorizing prohibited acts and available sanctions). A sanctioned inmate is entitled to a 
written copy of the DHO’s decision, setting forth the evidence relied upon, the sanction, 
and the reasons for its imposition. Id. § 541.8(h). Although not set out in regulation, BOP 
policy directs that an inmate receive the DHO’s decision “ordinarily within 15 work days 
of the decision.” PS § 5270.009, Ch. 5. An inmate unhappy with the UDC or DHO decision 

may appeal through the Administrative Remedy Program set forth at 
28 U.S.C. §§ 542
.10–
.19.; 541.7(i); 541.8(i).                                                 
    A.   Incident Report 3145493                                         
    According to the initial Incident Report 3145493, a corrections officer was making 
daily rounds in Mr. Davis’s unit at 8:30 a.m. on July 13, 2018. (Doc. 123-4.) In response 

to a wellness check, Mr. Davis began yelling obscene and graphic language, threatening to 
mutilate and kill the corrections officer. (Id.) The incident report was provided to Mr. Davis 
about 4 hours later, at which time, Mr. Davis was advised of his disciplinary process rights. 
(Id. at 2.) Mr. Davis ignored the BOP investigator and refused to make a statement. (Id.) 
The matter was referred to the UDC, who held a hearing on July 19, 2018. (Id. at 1.) Mr. 
Davis  told  the  UDC  he  was  legally  blind,  incompetent,  and  did  not  understand  the 

institutional rules or disciplinary process. (Id.) Given the severity of the incident, the UDC 
referred the matter to a DHO. (Id.) Mr. Davis was advised of his DHO hearing rights, but 
refused to sign a form acknowledging those rights, saying he did not understand the process 
and wanted his lawyer. (Doc. 123-5 at 1–2.)                               
    On July 23, 2018, at 12:00 p.m., the DHO held a disciplinary hearing. (Doc. 123-
7.) According to the DHO report, Mr. Davis “became belligerent and disruptive” at the 

outset of the proceedings. (Id. at 2.) Mr. Davis was warned to cease his behavior, but did 
not. (Id.) Instead, Mr. Davis spoke over the DHO and expressed a number of racial slurs. 
(Id.) Ultimately, Mr. Davis was removed from the hearing and returned to his cell, with the 
DHO  determining  that  Mr.  Davis’s  decision  to  exhibit  “this  unacceptable  behavior 
identified [his] unwillingness to participate in the disciplinary hearing.” (Id.) 

    In a report dated February 18, 2019, the DHO found that the greater weight of the 
evidence supported that Mr. Davis had engaged in threatening conduct. (Id. at 2–3.) Mr. 
Davis was sanctioned with (among other things) the loss of 27 GCT days for threatening 
bodily harm. (Id. at 2.) Mr. Davis was provided with a copy of the DHO report on April 
17, 2019. (Id. at 4.)                                                     

    B.   Incident Report 3146610                                         
    Just three days after the circumstances giving rise to Incident Report 3145493, Mr. 
Davis was again charged with threatening bodily harm. (Doc. 123-8.) At 3:13 p.m. on July 
16, 2018, Mr. Davis “began a verbal onslaught of racist names” toward a corrections 
officer, followed by threats to have the officer killed. (Id. at 1.) The incident report was 
delivered to Mr. Davis about three hours later. (Id.) Mr. Davis informed the investigator 

that he understood his rights and did not want to make a statement. (Id. at 2) The matter 
proceeded to a hearing before the UDC on July 19, 2018.14 (Id.) Mr. Davis told the UDC 
he  was  legally  blind,  incompetent,  and  did  not  understand  the  institutional  rules  or 
disciplinary process. (Id.) Given the severity of the incident, the UDC referred the matter 
to a DHO. (Id.) Mr. Davis was advised of his DHO hearing rights, but refused to sign a 
form acknowledging those rights, saying he did not understand the process and wanted his 

lawyer. (Docs. 123-9; 123-10.)                                            
    On July 23, 2018, at approximately 12:10 p.m., the DHO held a hearing regarding 
Incident Report 3145493. (Doc. 123-11.) The hearing report indicates that the hearing took 
place shortly after the hearing for Incident Report 3146610, and the report’s discussion of 
Mr. Davis’s conduct is the same for both reports: Mr. Davis “became belligerent and 

disruptive” at the outset of the proceedings; Mr. Davis was warned to cease his behavior; 
and Mr. Davis instead spoke over the DHO and expressed a number of racial slurs. (Id. at 
2.) Ultimately, Mr. Davis was removed from the hearing and returned to his cell, with the 
DHO determining that exhibiting “this unacceptable behavior identified [Mr. Davis’s] 
unwillingness to participate in the disciplinary hearing.” (Id.)          




14 According to the documentary evidence, the UDC hearings for Incident Reports 3145493 
and 3146610 happened within minutes of each other on July 19, 2018. (Compare Doc. 123-
4 at 1 with Doc. 123-8 at 1.)                                             
    In a report dated February 18, 2019, the DHO found that the greater weight of the 
evidence supported that Mr. Davis had engaged in threatening conduct. (Id. at 2–3.) 

Although  the  disciplinary  regime  contemplates  that  repeated  conduct  may  result  in 
progressive discipline, see 
28 C.F.R. § 541.3
, Table 2, the DHO did not impose a greater 
sanction for Mr. Davis’s conduct here than for the (similarly threatening) conduct he had 
engaged in three days earlier. Rather, just like in Incident Report 3145493, Mr. Davis was 
sanctioned with the loss of 27 GCT days for threatening bodily harm. (Id. at 2.) Mr. Davis 
was provided with a copy of the DHO report on April 17, 2019. (Id. at 4.) 

    C.   Incident Report 3229937                                         
    On March 3, 2019, at approximately 6:45 a.m., a corrections officer found a flash 
drive  in  the  hollow  tube  of  Mr.  Davis’s  wheelchair.  (Doc.  121-4.)  Flash  drives  are 
unauthorized devices for Mr. Davis. (Id.) The incident report was delivered to Mr. Davis 
at 7:00 a.m. on March 4, 2019—24 hours and 15 minutes after the incident. (Id. at 1.) Mr. 

Davis was read his rights by the investigator, indicated he understood them, and made no 
statement about the incident to the investigator. (Id. at 2.) The matter proceeded to a hearing 
before the UDC on March 8, 2019. (Id. at 1.) Mr. Davis submitted a written statement that 
he had received the flash drive while at another federal prison by a prison counselor, that 
it was sent to him by his attorney, and that it had legal information relevant to his criminal 

proceedings. (Id. at 3.) In this same statement, Mr. Davis provided citations to relevant 
sections of the Code of Federal Regulations and BOP Policy Statements, raising legal 
arguments not unlike ones in this habeas petition or filed in his underlying criminal matter. 
(Id.) Yet Mr. Davis also asserted that he did not understand or comprehend “anything” and 
was “incompetent,” citing to 
28 C.F.R. § 541.6
 (which concerns disciplinary proceedings 
for mentally incompetent prisoners). (Id.)                                

    Mr. Davis was notified that the matter would proceed to a hearing before a DHO. 
(Doc. 121-5.)  The document providing notice of Mr. Davis’s DHO hearing rights contains 
another citation to 
28 C.F.R. § 541.6
 and, on the signature block for the inmate’s signature, 
reads “Blind, Incompetent,” as well as what appears to be his signature. (Id.; see also Doc. 
121-6  (indicating  same)).  Given  Mr.  Davis’s  assertions  about competence,  the DHO 
suspended the March 8, 2019 hearing and referred Mr. Davis for further evaluation. (Doc. 

121 ¶ 16.) Dr. Alexandra Crouch, Psy.D., provided an evaluative report on March 20, 2019. 
(Doc. 121-4.) Dr. Crouch opined that Mr. Davis “has not been observed to be displaying 
any signs or symptoms consistent with actual psychotic symptoms,” but  rather, it is 
“suspected he is feigning mental illness in an effort to avoid consequences related to his 
incident  report.”  (Id.  at  5.)  Dr.  Crouch  deemed  Mr.  Davis  competent  to  undergo 

disciplinary proceedings and assist in his own defense, and opined that his actions giving 
rise to the incident report were not the product of a mental disease or defect impairing his 
ability to understand right from wrong. (Id.) Dr. Crouch’s assessment was echoed by Dr. 
Gregory Mims, who, in a report dated April 16, 2019, opined that Mr. Davis “is most 
certainly physically and mentally capable of participating in the DHO process.” (Id. at 10.)  

     Given the assessments of Drs. Crouch and Mims, the DHO resumed Mr. Davis’s 
hearing on April 17, 2019. Mr. Davis had indicated he sought to have Dr. Mims as his staff 
representative to inform the DHO that “I’m totally blind and disabled.” (Doc. 121-7 at 1.) 
Dr. Mims was not available for the hearing, but submitted the report referenced above. (Id. 
at 2.) Mr. Davis did not request any other staff representative, but asked that two other 
witnesses be called: his former counselor, who, according to Mr. Davis, would say that he 

gave Mr. Davis the thumb drive; and his attorney, who would tell the DHO that Mr. Davis 
was incompetent. (Id.) The DHO found that the counselor was unavailable by virtue of 
their retirement, and that his competence was already fully addressed by two medical 
professionals. (Id.)                                                      
    At the hearing, the DHO noted that Mr. Davis received the hearing notice 15 minutes 
beyond the 24-hour window (see 
28 C.F.R. § 541.5
(a)), but that the minor delay had no 

impact on Mr. Davis’s ability to prepare a defense. (Doc. 121-7 at 2.) After informing Mr. 
Davis that Dr. Mims could not serve as a staff representative, and that Mr. Davis’s lawyer 
and counselor would not be present as witnesses, the DHO asked Mr. Davis if he was ready 
to proceed. (Id.) Mr. Davis responded, “see you in court,” and the hearing went forward. 
(Id.)                                                                     

    The DHO Report was issued on May 1, 2019, and provided to Mr. Davis on August 
5, 2019. (Id. at 4.) The DHO found that the greater weight of the evidence supported the 
view that Mr. Davis had no justification for possessing the thumb drive. (Id. at 3.) The 
DHO found Mr. Davis to be not credible in several respects. Namely, the DHO found that 
Mr. Davis’s assertions that he was incompetent were contradicted by the evaluations of 

two medical professionals, one of whom opined that Mr. Davis’s assertion of incompetence 
was likely an attempt to evade disciplinary action. (Id.) The DHO also found that Mr. 
Davis’s assertion that he was unable to proceed because he was “completely blind” was 
contradicted  by  his  submission  before  the  UDC,  which  is  a  detailed,  full  page  of 
handwritten notes. (Id.) According to the DHO decision, “[t]he DHO asked [Mr. Davis] 
‘How did you write such a detailed note if you were completely blind?’ You just smiled at 

the DHO.” (Id.) Given the uncontroverted evidence of Mr. Davis’s possession of the drive, 
combined with the Mr. Davis’s lack of credibility, the DHO found a violation occurred and 
imposed a sanction of 40 days of lost GCT. (Id.)                          
    D.   Incident Report 3354941                                         
     On January 21, 2020, a corrections officer noticed a “white paper like substance” 
on Mr. Davis during a search and ordered Mr. Davis to remove it. (Doc. 121-8 at 1.) Mr. 

Davis responded by threatening to kill the officer. (Id.) Mr. Davis was provided with a 
copy of the incident report about three and a half hours later. (Id.) Mr. Davis was advised 
of his rights and acknowledged his understanding. (Id. at 2.) He made a “no comment” 
statement about the incident. (Id.) Mr. Davis was advised of his right to appear before the 
UDC, but declined to do so. (Id. at 3.) The matter was then referred to a DHO to consider 

discipline. (Id. at 1.)                                                   
    On January 28, 2020, Mr. Davis was informed of his rights related to a DHO hearing 
(Doc. 121-9.) The DHO held a hearing the next day. (Doc. 121-11 at 1.) Mr. Davis 
requested that K. Childress be present as his staff representative, but this officer was away 
from the institution in training. (Id. at 1.) The DHO substituted Unit Manager L. Custer as 

the staff representative without objection from Mr. Davis. (Id.) Mr. Davis indicated he 
understood his rights and the hearing process. (Id.) For his evidence, Mr. Davis stated that 
the charges were “fraudulently fabricated” and that “the Lieutenant never served me a 
shot.” (Id.) No other witnesses or evidence was submitted by Mr. Davis. (Id. at 1–2.)  
    The DHO issued their report the same day as the hearing. (Id.) The report concluded 
that the greater weight of the evidence supported that Mr. Davis engaged in threatening 

conduct, relying on the reporting officer’s assertion that Mr. Davis threatened to kill the 
officer. (Id.) The DHO considered Mr. Davis’s defense that the officer’s report was 
fabricated, but found it to be unsupported by any evidence. (Id.) Mr. Davis was sanctioned 
with a loss of 27 days of GCT. (Id. at 1.) A copy of the report was delivered to Mr. Davis 
the next day. (Id. at 2.)                                                 
                          *    *    *                                    

    As  is  evident  from  the  above  summary,  none  of  Mr.  Davis’s  disciplinary 
proceedings were infected with constitutional infirmity. For each, he received timely notice 
of the charge, had at least one (and sometimes two) hearings, was offered the opportunity 
to  present  evidence,  and  received  notice  of  the  result  of  the  proceeding.  For  each 
proceeding,  the  DHO  report  provided  the  basis  of  the  DHO’s  decision,  which  was 

supported by some evidence in each circumstance. And the DHO’s sanction in each 
proceeding was consistent with the misconduct.                            
    It is true that not every proceeding went forward precisely by the book. For instance, 
a few DHO reports were provided to Mr. Davis months after they were written, contrary to 
BOP  policy.  But  even  if  the  Court  were  to  construe  the  “several  months’  delay  in 

Petitioner’s receipt of the DHO Report” as “a failure by the BOP to follow its own policy, 
it is well established that a failure to follow BOP policy is not, by itself, enough to support 
a finding that procedures lacked due process under the Fifth Amendment.” Franklin v. 
Fikes, 22-cv-646 (JRT/TNL), 
2023 WL 8720331
, at *4 (D. Minn. Oct. 31, 2023) (cleaned 
up and quotation omitted), R. & R. adopted, 
2023 WL 8719963
 (D. Minn. Dec. 18, 2023). 
That is because the fact of delay does not violate due process, as opposed to prejudice 

resulting from such delay. 
Id.
 And Mr. Davis points to none.              
    Mr. Davis may also complain about being removed from his first two disciplinary 
DHO hearings, and that the BOP did not undertake any competency examinations before 
those proceedings despite Mr. Davis’s assertion that he was not competent. But as was 
evident in the reports of each hearing, Mr. Davis was removed because he refused to 
participate other than to be belligerent, yelling and talking over the hearing officer while 

expressing racially-charged insults. At no point, however, did Mr. Davis appear to actually 
seek  to  address  the  charges  against  him.  The  Court  cannot  say  that  under  those 
circumstances  the  hearing  officer  committed  constitutional  error  by  moving  forward 
without Mr. Davis present. Accord 
28 U.S.C. § 541.8
(e)(2) (inmate appearance at DHO 
hearing may be prohibited where presence would jeopardize institution’s security “at the 

DHO’s discretion”). And as it related to Mr. Davis’s competency, the DHO certainly could 
have postponed the proceedings to investigate Mr. Davis’s competency further. But the 
Court will not second guess the DHO’s decision not to do so based on the evidence before 
the officer. Accord 
28 C.F.R. § 541.6
(a) (DHO will make competency decisions based on 
evidence). Mr. Davis’s assertions of incompetence do not make it so, and the DHO did not 

err in so deciding.                                                       
VIII.  There is no habeas relief available for Mr. Davis’s financial claims. 
    In several of his Grounds,15 Mr. Davis asserts that the BOP administered his trust 

fund account in an unlawful manner, resulting in funds not being applied to his criminal 
financial obligations and rendering him ineligible for FTCs for a period of time.  
    Inmates do not retain cash in prison; they receive, retain, and spend money through 
a trust fund operated by the BOP. See generally BOP Program Statement (“PS”) 4500.12, 
Trust Fund/Deposit Fund Manual.16 In order accept funds for an inmate, the BOP requires 
that the inmate execute a Power of Attorney assignment so that the BOP can endorse checks 

on behalf of the inmate. PS 4500.12, § 9.1(c). If a prisoner refuses to sign the BOP’s Power 
of Attorney form, they are flagged as “No Power of Attorney” within the BOP’s system. 
Id. The BOP will not accept checks on behalf of inmates with a “No Power of Attorney” 
notation; checks received for such inmates are supposed to be returned to the sender (or, if 
no address is available, to the issuing financial institution). Id.       

    According to BOP Regional Trust Fund Administrator Jason Stolze, it is “extremely 
rare for an inmate to have ‘No Power of Attorney’ flagged on their Trust Fund Account.” 
(Doc. 125 at 2.) Although Mr. Stolze has worked for the BOP since 1993, he has only seen 
the “No Power of Attorney” flag “a handful of times.” (Id.) Mr. Davis is within that 
handful. He “has repeatedly declined to authorize the BOP to sign his name as endorsement 

to  deposit  funds  into  his  Trust  Fund  Account,”  reaffirming  his  intention  as  he  was 


15 Specifically, Mr. Davis raises financial abnormality claims in Grounds 2, 8, 11, 26, and 
37. (Doc. 42 at 7-9, 15, 21.)                                             
16 Available at https://perma.cc/H7LA-PTKP (last visited Jan. 18, 2024).  
transferred from institution to institution. (Id.; see also Doc. 125-2 (BOP authorization 
forms in which Mr. Davis refused to authorize BOP to endorse negotiable instruments on 

his behalf).)                                                             
    Mr. Davis received two checks from the United States Treasury: a $1400 stimulus 
check from the summer of 2021, and a $1350.10 check from the spring of 2022. (Docs. 
125 at 3; 125-4; 125-5.) By the government’s submissions, it appears that Mr. Davis has 
consistently refused to allow BOP endorsement of checks like these, and has never wavered 
from that position. (Doc. 125-2 at 1-5.) Under PS 4500.12, these checks were not to be 

deposited in Mr. Davis’s trust account and should have been returned to the Treasury. PS 
4500.12, § 9.1(c). But that is not what happened. Rather, both checks were deposited into 
Mr. Davis’s trust fund account. (Docs. 125 at 3; 125-3.) At the time that these funds were 
deposited, Mr. Davis had significant unsatisfied PLRA debt from his civil filings.17 (Doc. 
125-3.) The $1400 check was immediately and fully encumbered for Mr. Davis’s PLRA 

obligations, ultimately leaving less than $10 in his account within a month. (Id. at 4-5; see 
also PS 4500.12 § 10.1 (granting BOP authority to make withdrawals from inmate trust 
accounts for PLRA filing fees without inmate authorization). Likewise, Mr. Davis’s entire 
$1350.10 check was encumbered the day it was deposited, within a month leaving him 
with only $10 in his account. (Doc. 125-3 at 8.)                          




17 Under the Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”), a prisoner may not need to pay the 
entire filing fee to commence a civil action, but “shall be required to pay the full amount” 
over time as funds become available. See generally 
28 U.S.C. § 1915
.      
    Mr. Davis appears to be correct in asserting that the BOP disregarded its own 
program statement, his limited right to financial autonomy, and potentially violated the law 

when it endorsed checks for him without his authorization. The government may be right 
that the way Mr. Davis managed his BOP financial account was enigmatic. Nonetheless, 
that is his choice, and there appears no excuse for the government’s failure to honor it. But 
habeas is not a vehicle intended to right every wrong. Rather, habeas petitions are only 
cognizable to the extent they challenge the legality or length of a prisoner’s detention. 
Spencer, 774 F.3d at 469.                                                 

    Given Mr. Davis’s individual circumstances, the legality or length of his detention 
are not implicated by the BOP’s actions. It is true that the increased money in Mr. Davis’s 
trust account resulted in the BOP treating him as if he had more money in his account than 
he actually did, since the funds were immediately encumbered. This consequently led the 
BOP to conclude Mr. Davis had refused his financial obligations to pay his criminal court 

assessments and restitution. (Doc. 126 at 5.) And because of this, from November 16, 2021 
through February 22, 2022, and October 6, 2022 through October 26, 2022, the BOP listed 
Mr. Davis as in “FRP18 Refuse” status.19 (Doc. 126-8 at 1-2.) The government concedes 
that Mr. Davis’s FTCs were disallowed while he was on “FRP Refuse” status. (Doc. 126 
at 7.) For another prisoner, the loss of these FTCs could state a cognizable habeas claim, 



18 “FRP” refers to the Financial Responsibility Program, sometimes also referred to as the 
Inmate Financial Responsibility Program. See 
28 C.F.R. §§ 545.10
 & .11.   
19 Mr. Davis was also in “FRP Refuse” status from December 17, 2019 through April 28, 
2020 (see Docs. 126 at 7; 126-9 at 1), but he makes no habeas allegations about this period 
of time.                                                                  
since FTCs may shorten a prison term. But as set forth above in Section V, Mr. Davis has 
already reached the maximum amount of FTCs that can be applied to early release. Habeas 

relief is not available to further reduce Mr. Davis’s prison sentence beyond the statutory 
cap.                                                                      
XI.  Mr. Davis’s remaining claims.                                        
    Some of Mr. Davis’s remaining claims defy easy description, while others merit 
little discussion.20 He asserts as independent claims (in Grounds 10 and 50) that the BOP’s 
administrative remedy program is effectively unavailable to him because he gets harassed 

when he complaints. (Doc. 42 at 9, 23.) To the extent that Mr. Davis is seeking to excuse 
his failure to exhaust administrative remedies, see Mathena v. United States, 
577 F.3d 943, 946
 (8th Cir. 2009), this Court has addressed his claims on their merits regardless of any 
failure to exhaust. Mr. Davis also asserts in the BOP has violated some of their program 
statements, been nonresponsive to him at times, and not provided him with all of the legal 

supplies that he desires. (Doc. 42 at Grounds 9, 10, 12, 17, 23, 44, 46, 48.) These are 
generally not cognizable habeas claims, see Spencer, 774 F.3d 469–70, and specifically 
not here.21 Mr.  Davis asserts  he  is  the  victim  of  retaliation  in  violation  of  his  First 
Amendment rights in Grounds 17, 25, 26, and 38 (Doc. 42 at 12–15, 21), but again, habeas 
is not the vehicle for such claims. Mr. Davis also faults the BOP for not managing his care 

in a way that would have allowed him early “release,” but these complaints appear to 

20 Mr. Davis’s petition includes no Ground 29, explaining the omission of any analysis of 
Ground 29, and two Ground 46s.                                            
21 The Court addressed Mr. Davis’s claims that he had been deprived legal supplies in an 
earlier Report and Recommendation and Order as well. (Docs. 111, 128.)    
implicate  community  confinement.  (Id.  at  21–22  (Grounds  39,  44,  46,  and  48).)  As 
discussed at length in Section II, there is no habeas relief available for such claims. In 

Ground 50 of Mr. Davis’s habeas petition, he seeks declaratory and injunctive relief. (Id. 
at 23.) It is true that habeas is an equitable remedy, but here there is no basis for relief at 
all, so his requests fail.                                                
X.   Additional matters.                                                  
    Mr. Davis has also filed a number of other motions, including a motion for sanctions 
(Doc. 48), a motion for a temporary restraining order (Doc. 62), a “standing” motion for 

appointment of counsel (Doc. 82), and two discovery motions (Docs. 96, 104). The Court 
finds that Mr. Davis’s motion for sanctions has no merit and denies it. His motion for a 
temporary restraining order merely repeats complaints made and rejected by this Court and 
the Court thus recommends it be denied for the same reasons. (Doc. 111). His motion 
seeking the appointment of counsel likewise fails for the same reasons as in his previous 

motions  for  counsel.  (Docs.  10,  60.)  As  for  Mr.  Davis’s  discovery  motions,  habeas 
discovery is only available for good cause, see Fiorito v. Fikes, 22-cv-0512 (WMW/TNL), 
2022 WL 7341963
, at *3 (D. Minn. Sept. 13, 2022), aff’d, 
2023 WL 129093
 (D. Minn. Jan. 
9, 2023), and good cause does not exist here. Thus, the Court denies both motions. The 
Court’s decision is based on undisputed record evidence that leaves no room for doubt. Mr. 

Davis also requests copies of his docket sheets in this case as well as his underlying 
criminal case. (Doc. 105.) The Court grants this motion in part. The Clerk of Court is 
directed to mail Mr. Davis a copy of the docket in this case. Should he desire the docket in 
his underlying criminal case, that request is best considered by the court of original 
jurisdiction.                                                             

    Finally, the Court concludes there is no basis for an evidentiary hearing. Mr. Davis’s 
petition was fulsome, as was the government’s responsive pleadings and submissions. In 
reviewing those submissions, the Court discerned no material facts in dispute. As such, no 
evidentiary hearing is necessary to decide Mr. Davis’s claims. Wilson v. Kemna, 
12 F.3d 145, 146
 (8th Cir. 1994).                                                 

ORDER

    Based on the all the files, records, and proceedings above, IT IS ORDERED that: 
    1.  Petitioner  William  Scott  Davis,  Jr.’s  Motion  for  Sanctions  (Doc.  48)  is 
      DENIED;                                                            

    2.  Mr.  Davis’s  Standing  Motion  for  Appointment  of  Counsel  (Doc.  82)  is 
      DENIED;                                                            

    3.  Mr. Davis’s Motion for Respondents Production (Doc. 96) is DENIED; 

    4.  Mr. Davis’s Motion (Doc. 104) that concerns discovery is DENIED; and 

    5.  Mr. Davis’s Motion (Doc. 105) seeking copies of his court filings is GRANTED 
      IN PART and DENIED IN PART. The Clerk of Court is directed to mail Mr. 
      Davis a copy of the docket in this case.                           

                      RECOMMENDATION                                     
    Based  on  the  all  the  files,  records,  and  proceedings  above,  IT  IS 
RECOMMENDED that:                                                         
    1.  Mr. Davis’s Amended Petition (Doc. 42) seeking federal habeas corpus relief be 
      DENIED;                                                            

    2.  Mr. Davis’s Motion (Doc. 54) brought under 
28 U.S.C. § 2255
 be DENIED; and 
    3.  Mr.  Davis’s  Motion  for  a  Temporary  Restraining  Order  and  Preliminary 
      Injunction (Doc. 62) be DENIED.                                    


Date: January 19, 2024              s/Douglas L. Micko                   
                                   DOUGLAS L. MICKO                      
                                   United States Magistrate Judge        

                            NOTICE                                       
Filing Objections: This Report and Recommendation is not an order or judgment of the 
District Court and is therefore not appealable directly to the Eighth Circuit Court of 
Appeals.  Under  Local  Rule  72.2(b)(1),  “a  party  may  file  and  serve  specific  written 
objections to a magistrate judge’s proposed findings and recommendations within 14 days 
after being served with a copy” of the Report and Recommendation.         

A party may respond to those objections within 14 days after being served a copy of the 
objections. See Local Rule 72.2(b)(2). All objections and responses must comply with the 
word or line limits set forth in Local Rule 72.2(c).                      

Trial Court Opinion

                 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


 William Scott Davis, Jr.,          Case No. 22-cv-2854 (JRT/DLM)        

               Petitioner,                                               

 v.                                                                      
                                     ORDER AND REPORT AND                

                                       RECOMMENDATION                    
 Jared  Rardin,  Warden  F.M.C.  Rochester                               

 MN; Merrick Garland, U.S.A.G.; and                                      
 Colett S. Peters, Director F.B.O.P.,                                    

               Respondents.                                              


    This case has been referred to the undersigned United States Magistrate Judge for a 
Report and Recommendation pursuant to 
28 U.S.C. § 636
 and District of Minnesota Local 
Rule 72.1. Petitioner William Scott Davis, Jr., a federal prisoner, brings this petition for 
habeas corpus relief pursuant to 
28 U.S.C. § 2241
. Mr. Davis initially filed his petition in 
November of 2022 (Doc. 1), but in the weeks following, Mr. Davis filed a number of other 
documents that supplemented his petition (see, e.g., Docs. 18, 19, 20, 22, 23). Rather than 
consider matters piecemeal, the Court ordered Mr. Davis to file a single, consolidated 
petition setting forth all of the grounds on which he seeks habeas relief. (Doc. 27.) 
    In response, Mr. Davis filed an amended petition. (Doc. 42.) The amended petition 
enumerates exactly 50 grounds for relief, but a closer review of each reveals that some of 
those grounds are duplicative, while others can be reasonably construed as asserting several 
theories in one “ground.”1 All to say, Mr. Davis’s cataloguing is not particularly useful. 

1 For a comprehensive listing of Mr. Davis’s grounds for relief, see Doc. 111 at 2–4 n.2. 
Below,  the  undersigned  recategorizes  Mr.  Davis’s  petition  into  subject  matters, with 
reference to which of his enumerated grounds arguably are included in each category. 

    Regardless of the organization of Mr. Davis’s petition, it does not set forth any bases 
for relief. The overwhelming majority of Mr. Davis’s theories involve matters that are not 
cognizable in habeas, such as where he is serving his sentence. Others involve complaints 
that have no remedy, such as asserting that he has not received certain good time credits 
even though he is already at the statutory cap for credited time. And yet others are direct 
or veiled attacks on his underlying criminal sentence, something generally reserved for the 

sentencing court to consider via a motion to vacate his sentence (which Mr. Davis clearly 
knows, since he unsuccessfully sought this relief in his sentencing District). Finally, for 
those few grounds that actually may be considered on their merits, Mr. Davis puts forth 
only conclusory allegations that have been thoroughly dispelled by the government’s 
response. As such, it is recommended that Mr. Davis’s petition be denied in its entirety 

without an evidentiary hearing.2                                          
                         BACKGROUND                                      
    Mr. Davis is a federal inmate who is incarcerated at the Federal Medical Center in 
Rochester, Minnesota (“FMC-Rochester”). Federal Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) Inmate 
Locator, https://perma.cc/G78K-K3TM (last visited January 17, 2024). He is serving a 

144-month sentence after a jury found him guilty of one count of cyberstalking, in violation 
of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2261A(2)(B) and 2261(b)(5), and three counts of sending threatening 

2 Mr. Davis filed a number of motions as well, which remain outstanding. In Section X 
below, the Court addresses these matters.                                 
communications, in violation of 
18 U.S.C. § 875
(c). See United States v. Davis, No. 5:14-
cr-240, Doc. 906 (Judgment) (E.D.N.C. Mar. 29, 2018). Mr. Davis was originally arrested 

on his federal criminal matter on October 22, 2014. 
Id.,
 Doc. 8. The three and a half years 
between arrest and sentencing in Mr. Davis’s criminal case were marked by wide ranging 
proceedings, which included an overwhelming number of pro se filings (highlighted by 
attempts to recuse and threats to sue Mr. Davis’s district judge), competency proceedings, 
and, ultimately, a trial with standby counsel. See generally 
id.
 This single defendant 
criminal matter has resulted in, as of now, 1,131 separate docket entries. 
Id.
 These entries 

also include Mr. Davis’s motions to vacate his sentence pursuant to 
18 U.S.C. § 2255
, 
id.
 
at Docs. 919, 1046, and motions for compassionate release, 
id.
 at Docs. 993, 1027–28, 
1049, 1062.3                                                              
    Mr. Davis’s statutory release date—that is, the date that he is expected to be released 
if he were to receive all of the “good conduct time” credit set forth in 
18 U.S.C. § 3624
(b)—

is May 12, 2025. (Doc. 122-1 at 3.) However, Mr. Davis has also qualified for an additional 
365  days  of  early-release  credits  pursuant  to  the  First  Step  Act,4  moving  his  actual 
projected release date to May 12, 2024. (Doc. 126-1 at 3.) He filed a petition for habeas 
corpus relief with this Court on November 7, 2022. (Doc. 1.) As noted in the Court’s 
August 16, 2023 Order, Mr. Davis “has filed a multitude of motions since his petition was 


3 The district court in Mr. Davis’s criminal matter ultimately denied each of his § 2255 and 
compassionate release motions. United States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240, Docs. 1066, 
1079–80, 1106 (E.D.N.C.).                                                 
4 The First Step Act of 2018 introduced amendments to a number of statutes governing 
time credits, early release, and early prerelease custody for federal prisoners. See generally 
First Step Act of 2018, 
Pub. L. No. 115-391, 132
 Stat. 5194 (2018).       
filed,” (Doc. 128), including some which appeared to supplement his habeas petition. 
Subsequently (and in response to this Court’s direction), Mr. Davis filed an amended 

habeas petition, which included all of his grounds for relief, on March 6, 2023. (Doc. 42.) 
The government filed its response, together with a number of declarations and exhibits, on 
August 14, 2023 (Docs. 120 (Response), 121–26 (Declarations & Exhibits)). Any response 
by Mr. Davis was due within 30 days (Doc. 10), but none was filed. Instead, on August 24, 
2023, Mr. Davis filed a motion seeking “up until December 31st 2023” to reply to the 
government’s response. (Doc. 130.) The Court denied Mr. Davis’s motion for failure to 

comply with the Court’s prior Order requiring leave before filing any such motions. (Doc. 
131 (citing Doc. 128).) Mr. Davis has filed no reply at all to the government’s response—
timely or not—and the date for which he sought to move his deadline has now passed. 
Further background evidence will be set forth below as relevant to the analysis of Mr. 
Davis’s claims.                                                           

                           ANALYSIS                                      
I.   Mr. Davis’s collateral attacks on his criminal conviction and sentence are not 
    cognizable via this § 2241 petition.                                 

    In Mr. Davis’s amended petition, he checked the box “No” in answer to the question 
of whether he was challenging the validity of his conviction or sentence. (Doc. 42 at 2 
¶ 10.) However, as the government correctly notes, Grounds 6, 7, 22, 23, 28, 46, and 49 all 
concern the validity of his conviction and sentence: Ground 6 challenges Mr. Davis’s 
Presentence Report (“PSR”) as inaccurate; Ground 7 contends that his Judgment and 
Commitment order listed the wrong conviction; Ground 23 accuses the government of 
Brady5 violations; Ground 28 specifically attacks Mr. Davis’s sentence and conviction; 
Grounds 22 and 46 assert the BOP has improperly denied him access to his PSR (which he 

claims  he  needs  to  attack  his  conviction  and  sentence);  and  Ground  49  purports  to 
incorporate Mr. Davis’s “§ 2255 filings.” (Id. at 8, 11, 16–19, 23.) Mr. Davis also filed a 
standalone motion to attack his criminal conviction and sentence, separate from his habeas 
petition. (Doc. 54.)                                                      
    A prisoner seeking to challenge the validity of his conviction or sentence must file 
a motion to vacate pursuant to 
18 U.S.C. § 2255
. Nichols v. Symmes, 
553 F.3d 647, 649
 

(8th Cir. 2009). That motion must generally be filed in the district where the prisoner was 
sentenced. Jones v. Hendrix, 
599 U.S. 465, 472
 (2023). Petitions brought pursuant to 
18 U.S.C. § 2241
 are attacks on the execution of a prisoner’s sentence, generally brought 
where the person is incarcerated. Nichols, 
553 F.3d at 649
.               
    Mr. Davis has already sought § 2255 relief in his sentencing District. See United 

States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240, Docs. 919, 1046. He lost. Id. at Doc. 1080 (E.D.N.C. Apr. 
14, 2022). In Jones v. Hendrix, the Supreme Court recently clarified that the grounds for 
seeking § 2241 habeas relief rather than moving for relief via § 2255 are extremely narrow. 
599 U.S. at 471–78. There, the Court refused to extend § 2255(e)’s “saving clause” (that 
is, the section of § 2255 which allows a prisoner to forego a § 2255 motion if “the remedy 

by motion is inadequate or ineffective to test the legality of detention”) to all but the most 
exceptional § 2241 habeas petitions. Id. By Jones, a § 2241 attack on a prisoner’s sentence 


5 Brady v. Maryland, 
373 U.S. 83
 (1963).                                  
may be permitted where the prisoner could not bring a § 2255 claim because of logistical 
issues making it impracticable to do so, but not for much else. Id. at 475–76. 

    Mr. Davis does not suggest that his case falls within an exceptional circumstance 
making it impossible or impracticable to attack his sentence or conviction via a § 2255 
motion. In fact, he pursued that relief with his sentencing court not long before filing his 
original § 2241 petition with this court. United States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240, Doc. 1042 
(E.D.N.C. filed Feb. 22, 2022). As such, the Court finds no basis to entertain Mr. Davis’s 
collateral attacks on his sentence or conviction through the § 2241 habeas petition he filed 

in this District, nor through the related standalone motion within this action, which the 
Court recommends be denied.                                               
II.  Mr. Davis’s complaints about not being transferred to a halfway house or home 
    confinement are not cognizable habeas claims and otherwise have no merit. 

    In several areas of his petition, Mr. Davis complains that he has not been transferred 
to home confinement or to a halfway house (also known as a Residential Reentry Center 
or “RRC”) placement. In Grounds 4, 15, 18, and 32, he claims he should have already been 
released to a halfway house or home confinement because his good time has not been 
properly calculated. (Doc. 42 at 6, 10, 20.) In Grounds 7 and 21, he complains that he was 
not granted home confinement under the CARES Act. (Id. at 8, 11.) Ground 9 follows the 
theme, stating he should already be released to home confinement or a halfway house. (Id.) 
Similarly, in Grounds 20, 36, and 42, Mr. Davis complains that he was not placed on home 
confinement pursuant to the Elderly Home Confinement Program.6 (Id. at 11, 21-22.) In 


6 
34 U.S.C. § 60541
(g).                                                   
Grounds 13, 14, 16, and 46, Mr. Davis asserts that it is a failure of the BOP that he is not 
in a halfway house or on home confinement given his age and disabilities. (Id.) Ground 24 
asserts that he was denied a halfway house placement under the Second Chance Act7 for 

impermissible reasons, a theme repeated in Ground 41 as it relates to home confinement. 
(Id. at 12.) Ground 31 claims that the BOP failed to assess his individual needs in not 
granting him a halfway house placement, as does Ground 34 (but expanded to include 
denial of home confinement). (Id. at 20–21.) Finally, Ground 45 asserts that the BOP has 
failed to properly interpret 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(b), which governs the place of imprisonment. 

(Id. at 22.)                                                              
    In each of his assertions, Mr. Davis challenges his placement, preferring a halfway-
house or home confinement to being incarcerated at FMC-Rochester. In this Circuit and 
District, claims seeking that type of relief are generally considered claims challenging the 
place of confinement. See United States v. Houck, 
2 F.4th 1082, 1085
 (8th Cir. 2021) 

(discussing home confinement as a place of confinement); Elwood v. Jeter, 
386 F.3d 842, 846
 (8th Cir. 2004) (halfway house “is a penal or correctional facility and a place of 
imprisonment”); see also Williams v. Birkholz, No. 20-cv-2190 (ECT/LIB), 
2021 WL 4155614
, at *6 (D. Minn. July 20, 2021) (“A prisoner is transferred to home confinement 
not released to home confinement because home confinement is a place of incarceration.”) 

(citation omitted), R. & R. adopted, 
2021 WL 4155013
 (D. Minn. Sept. 13, 2021). And a 
“legal action seeking transfer from one form of BOP custody to another (like a legal action 


7 Second Chance Act of 2007, Pub. L. No. 110–199, 
122 Stat. 657
 (2008).   
seeking transfer from one BOP facility to another) is not a challenge to the fact or duration 
of confinement.” Johnson v. Birkholz, 21-cv-2017 (PJS/LIB), 
2022 WL 3135304
, at *1 (D. 

Minn. Aug. 5, 2022). The Court has no jurisdiction to entertain a challenge to a prisoner’s 
place of confinement via a habeas petition. 
Id.
                           
    Even if considered on the merits, Mr. Davis’s claims would fare no better. At 
bottom, his complaint is that the BOP has not placed him in a halfway house or on home 
confinement in violation of its statutory obligations, constitutional obligations, or both. But 
“[t]he BOP has the exclusive authority to designate where an inmate will serve [their] 

sentence,” and “placement decisions are not reviewable.” Blocher v. Eischen, No. 22-cv-
0678 (PJS/DTS), 
2022 WL 17406549
, at *3 (D. Minn. Nov. 3, 2022) (citing 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(b)), R. & R. adopted, 
2022 WL 17404447
 (D. Minn. Dec. 2, 2022); see also United 
States v. Vang, No. 16-cr-0277 (DWF/KMM), 
2020 WL 4704875
, at *2 (D. Minn. Aug. 
13, 2020) (“Courts have consistently held that placement questions are not reviewable.”) 

(citing 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(b)) (collecting cases). Thus, the BOP’s placement decisions—
including  whether  and  when  Mr.  Davis  is  placed  in  a  halfway  house  or  on  home 
confinement—are generally not subject to judicial review. Khdeer v. Paul, No. 18-cv-2112 
(ECT/BRT), 
2018 WL 6919637
, at *4 (D. Minn. Nov. 29, 2018), R. & R. adopted, 
2019 WL 79318
 (D. Minn. Jan 2, 2019); cf. United States v. Acosta-Cruz, No. 11-cr-002(4) 

(SRN/FLN), 
2018 WL 5801900
, at *3 (D. Minn. Nov. 6, 2018) (“[A] prisoner does not 
have an enforceable legal right to a 12-month pre-release RRC placement.”) (citation 
omitted).                                                                 
    To the extent that Mr. Davis’s claims could be broadly read to suggest BOP’s refusal 
to move him to community confinement was contrary to law or violated the Constitution 

(a  possible  exception  to  §  3625’s  bar  on  judicial  review  of  BOP  discretionary 
decisionmaking, see Khdeer¸ 
2018 WL 6919637
, at *5), his claims lack merit. On the 
contrary, the BOP’s decision not to move Mr. Davis to a halfway house is precisely because 
it conducted the individualized assessment required by 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(b): the BOP 
determined that Mr. Davis’s significant medical needs could not be accommodated by a 
halfway house, and he lacked a suitable release address for a home confinement placement. 

(Doc.  126  ¶¶  36–48.)  Finally,  because  Mr.  Davis  “does  not  have  a  constitutionally 
protected liberty interest in serving his sentence at a particular institution,” he “has no 
constitutional right to a pre-release RRC or home confinement placement.” Khdeer, 
2018 WL 6919637
, at *5 (citations omitted).                                    
III.  Mr.  Davis’s  compassionate release  claims  are  not  cognizable  through this 
    § 2241 habeas petition.                                              

    In at least three of his Grounds (19, 30, and 47), Mr. Davis suggests that he should 
be released (or, more accurately, that the government has violated his rights in not releasing 
him) pursuant to 
18 U.S.C. § 3582
(c)(1)(A). As relevant here, § 3582(c)(1)(A) permits a 
court  to  modify  a  prisoner’s  sentence  based  on  “extraordinary  and  compelling” 
circumstances.  Requesting  such  relief  is  commonly  referred  to  as  a  motion  for 
compassionate release. United States v. Sims, 
87 F.4th 917, 919
 (8th Cir. 2023). But 
because § 3582(c) motions seek to modify a person’s original sentence, they must be 

brought  before  the  original  sentencing  court.  Ybarra  v.  Kallis,  No.  21-cv-2062 
(ECT/KMM), 
2021 WL 5235335
, at *1 (D. Minn. Oct. 1, 2021), R. & R. adopted, 
2021 WL 5235141
 (D. Minn. Nov. 10, 2012); see also Chicoine v. Segal, No. 23-cv-1217 

(KMM/TNL), 
2023 WL 5337085
, at *2 (May 30, 2023), R. & R. adopted, 
2023 WL 5333772
 (D. Minn. Aug. 18, 2023). This Court “has no authority to modify pursuant to 
§ 3582(c)  a  sentence  imposed  in  another  venue.”  Boos  v.  Kallis,  No.  21-cv-2177 
(SRN/BRT), 
2022 WL 2541751
, at *1 (D. Minn. Jun. 15, 2022) (quoting Ybarra, 
2021 WL 5235335
, at *1), R. & R. adopted, 
2022 WL 2533374
 (D. Minn. Jul. 7, 2022). 
    As noted above, Mr. Davis was sentenced in the Eastern District of North Carolina. 

Any motion to modify his sentence must be considered by that court, not this one. Mr. 
Davis has, in fact, filed a number of compassionate-release motions seeking to modify his 
sentence with that court, see, e.g., United States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240, at Docs. 970, 
998, 993, 1027, 1028, 1041, 1049, 1052, 1062, 1069, 1072, including a Notice of Appeal 
that post-dated the filing of his habeas petition with this Court, 
id.
 at Doc. 1107 (E.D.N.C. 

filed Nov. 14, 2022). As such, there appears to be no impediment Mr. Davis seeking 
§ 3582(c) relief in his sentencing court, and no excuse for seeking it via § 2241 habeas 
petition here.                                                            
IV.  The BOP correctly computed Mr. Davis’s sentence.                     
    Mr.  Davis also  complains (in Grounds  4,  27,  and  arguably  35) that  the  BOP 

improperly calculated his sentence such that he is serving more time in custody than he 
should. These arguments are properly considered via a § 2241 habeas petition, since they 
involve the duration of confinement.                                      
    On March 22, 2018, Mr. Davis was sentenced to 144 months of imprisonment. 
United States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240 at Doc. 906 (E.D.N.C. Mar. 29, 2018).8 Under 
18 U.S.C. § 3585
, an offender like Mr. Davis is entitled to credit toward his sentence “for any 
time spent in official detention.” United States v. Tindall, 
455 F.3d 885, 888
 (8th Cir. 2006) 
(citing 
18 U.S.C. § 3583
(b)(2)). Once a federal court sentences an offender, it is up to the 
Attorney General to determine what time credit the offender receives toward that sentence. 
United States v. Wilson, 
503 U.S. 329
, 333–34 (1992).                     
    Mr. Davis was arrested for his underlying offense on October 22, 2014. United 

States v. Davis, No. 5:14-cr-240 at Doc. 8 (E.D.N.C. Oct. 22, 2014); (see also Doc. 122-
2). He remained in some form or another of federal custody (between traditional pretrial 
detention and competency proceedings) continuously until his sentencing. (Doc. 122-3.) 
The period of Mr. Davis’s federal pretrial detention—from his October 22, 2014 arrest 
through March 22, 2018 sentencing—was 1,247 days. According to the inmate data sheet 

submitted by the government, Mr. Davis received 1,247 days of credit toward his sentence. 
(Doc. 122 ¶ 12; Doc. 122-1 at 3.) Given the unrefuted evidence that the BOP correctly 
calculated Mr. Davis’s sentence, there is no habeas relief available to Mr. Davis based on 
BOP calculation errors.                                                   




8 Although judgment  was entered  on March 29, 2018,  Mr. Davis’s sentencing court 
imposed that judgment at sentencing on March 22, 2018. See United States v. Davis, No. 
5:14-cr-240  at  Docs.  903  (E.D.N.C.  Mar.  22,  2018)  (minute  entry  for  sentencing 
proceeding), 906 (E.D.N.C. Mar. 29, 2018) (judgment and commitment order stating 
judgment imposed March 22, 2018).                                         
V.   There is no basis to grant relief for Mr. Davis’s concerns regarding his accrual 
    of First Step Act time credits.                                      

    In late 2018, the First Step Act was enacted into law, ushering in a number of 
changes to federal inmate programming and, as most relevant here, good time credits. If an 
inmate participates in evidence-based recidivism reduction programing, they may earn 
First Step Act time credits (“FTC”) at a rate of 10 or 15 days for every 30 days of 
programming. 
18 U.S.C. § 3632
(d)(4)(A)(i) & (ii). FTCs “shall be applied toward time in 
prerelease custody or supervised release.” 
18 U.S.C. § 3632
(d)(4)(C). A prisoner’s FTCs 
may be used to transfer them out of custody and onto supervised release up to 12 months 
early. 
18 U.S.C. § 3624
(g)(3).                                            
    Mr. Davis raises a number of issues related to his FTCs. In Grounds 3, 4, 9, 15, 18, 

and 40, he contends that if the BOP had applied his FTCs correctly, he would be at a 
halfway house or on home confinement by now. But as discussed in Section II above, Mr. 
Davis’s  preference  for  being  in  custody  somewhere  other  than  a  prison  (that  is,  in 
community confinement) is generally not a cognizable habeas claim.        
    In Grounds 3, 4, 15, 27, 32, 35, and 40, Mr. Davis asserts (in one way or another) 

that he ought to be released already entirely because, if correctly calculated, his FTCs 
eclipse the rest of his sentence.9 But the amount of FTCs that can be applied to early release 
is limited to 12 months’ worth, see 
18 U.S.C. § 3624
(g)(3), and Mr. Davis has already 
reached the maximum amount, (Docs. 126 ¶ 22; 126-8 at 1 (“FTC Towards Release: 365”). 


9 As noted above, a number of Mr. Davis’s Grounds for Relief can arguably be read as 
asserting discrete, sometimes overlapping arguments, explaining why certain Grounds are 
cited several times in different sections of this Report and Recommendation. 
The effect of this is that Mr. Davis’s FTCs have accelerated his release date to May 12, 
2024, rather than his statutory release date of May 12, 2025. (Docs. 122 ¶ 12; 122-1 at 3.) 

Habeas relief is not available to further reduce Mr. Davis’s incarcerative sentence beyond 
§ 3624(g)(3)’s 12-month cap.                                              
    There remains the question of whether Mr. Davis raises a justiciable claim that the 
BOP withheld some FTCs that could reduce his term of supervised release. He makes no 
such claim directly through his 50 Grounds for Relief. However, in Ground 9 he cites 
various provisions of the First Step Act, followed by the statement “Should have already 

been release[d] RRC/HC applied to supervised release.” (Doc. 42 at 8.) The Court, broadly 
and liberally construing this portion of the petition, see Frey v. Schuetzle, 
78 F.3d 359, 361
 
(8th Cir. 1996) (“as a general rule a pro se habeas petition must be given a liberal 
construction”), finds that the phrase “applied to supervised release” might be asserting that 
Mr. Davis has been unlawfully deprived of FTCs that could be used to shorten his term of 

supervised release.                                                       
    While Mr. Davis has reached the maximum number of FTC days for early release, 
he  has  accrued  an  additional  310  days  beyond  that.  (Doc.  126-8.)  The  government 
characterizes  these  as  “FTCs  toward  pre-release  placement  in  an  RRC  or  home 
confinement,” which is consistent with the description on the BOP’s FSA Time Credit 

Assessment document. (Docs. 120 at 67; 126-8 at 1.) If that description were accurate, 
there would be no relief for Mr. Davis since complaints about not being placed in a halfway 
house or on home confinement deal with the place of confinement, not the fact or duration 
of the sentence. But the government’s description is not altogether accurate. Rather, by 
statute,  these  residual  FTCs  “shall  be  applied  toward  time  in  prerelease  custody  or 
supervised release.” 
18 U.S.C. § 3632
(d)(4)(C). One court has ascribed to the view that the 

above language “provides that [FTCs] may be applied to [reduce] a term of supervised 
release.” Dyer v. Fulgham, No. 1:21-cv-0299 (CLC/CHS), 
2022 WL 1598249
, at *3 (E.D. 
Tenn. May 20, 2022). But there is a long and growing line of cases holding to the contrary, 
both within and outside this Circuit:                                     
    Since Dyer, other courts to consider this issue have declined to follow Dyer’s 
    reasoning. Orasco v. Yates, No. 2:22-cv-156, 
2022 WL 18027627
, at *3 n.4 
    (E.D. Ark. Dec. 12, 2022) (“[W]hile the [FSA’s time credit] program permits 
    early transfer to supervised release, it does not grant the BOP authority to 
    reduce or shorten a prisoner’s term of supervised release.”); Harrison v. Fed. 
    Bureau of Prisons, No. 22-14312, 
2022 WL 17093441
, at *1 (S.D. Fla. Nov. 
    21,  2022);  Pillow  v.  Bureau  of  Prisons,  No.  4:22-cv-713,  
2022 WL 13892877
, at *7 (E.D. Ark. Oct. 21, 2022); see also Mero v. Yates, No. 2:22-
    cv-72, 
2022 WL 17653228
, at *1 n.2 (E.D. Ark. Sept. 27, 2022) (“The  
    ‘earned time credits’ [defendant] seeks affect when he is eligible for transfer 
    into prelease custody, but do not reduce his sentence or his term of supervised 
    release.”);  Komando  v.  Luna,  No.  22-cv-425,  
2023 WL 310580
,  at  *3 
    (D.N.H. Jan. 13, 2023) (“FSA time credits, when applied, advance the date 
    when the prisoner will be placed in ‘prerelease custody’ (including home 
    confinement or residential reentry facilities), or accelerate the date when the 
    prisoner will leave BOP custody to start a term of court-imposed supervised 
    release.”).                                                          

United States v. Calabrese, No. 1:11-cr-00437, 
2023 WL 1969753
, at *2 (N.D. Ohio Feb. 
13, 2023). The Calabrese court’s statutory interpretation provides persuasive reasoning 
against reducing a prisoner’s supervised release term with FTCs:          
    If § 3632(d)(4)(C) provided that time credits shall be applied to reduce a term 
    of supervised release, then the Court might agree with the decision reached 
    in Dryer. But the statute provides that time credits shall be applied toward 
    supervised release. Use of the word “toward” means that credits can be 
    applied to bring “time in prerelease custody or supervised release” closer to 
    occurring because credits applied “toward” something generally means to 
    bring that something closer to happening. Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 
    2019) (defining “toward,” in relevant part, as “in the direction of; on a course 
    or line leading to (some place or something)”).                      

Id. at *2. Perhaps this is why “[e]very court to consider Dyer and Calabrese has sided with 
Calabrese.” United States v. Calhoun, No. 3:08-cr-0077 (DPJ/LGI), 
2023 WL 7930053
, at 
*3 (S.D. Miss. Nov. 16, 2023) (citing Gonzalez v. Pierre-Mike, No. 1:23-cv-11665 (IT), 
2023 WL 5984522
, at *5 (D. Mass. Sept. 14, 2023)).                        
    This Court agrees that “the Calabrese construction is more faithful to the statutory 
text.” 
Id. at *3
. Beyond that, this construction “aligns with the applicable regulation,” 
which permits FTCs to be applied toward early transfer to supervised release, not to 
shortening of supervised release. 
Id.
 (citing 
28 C.F.R. § 523.44
(d)). And finally, allowing 
FTCs to reduce a term of supervised release would contravene the purpose of supervised 

release, which “serves rehabilitative ends distinct from those served by incarceration.” 
Gonzalez, 
2023 WL 5984522
, at *5 (citation omitted); accord United States v. Johnson, 
529 U.S. 53, 59
 (2000) (refusing to apply excess prison time to reduce the length of 
supervised release). The First Step Act modified much when it comes to sentencing and 
detention, but it cannot reasonably be read as potentially eliminating supervised release, 

particularly for those serving the longest sentences who may need “supervised release to 
assist . . . in their transition to community life.”10 Johnson, 
529 U.S. at 55
. To the extent 
Mr. Davis’s habeas petition could be liberally construed to suggest he was entitled to 



10 Because FTCs accrue at a ratio based on days in programming, 
18 U.S.C. § 3632
(d)(4), 
prisoners serving longer sentences have the opportunity to earn the most FTCs (all other 
things being equal).                                                      
additional FTCs to shorten his supervised release, the Court finds no basis for granting 
such relief.                                                              

VI.  The government did not unlawfully prevent Mr. Davis from participating in 
    the BOP’s Residential Drug Abuse Program (“RDAP”) regimen.           

    Mr. Davis challenges the BOP’s determination that he was not eligible to participate 
in RDAP. To the extent he makes argument at all (See Doc. 42 at Grounds 5, 33, 43), Mr. 
Davis argues that he was wrongfully excluded from RDAP based on a prior assault 
conviction, which the BOP improperly classified as a disqualifying crime of violence. 
    By statute, the BOP is required to offer residential substance abuse treatment to 
“every prisoner with a substance abuse problem.” 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(e)(1)(C). Accordingly, 
the  BOP  screens  prisoners  for  participation  in  its  Residential  Drug  Abuse  Program, 
commonly referred to as RDAP. 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(e)(5)(B). If a person participates in and 
successfully completes RDAP, they are eligible to receive up to a year’s reduction in their 
prison sentence. 
Id.
 § 3621(e)(2)(B). “As several courts have noted, the RDAP has proved 
popular with prisoners because, beyond its rehabilitative potential, it also provides the 
possibility of a one-year early release.” Stanciel v. Holinka, No. 6-cv-3730 (PJS/SRN), 

2008 WL 304889
, at *2 (D. Minn. Jan. 31, 2008) (cleaned up, citations omitted). But this 
sentence-reduction incentive is only available to those RDAP graduates “convicted of a 
nonviolent offense.” 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(e)(2)(B). “The measure thus categorically denies 
early release eligibility to inmates convicted of violent offenses.” Lopez v. Davis, 
531 U.S. 230, 238
 (2001).                                                          
    The Supreme Court has long held that the BOP has some discretion to advance 
regulations to fill the gap in RDAP’s statutory scheme. 
Id.
 at 239–44. Mr. Davis does not 

quarrel with this proposition generally, but argues the BOP went too far in rejecting him 
from RDAP based on his prior record. Specifically, he appears to argue that the BOP used 
an overbroad definition of what is a crime of violence, then applied that definition to 
disqualify him from participating in RDAP as a violent offender. (Doc. 42 at Grounds 5, 
33, 43.)                                                                  
    Here, Mr. Davis’s contentions fail as a matter of fact. The government has submitted 

a declaration from Dr. Melissa Klein, the Chief of Psychology at FMC-Rochester. (Doc. 
124.) According to Dr. Klein, Mr. Davis was screened for RDAP on July 15, 2022. As 
mentioned above, one of the key qualifications for RDAP eligibility is that the prisoner 
actually have a substance abuse problem, 
18 U.S.C. § 3621
(e)(5)(B), something the BOP 
tests through verifiable information focusing on the year before a person’s arrest. (Docs. 

124 ¶ 5; 124-1 at 27–28 (BOP Program Statement 5330. 1111)); see also Stanciel, 
2008 WL 304889
, at *2–4. For Mr. Davis, there was no such information. To the contrary, Mr. 
Davis’s PSR he had indicated “no history of substance abuse or treatment for substance 
abuse programs.” (Docs. 124 ¶ 8; 124-3 at 1.) It is true that Mr. Davis’s screening summary 
also indicates that his violent criminal history may preclude his participation in RDAP. 



11 Mr. Davis does not challenge the BOP’s authority or criteria for determining whether a 
person has a verifiable substance abuse disorder. Accord Frey, 
78 F.3d at 361
 (while courts 
must liberally construe pro se habeas petitions, “federal courts should not grant habeas 
relief to a petitioner based upon a legal theory that involves an entirely different analysis 
and legal standards than the theory actually alleged by the petitioner”). 
(Doc. 124-3 at 1.) But because Mr. Davis was otherwise ineligible for RDAP, the BOP’s 
characterization of his criminal history is of no moment: without evidence of a substance 

abuse problem, Mr. Davis would not be admitted into RDAP. He provided no such 
information,  rendering  it  unnecessary  to  reach  the  issue  of  whether  Mr.  Davis  was 
wrongfully excluded from RDAP based on the BOP’s characterization of his criminal 
history.12                                                                
VII.  Mr. Davis’s challenges to his disciplinary proceedings fail.        
    In Grounds 1 and 26 of his petition, Mr. Davis alleges that he was denied due process 

in prison disciplinary proceedings, resulting in the loss of good conduct time (“GCT”). 
(Doc. 42 at 7, 14–15.) Although Mr. Davis was the subject of at least nine disciplinary 
proceedings (Doc. 123-3), he primarily focuses on the proceedings associated with four 
incident  reports:  3145493,  3146610,  3229937,  and  3354941  (Doc.  42  at  15).  The 
government suggests that it was only these four incident reports that resulted in the loss of 

GCT, something borne out by the record (and which Mr. Davis does not dispute). (Docs. 
120 at 25; 123-3.) The Court agrees that its focus is appropriately trained only on those 
disciplinary proceedings for which Mr. Davis lost GTC. Accord Kruger v. Erickson, 
77 F.3d 1071, 1073
 (8th Cir. 1996) (“If the prisoner is not challenging the validity of his 



12 Even if Mr. Davis could show an entitlement to participate in RDAP, there would likely 
be no basis to grant his habeas petition to reduce his sentence. Davis v. English, No. 12-
cv-1483 (JNE/LIB), 
2013 WL 1149526
, at *6 (D. Minn. Feb. 27, 2013) (rejecting habeas 
petition seeking RDAP sentence reduction where petitioner was not even admitted to the 
program as “entirely speculative”), R. & R. adopted, 
2013 WL 1149769
 (D. Minn. Mar. 
19, 2013).                                                                
conviction or the length of his detention, such as loss of good time, then a writ of habeas 
corpus is not the proper remedy.”).                                       

    Courts have long held that a prisoner’s good time involves a constitutionally-
protected  liberty  interest,  which  cannot  be  forfeited  absent  due  process.  Wolff  v. 
McDonnell, 
418 U.S. 539
, 555–57 (1974). Because of the “distinctive setting of a prison,” 
however, the process due to prisoners facing the loss of good time may be less than in other 
circumstances. Superintendent, Massachusetts Corr. Inst., Walpole v. Hill, 
472 U.S. 445, 454
 (1985); Freitas v. Auger, 
837 F.2d 806, 808
 (8th Cir. 1988). A prisoner is entitled to 

(1) advance notice of the charges; (2) a hearing that includes the opportunity to present 
evidence (when consistent with the prison’s safety and correctional goals); and (3) a written 
statement by the factfinder of the evidence credited and the reasons for the disciplinary 
action. Hill, 
472 U.S. at 454
.                                            
    In order to prevent “arbitrary deprivations” of liberty, the notice of charges should 

be in writing and set forth at least some specific facts underlying the accusation, so that a 
prisoner can prepare a defense. See Dible v. Scholl, 
506 F.3d 1106, 1110
 (8th Cir. 2007) 
(holding that notice that contained no information about the victim, date, or place of alleged 
assault was not sufficient because if prisoner was innocent, “he would be uncertain of what 
evidence, such as an alibi, could refute the allegation”). “The adequacy of the notice hinges 

on whether it allows the inmate to ‘marshal the facts’ and prepare a defense.” Freitas, 
837 F.2d at 809
 (quoting Wolff, 
418 U.S. at 564
).                             
    Once a prisoner receives notice of the charges, they are generally entitled to a 
hearing on the matter. Hill, 
472 U.S. at 454
. Such a hearing may include the ability “to call 
witnesses and present documentary evidence,” so long as doing so “will not be unduly 
hazardous to institutional safety or correctional goals.” Wolff, 
418 U.S. at 566
; see also 
id. at 567
  (because  “[c]onfrontation  and  cross-examination  present  greater  hazards  to 
institutional  interests,”  the  procedures  are  not  constitutionally  required  in  prison 
disciplinary hearings). Prison officials have “broad discretion to limit an inmate’s right to 
call witnesses,” but may need to explain the reasons for doing so. Espinoza v. Peterson, 
283 F.3d 949, 953
 (8th Cir. 2002); Arias v. Barnes, No. 19-cv-1326 (JRT/KMM), 
2019 WL 9244885
, at *6 (D. Minn. Oct. 21, 2019), R. & R. adopted, 
2020 WL 3642313
 (D. 

Minn. July 6, 2020).                                                      
    As it relates to the evidence relied upon, “the requirements of due process are 
satisfied if some evidence supports the decision” to revoke GTC. Hill, 
472 U.S. at 455
. 
“Ascertaining whether this standard is satisfied does not require examination of the entire 
record, independent assessment of the credibility of witnesses, or weighing of the evidence. 

Instead, the relevant question is whether there is any evidence in the record that could 
support the conclusion reached by the disciplinary board.” 
Id.
 at 455–56. The evidence that 
supports a prison’s disciplinary decision may include testimony or written reports. 
Id.
 at 
456–57.                                                                   
    With  these  standards  in  mind,  the  Court  addresses  the  disciplinary  incidents 

resulting in the loss of Mr. Davis’s GCT. The BOP’s disciplinary process is the same for 
each of those incidents. The process begins when a staff member witnesses or reasonably 
believes a prisoner committed a prohibited act. 
28 C.F.R. § 541.5
(a). BOP staff then 
prepares an incident report, which should include all relevant details, and provides it to the 
inmate within 24 hours. Id.; see also BOP Program Statement (“PS”) 5270.09, Inmate 
Discipline Program, Ch. 2, § 541.5(a).13 BOP staff then undertake an investigation, which 

generally includes informing  the subject of the allegations of their rights to make a 
statement (or remain silent) and identify other evidence relevant to the investigation. 
28 C.F.R. § 541.5
(a)(1) & (2); PS 5270.09, Ch. 2. Once the investigation is complete, the 
matter is referred to the Unit Discipline Committee (“UDC”) for review and a hearing. 
28 C.F.R. § 541.7
. Members of the UDC “will not be victims, witnesses, investigators, or 
otherwise significantly involved in the incident.” 
Id.
 § 541.7(b). Typically, UDC hearings 

take place within five work days from issuance of the incident report. Id. § 541.7(c). The 
subject may appear in person or electronically for the UDC hearing, “except during UDC 
deliberations or when your presence would jeopardize institution security, at the UDC’s 
discretion.”  Id.  §  547.1(d).  An  inmate  is  entitled  to  make  a  statement  and  present 
documentary evidence at the UDC hearing, and the UDC will then decide the matter based 

on the greater weight of the evidence. Id. § 547.1(e).                    
    Depending on the seriousness of the charge, the UDC may (or for certain prohibited 
acts, must) refer the matter to a Discipline Hearing Officer (“DHO”) for further review. Id. 
§ 541.7(a)(3) & (4). Like the UDC, a DHO “will be an impartial decision maker who was 
not a victim, witness, investigator, or otherwise significantly involved in the incident.” Id. 

§ 541.8(b). The subject of the discipline is entitled to appear at the DHO’s hearing, except 
during deliberations or when institutional security is jeopardized. Id. § 541.8(e). The 


13 Available at https://perma.cc/ZR9F-ZW2F (last visited Jan. 18, 2024).  
subject may make a statement, present documentary evidence and, in some circumstances, 
present witnesses on their behalf. Id. § 541.8(f). The subject is also entitled to a staff 

representative to assist them at the DHO’s hearing. Id. § 541.8(d). An inmate may request 
the staff representative of their choice, but if that person is not available, the institution’s 
warden will appoint another one. Id. The DHO will decide whether the charged prohibited 
acts occurred based on the greater weight of the evidence. Id. § 541.8(f). If the DHO 
determines that the incident occurred, they will impose sanctions within the range that is 
set forth by regulation based on the type of prohibited act. Id. § 541.8(g); see also § 541.3 

(categorizing prohibited acts and available sanctions). A sanctioned inmate is entitled to a 
written copy of the DHO’s decision, setting forth the evidence relied upon, the sanction, 
and the reasons for its imposition. Id. § 541.8(h). Although not set out in regulation, BOP 
policy directs that an inmate receive the DHO’s decision “ordinarily within 15 work days 
of the decision.” PS § 5270.009, Ch. 5. An inmate unhappy with the UDC or DHO decision 

may appeal through the Administrative Remedy Program set forth at 
28 U.S.C. §§ 542
.10–
.19.; 541.7(i); 541.8(i).                                                 
    A.   Incident Report 3145493                                         
    According to the initial Incident Report 3145493, a corrections officer was making 
daily rounds in Mr. Davis’s unit at 8:30 a.m. on July 13, 2018. (Doc. 123-4.) In response 

to a wellness check, Mr. Davis began yelling obscene and graphic language, threatening to 
mutilate and kill the corrections officer. (Id.) The incident report was provided to Mr. Davis 
about 4 hours later, at which time, Mr. Davis was advised of his disciplinary process rights. 
(Id. at 2.) Mr. Davis ignored the BOP investigator and refused to make a statement. (Id.) 
The matter was referred to the UDC, who held a hearing on July 19, 2018. (Id. at 1.) Mr. 
Davis  told  the  UDC  he  was  legally  blind,  incompetent,  and  did  not  understand  the 

institutional rules or disciplinary process. (Id.) Given the severity of the incident, the UDC 
referred the matter to a DHO. (Id.) Mr. Davis was advised of his DHO hearing rights, but 
refused to sign a form acknowledging those rights, saying he did not understand the process 
and wanted his lawyer. (Doc. 123-5 at 1–2.)                               
    On July 23, 2018, at 12:00 p.m., the DHO held a disciplinary hearing. (Doc. 123-
7.) According to the DHO report, Mr. Davis “became belligerent and disruptive” at the 

outset of the proceedings. (Id. at 2.) Mr. Davis was warned to cease his behavior, but did 
not. (Id.) Instead, Mr. Davis spoke over the DHO and expressed a number of racial slurs. 
(Id.) Ultimately, Mr. Davis was removed from the hearing and returned to his cell, with the 
DHO  determining  that  Mr.  Davis’s  decision  to  exhibit  “this  unacceptable  behavior 
identified [his] unwillingness to participate in the disciplinary hearing.” (Id.) 

    In a report dated February 18, 2019, the DHO found that the greater weight of the 
evidence supported that Mr. Davis had engaged in threatening conduct. (Id. at 2–3.) Mr. 
Davis was sanctioned with (among other things) the loss of 27 GCT days for threatening 
bodily harm. (Id. at 2.) Mr. Davis was provided with a copy of the DHO report on April 
17, 2019. (Id. at 4.)                                                     

    B.   Incident Report 3146610                                         
    Just three days after the circumstances giving rise to Incident Report 3145493, Mr. 
Davis was again charged with threatening bodily harm. (Doc. 123-8.) At 3:13 p.m. on July 
16, 2018, Mr. Davis “began a verbal onslaught of racist names” toward a corrections 
officer, followed by threats to have the officer killed. (Id. at 1.) The incident report was 
delivered to Mr. Davis about three hours later. (Id.) Mr. Davis informed the investigator 

that he understood his rights and did not want to make a statement. (Id. at 2) The matter 
proceeded to a hearing before the UDC on July 19, 2018.14 (Id.) Mr. Davis told the UDC 
he  was  legally  blind,  incompetent,  and  did  not  understand  the  institutional  rules  or 
disciplinary process. (Id.) Given the severity of the incident, the UDC referred the matter 
to a DHO. (Id.) Mr. Davis was advised of his DHO hearing rights, but refused to sign a 
form acknowledging those rights, saying he did not understand the process and wanted his 

lawyer. (Docs. 123-9; 123-10.)                                            
    On July 23, 2018, at approximately 12:10 p.m., the DHO held a hearing regarding 
Incident Report 3145493. (Doc. 123-11.) The hearing report indicates that the hearing took 
place shortly after the hearing for Incident Report 3146610, and the report’s discussion of 
Mr. Davis’s conduct is the same for both reports: Mr. Davis “became belligerent and 

disruptive” at the outset of the proceedings; Mr. Davis was warned to cease his behavior; 
and Mr. Davis instead spoke over the DHO and expressed a number of racial slurs. (Id. at 
2.) Ultimately, Mr. Davis was removed from the hearing and returned to his cell, with the 
DHO determining that exhibiting “this unacceptable behavior identified [Mr. Davis’s] 
unwillingness to participate in the disciplinary hearing.” (Id.)          




14 According to the documentary evidence, the UDC hearings for Incident Reports 3145493 
and 3146610 happened within minutes of each other on July 19, 2018. (Compare Doc. 123-
4 at 1 with Doc. 123-8 at 1.)                                             
    In a report dated February 18, 2019, the DHO found that the greater weight of the 
evidence supported that Mr. Davis had engaged in threatening conduct. (Id. at 2–3.) 

Although  the  disciplinary  regime  contemplates  that  repeated  conduct  may  result  in 
progressive discipline, see 
28 C.F.R. § 541.3
, Table 2, the DHO did not impose a greater 
sanction for Mr. Davis’s conduct here than for the (similarly threatening) conduct he had 
engaged in three days earlier. Rather, just like in Incident Report 3145493, Mr. Davis was 
sanctioned with the loss of 27 GCT days for threatening bodily harm. (Id. at 2.) Mr. Davis 
was provided with a copy of the DHO report on April 17, 2019. (Id. at 4.) 

    C.   Incident Report 3229937                                         
    On March 3, 2019, at approximately 6:45 a.m., a corrections officer found a flash 
drive  in  the  hollow  tube  of  Mr.  Davis’s  wheelchair.  (Doc.  121-4.)  Flash  drives  are 
unauthorized devices for Mr. Davis. (Id.) The incident report was delivered to Mr. Davis 
at 7:00 a.m. on March 4, 2019—24 hours and 15 minutes after the incident. (Id. at 1.) Mr. 

Davis was read his rights by the investigator, indicated he understood them, and made no 
statement about the incident to the investigator. (Id. at 2.) The matter proceeded to a hearing 
before the UDC on March 8, 2019. (Id. at 1.) Mr. Davis submitted a written statement that 
he had received the flash drive while at another federal prison by a prison counselor, that 
it was sent to him by his attorney, and that it had legal information relevant to his criminal 

proceedings. (Id. at 3.) In this same statement, Mr. Davis provided citations to relevant 
sections of the Code of Federal Regulations and BOP Policy Statements, raising legal 
arguments not unlike ones in this habeas petition or filed in his underlying criminal matter. 
(Id.) Yet Mr. Davis also asserted that he did not understand or comprehend “anything” and 
was “incompetent,” citing to 
28 C.F.R. § 541.6
 (which concerns disciplinary proceedings 
for mentally incompetent prisoners). (Id.)                                

    Mr. Davis was notified that the matter would proceed to a hearing before a DHO. 
(Doc. 121-5.)  The document providing notice of Mr. Davis’s DHO hearing rights contains 
another citation to 
28 C.F.R. § 541.6
 and, on the signature block for the inmate’s signature, 
reads “Blind, Incompetent,” as well as what appears to be his signature. (Id.; see also Doc. 
121-6  (indicating  same)).  Given  Mr.  Davis’s  assertions  about competence,  the DHO 
suspended the March 8, 2019 hearing and referred Mr. Davis for further evaluation. (Doc. 

121 ¶ 16.) Dr. Alexandra Crouch, Psy.D., provided an evaluative report on March 20, 2019. 
(Doc. 121-4.) Dr. Crouch opined that Mr. Davis “has not been observed to be displaying 
any signs or symptoms consistent with actual psychotic symptoms,” but  rather, it is 
“suspected he is feigning mental illness in an effort to avoid consequences related to his 
incident  report.”  (Id.  at  5.)  Dr.  Crouch  deemed  Mr.  Davis  competent  to  undergo 

disciplinary proceedings and assist in his own defense, and opined that his actions giving 
rise to the incident report were not the product of a mental disease or defect impairing his 
ability to understand right from wrong. (Id.) Dr. Crouch’s assessment was echoed by Dr. 
Gregory Mims, who, in a report dated April 16, 2019, opined that Mr. Davis “is most 
certainly physically and mentally capable of participating in the DHO process.” (Id. at 10.)  

     Given the assessments of Drs. Crouch and Mims, the DHO resumed Mr. Davis’s 
hearing on April 17, 2019. Mr. Davis had indicated he sought to have Dr. Mims as his staff 
representative to inform the DHO that “I’m totally blind and disabled.” (Doc. 121-7 at 1.) 
Dr. Mims was not available for the hearing, but submitted the report referenced above. (Id. 
at 2.) Mr. Davis did not request any other staff representative, but asked that two other 
witnesses be called: his former counselor, who, according to Mr. Davis, would say that he 

gave Mr. Davis the thumb drive; and his attorney, who would tell the DHO that Mr. Davis 
was incompetent. (Id.) The DHO found that the counselor was unavailable by virtue of 
their retirement, and that his competence was already fully addressed by two medical 
professionals. (Id.)                                                      
    At the hearing, the DHO noted that Mr. Davis received the hearing notice 15 minutes 
beyond the 24-hour window (see 
28 C.F.R. § 541.5
(a)), but that the minor delay had no 

impact on Mr. Davis’s ability to prepare a defense. (Doc. 121-7 at 2.) After informing Mr. 
Davis that Dr. Mims could not serve as a staff representative, and that Mr. Davis’s lawyer 
and counselor would not be present as witnesses, the DHO asked Mr. Davis if he was ready 
to proceed. (Id.) Mr. Davis responded, “see you in court,” and the hearing went forward. 
(Id.)                                                                     

    The DHO Report was issued on May 1, 2019, and provided to Mr. Davis on August 
5, 2019. (Id. at 4.) The DHO found that the greater weight of the evidence supported the 
view that Mr. Davis had no justification for possessing the thumb drive. (Id. at 3.) The 
DHO found Mr. Davis to be not credible in several respects. Namely, the DHO found that 
Mr. Davis’s assertions that he was incompetent were contradicted by the evaluations of 

two medical professionals, one of whom opined that Mr. Davis’s assertion of incompetence 
was likely an attempt to evade disciplinary action. (Id.) The DHO also found that Mr. 
Davis’s assertion that he was unable to proceed because he was “completely blind” was 
contradicted  by  his  submission  before  the  UDC,  which  is  a  detailed,  full  page  of 
handwritten notes. (Id.) According to the DHO decision, “[t]he DHO asked [Mr. Davis] 
‘How did you write such a detailed note if you were completely blind?’ You just smiled at 

the DHO.” (Id.) Given the uncontroverted evidence of Mr. Davis’s possession of the drive, 
combined with the Mr. Davis’s lack of credibility, the DHO found a violation occurred and 
imposed a sanction of 40 days of lost GCT. (Id.)                          
    D.   Incident Report 3354941                                         
     On January 21, 2020, a corrections officer noticed a “white paper like substance” 
on Mr. Davis during a search and ordered Mr. Davis to remove it. (Doc. 121-8 at 1.) Mr. 

Davis responded by threatening to kill the officer. (Id.) Mr. Davis was provided with a 
copy of the incident report about three and a half hours later. (Id.) Mr. Davis was advised 
of his rights and acknowledged his understanding. (Id. at 2.) He made a “no comment” 
statement about the incident. (Id.) Mr. Davis was advised of his right to appear before the 
UDC, but declined to do so. (Id. at 3.) The matter was then referred to a DHO to consider 

discipline. (Id. at 1.)                                                   
    On January 28, 2020, Mr. Davis was informed of his rights related to a DHO hearing 
(Doc. 121-9.) The DHO held a hearing the next day. (Doc. 121-11 at 1.) Mr. Davis 
requested that K. Childress be present as his staff representative, but this officer was away 
from the institution in training. (Id. at 1.) The DHO substituted Unit Manager L. Custer as 

the staff representative without objection from Mr. Davis. (Id.) Mr. Davis indicated he 
understood his rights and the hearing process. (Id.) For his evidence, Mr. Davis stated that 
the charges were “fraudulently fabricated” and that “the Lieutenant never served me a 
shot.” (Id.) No other witnesses or evidence was submitted by Mr. Davis. (Id. at 1–2.)  
    The DHO issued their report the same day as the hearing. (Id.) The report concluded 
that the greater weight of the evidence supported that Mr. Davis engaged in threatening 

conduct, relying on the reporting officer’s assertion that Mr. Davis threatened to kill the 
officer. (Id.) The DHO considered Mr. Davis’s defense that the officer’s report was 
fabricated, but found it to be unsupported by any evidence. (Id.) Mr. Davis was sanctioned 
with a loss of 27 days of GCT. (Id. at 1.) A copy of the report was delivered to Mr. Davis 
the next day. (Id. at 2.)                                                 
                          *    *    *                                    

    As  is  evident  from  the  above  summary,  none  of  Mr.  Davis’s  disciplinary 
proceedings were infected with constitutional infirmity. For each, he received timely notice 
of the charge, had at least one (and sometimes two) hearings, was offered the opportunity 
to  present  evidence,  and  received  notice  of  the  result  of  the  proceeding.  For  each 
proceeding,  the  DHO  report  provided  the  basis  of  the  DHO’s  decision,  which  was 

supported by some evidence in each circumstance. And the DHO’s sanction in each 
proceeding was consistent with the misconduct.                            
    It is true that not every proceeding went forward precisely by the book. For instance, 
a few DHO reports were provided to Mr. Davis months after they were written, contrary to 
BOP  policy.  But  even  if  the  Court  were  to  construe  the  “several  months’  delay  in 

Petitioner’s receipt of the DHO Report” as “a failure by the BOP to follow its own policy, 
it is well established that a failure to follow BOP policy is not, by itself, enough to support 
a finding that procedures lacked due process under the Fifth Amendment.” Franklin v. 
Fikes, 22-cv-646 (JRT/TNL), 
2023 WL 8720331
, at *4 (D. Minn. Oct. 31, 2023) (cleaned 
up and quotation omitted), R. & R. adopted, 
2023 WL 8719963
 (D. Minn. Dec. 18, 2023). 
That is because the fact of delay does not violate due process, as opposed to prejudice 

resulting from such delay. 
Id.
 And Mr. Davis points to none.              
    Mr. Davis may also complain about being removed from his first two disciplinary 
DHO hearings, and that the BOP did not undertake any competency examinations before 
those proceedings despite Mr. Davis’s assertion that he was not competent. But as was 
evident in the reports of each hearing, Mr. Davis was removed because he refused to 
participate other than to be belligerent, yelling and talking over the hearing officer while 

expressing racially-charged insults. At no point, however, did Mr. Davis appear to actually 
seek  to  address  the  charges  against  him.  The  Court  cannot  say  that  under  those 
circumstances  the  hearing  officer  committed  constitutional  error  by  moving  forward 
without Mr. Davis present. Accord 
28 U.S.C. § 541.8
(e)(2) (inmate appearance at DHO 
hearing may be prohibited where presence would jeopardize institution’s security “at the 

DHO’s discretion”). And as it related to Mr. Davis’s competency, the DHO certainly could 
have postponed the proceedings to investigate Mr. Davis’s competency further. But the 
Court will not second guess the DHO’s decision not to do so based on the evidence before 
the officer. Accord 
28 C.F.R. § 541.6
(a) (DHO will make competency decisions based on 
evidence). Mr. Davis’s assertions of incompetence do not make it so, and the DHO did not 

err in so deciding.                                                       
VIII.  There is no habeas relief available for Mr. Davis’s financial claims. 
    In several of his Grounds,15 Mr. Davis asserts that the BOP administered his trust 

fund account in an unlawful manner, resulting in funds not being applied to his criminal 
financial obligations and rendering him ineligible for FTCs for a period of time.  
    Inmates do not retain cash in prison; they receive, retain, and spend money through 
a trust fund operated by the BOP. See generally BOP Program Statement (“PS”) 4500.12, 
Trust Fund/Deposit Fund Manual.16 In order accept funds for an inmate, the BOP requires 
that the inmate execute a Power of Attorney assignment so that the BOP can endorse checks 

on behalf of the inmate. PS 4500.12, § 9.1(c). If a prisoner refuses to sign the BOP’s Power 
of Attorney form, they are flagged as “No Power of Attorney” within the BOP’s system. 
Id. The BOP will not accept checks on behalf of inmates with a “No Power of Attorney” 
notation; checks received for such inmates are supposed to be returned to the sender (or, if 
no address is available, to the issuing financial institution). Id.       

    According to BOP Regional Trust Fund Administrator Jason Stolze, it is “extremely 
rare for an inmate to have ‘No Power of Attorney’ flagged on their Trust Fund Account.” 
(Doc. 125 at 2.) Although Mr. Stolze has worked for the BOP since 1993, he has only seen 
the “No Power of Attorney” flag “a handful of times.” (Id.) Mr. Davis is within that 
handful. He “has repeatedly declined to authorize the BOP to sign his name as endorsement 

to  deposit  funds  into  his  Trust  Fund  Account,”  reaffirming  his  intention  as  he  was 


15 Specifically, Mr. Davis raises financial abnormality claims in Grounds 2, 8, 11, 26, and 
37. (Doc. 42 at 7-9, 15, 21.)                                             
16 Available at https://perma.cc/H7LA-PTKP (last visited Jan. 18, 2024).  
transferred from institution to institution. (Id.; see also Doc. 125-2 (BOP authorization 
forms in which Mr. Davis refused to authorize BOP to endorse negotiable instruments on 

his behalf).)                                                             
    Mr. Davis received two checks from the United States Treasury: a $1400 stimulus 
check from the summer of 2021, and a $1350.10 check from the spring of 2022. (Docs. 
125 at 3; 125-4; 125-5.) By the government’s submissions, it appears that Mr. Davis has 
consistently refused to allow BOP endorsement of checks like these, and has never wavered 
from that position. (Doc. 125-2 at 1-5.) Under PS 4500.12, these checks were not to be 

deposited in Mr. Davis’s trust account and should have been returned to the Treasury. PS 
4500.12, § 9.1(c). But that is not what happened. Rather, both checks were deposited into 
Mr. Davis’s trust fund account. (Docs. 125 at 3; 125-3.) At the time that these funds were 
deposited, Mr. Davis had significant unsatisfied PLRA debt from his civil filings.17 (Doc. 
125-3.) The $1400 check was immediately and fully encumbered for Mr. Davis’s PLRA 

obligations, ultimately leaving less than $10 in his account within a month. (Id. at 4-5; see 
also PS 4500.12 § 10.1 (granting BOP authority to make withdrawals from inmate trust 
accounts for PLRA filing fees without inmate authorization). Likewise, Mr. Davis’s entire 
$1350.10 check was encumbered the day it was deposited, within a month leaving him 
with only $10 in his account. (Doc. 125-3 at 8.)                          




17 Under the Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”), a prisoner may not need to pay the 
entire filing fee to commence a civil action, but “shall be required to pay the full amount” 
over time as funds become available. See generally 
28 U.S.C. § 1915
.      
    Mr. Davis appears to be correct in asserting that the BOP disregarded its own 
program statement, his limited right to financial autonomy, and potentially violated the law 

when it endorsed checks for him without his authorization. The government may be right 
that the way Mr. Davis managed his BOP financial account was enigmatic. Nonetheless, 
that is his choice, and there appears no excuse for the government’s failure to honor it. But 
habeas is not a vehicle intended to right every wrong. Rather, habeas petitions are only 
cognizable to the extent they challenge the legality or length of a prisoner’s detention. 
Spencer, 774 F.3d at 469.                                                 

    Given Mr. Davis’s individual circumstances, the legality or length of his detention 
are not implicated by the BOP’s actions. It is true that the increased money in Mr. Davis’s 
trust account resulted in the BOP treating him as if he had more money in his account than 
he actually did, since the funds were immediately encumbered. This consequently led the 
BOP to conclude Mr. Davis had refused his financial obligations to pay his criminal court 

assessments and restitution. (Doc. 126 at 5.) And because of this, from November 16, 2021 
through February 22, 2022, and October 6, 2022 through October 26, 2022, the BOP listed 
Mr. Davis as in “FRP18 Refuse” status.19 (Doc. 126-8 at 1-2.) The government concedes 
that Mr. Davis’s FTCs were disallowed while he was on “FRP Refuse” status. (Doc. 126 
at 7.) For another prisoner, the loss of these FTCs could state a cognizable habeas claim, 



18 “FRP” refers to the Financial Responsibility Program, sometimes also referred to as the 
Inmate Financial Responsibility Program. See 
28 C.F.R. §§ 545.10
 & .11.   
19 Mr. Davis was also in “FRP Refuse” status from December 17, 2019 through April 28, 
2020 (see Docs. 126 at 7; 126-9 at 1), but he makes no habeas allegations about this period 
of time.                                                                  
since FTCs may shorten a prison term. But as set forth above in Section V, Mr. Davis has 
already reached the maximum amount of FTCs that can be applied to early release. Habeas 

relief is not available to further reduce Mr. Davis’s prison sentence beyond the statutory 
cap.                                                                      
XI.  Mr. Davis’s remaining claims.                                        
    Some of Mr. Davis’s remaining claims defy easy description, while others merit 
little discussion.20 He asserts as independent claims (in Grounds 10 and 50) that the BOP’s 
administrative remedy program is effectively unavailable to him because he gets harassed 

when he complaints. (Doc. 42 at 9, 23.) To the extent that Mr. Davis is seeking to excuse 
his failure to exhaust administrative remedies, see Mathena v. United States, 
577 F.3d 943, 946
 (8th Cir. 2009), this Court has addressed his claims on their merits regardless of any 
failure to exhaust. Mr. Davis also asserts in the BOP has violated some of their program 
statements, been nonresponsive to him at times, and not provided him with all of the legal 

supplies that he desires. (Doc. 42 at Grounds 9, 10, 12, 17, 23, 44, 46, 48.) These are 
generally not cognizable habeas claims, see Spencer, 774 F.3d 469–70, and specifically 
not here.21 Mr.  Davis asserts  he  is  the  victim  of  retaliation  in  violation  of  his  First 
Amendment rights in Grounds 17, 25, 26, and 38 (Doc. 42 at 12–15, 21), but again, habeas 
is not the vehicle for such claims. Mr. Davis also faults the BOP for not managing his care 

in a way that would have allowed him early “release,” but these complaints appear to 

20 Mr. Davis’s petition includes no Ground 29, explaining the omission of any analysis of 
Ground 29, and two Ground 46s.                                            
21 The Court addressed Mr. Davis’s claims that he had been deprived legal supplies in an 
earlier Report and Recommendation and Order as well. (Docs. 111, 128.)    
implicate  community  confinement.  (Id.  at  21–22  (Grounds  39,  44,  46,  and  48).)  As 
discussed at length in Section II, there is no habeas relief available for such claims. In 

Ground 50 of Mr. Davis’s habeas petition, he seeks declaratory and injunctive relief. (Id. 
at 23.) It is true that habeas is an equitable remedy, but here there is no basis for relief at 
all, so his requests fail.                                                
X.   Additional matters.                                                  
    Mr. Davis has also filed a number of other motions, including a motion for sanctions 
(Doc. 48), a motion for a temporary restraining order (Doc. 62), a “standing” motion for 

appointment of counsel (Doc. 82), and two discovery motions (Docs. 96, 104). The Court 
finds that Mr. Davis’s motion for sanctions has no merit and denies it. His motion for a 
temporary restraining order merely repeats complaints made and rejected by this Court and 
the Court thus recommends it be denied for the same reasons. (Doc. 111). His motion 
seeking the appointment of counsel likewise fails for the same reasons as in his previous 

motions  for  counsel.  (Docs.  10,  60.)  As  for  Mr.  Davis’s  discovery  motions,  habeas 
discovery is only available for good cause, see Fiorito v. Fikes, 22-cv-0512 (WMW/TNL), 
2022 WL 7341963
, at *3 (D. Minn. Sept. 13, 2022), aff’d, 
2023 WL 129093
 (D. Minn. Jan. 
9, 2023), and good cause does not exist here. Thus, the Court denies both motions. The 
Court’s decision is based on undisputed record evidence that leaves no room for doubt. Mr. 

Davis also requests copies of his docket sheets in this case as well as his underlying 
criminal case. (Doc. 105.) The Court grants this motion in part. The Clerk of Court is 
directed to mail Mr. Davis a copy of the docket in this case. Should he desire the docket in 
his underlying criminal case, that request is best considered by the court of original 
jurisdiction.                                                             

    Finally, the Court concludes there is no basis for an evidentiary hearing. Mr. Davis’s 
petition was fulsome, as was the government’s responsive pleadings and submissions. In 
reviewing those submissions, the Court discerned no material facts in dispute. As such, no 
evidentiary hearing is necessary to decide Mr. Davis’s claims. Wilson v. Kemna, 
12 F.3d 145, 146
 (8th Cir. 1994).                                                 

ORDER

    Based on the all the files, records, and proceedings above, IT IS ORDERED that: 
    1.  Petitioner  William  Scott  Davis,  Jr.’s  Motion  for  Sanctions  (Doc.  48)  is 
      DENIED;                                                            

    2.  Mr.  Davis’s  Standing  Motion  for  Appointment  of  Counsel  (Doc.  82)  is 
      DENIED;                                                            

    3.  Mr. Davis’s Motion for Respondents Production (Doc. 96) is DENIED; 

    4.  Mr. Davis’s Motion (Doc. 104) that concerns discovery is DENIED; and 

    5.  Mr. Davis’s Motion (Doc. 105) seeking copies of his court filings is GRANTED 
      IN PART and DENIED IN PART. The Clerk of Court is directed to mail Mr. 
      Davis a copy of the docket in this case.                           

                      RECOMMENDATION                                     
    Based  on  the  all  the  files,  records,  and  proceedings  above,  IT  IS 
RECOMMENDED that:                                                         
    1.  Mr. Davis’s Amended Petition (Doc. 42) seeking federal habeas corpus relief be 
      DENIED;                                                            

    2.  Mr. Davis’s Motion (Doc. 54) brought under 
28 U.S.C. § 2255
 be DENIED; and 
    3.  Mr.  Davis’s  Motion  for  a  Temporary  Restraining  Order  and  Preliminary 
      Injunction (Doc. 62) be DENIED.                                    


Date: January 19, 2024              s/Douglas L. Micko                   
                                   DOUGLAS L. MICKO                      
                                   United States Magistrate Judge        

                            NOTICE                                       
Filing Objections: This Report and Recommendation is not an order or judgment of the 
District Court and is therefore not appealable directly to the Eighth Circuit Court of 
Appeals.  Under  Local  Rule  72.2(b)(1),  “a  party  may  file  and  serve  specific  written 
objections to a magistrate judge’s proposed findings and recommendations within 14 days 
after being served with a copy” of the Report and Recommendation.         

A party may respond to those objections within 14 days after being served a copy of the 
objections. See Local Rule 72.2(b)(2). All objections and responses must comply with the 
word or line limits set forth in Local Rule 72.2(c).                      

Reference

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