Massachusetts General Laws

Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 127, § 134 (2026)

Appearance before parole board; investigation and hearing by staff members; reports; sentences served in other states

✓ current as of July 2026
Find cases: SyfertCases citing this section MAmalegislature.gov (official) JustiaChapter on Justia CornellLII Search CasesGoogle Scholar

Section 134. (a) In the case of an inmate committed to a correctional institution of the commonwealth, no parole permit shall be granted by the parole board until the inmate has been seen by at least three members of said board, except when the chairman has designated three members to act as the parole board under the provisions of section five of chapter twenty-seven, no parole permit shall be granted by the board until the inmate has been seen by at least two of said members.

(b) In the case of an inmate committed to a jail or house of correction, the chairman may designate the director of parole services, a parole supervisor, a parole employment officer, the legal counsel to the parole board, an institutional parole officer, the executive secretary to the parole board, a parole officer, a junior parole officer, or a parole board employee whose primary function is to serve as a hearing officer, to make an investigation and to conduct a hearing in lieu of the board for the purpose of ascertaining the suitability of such inmate for a parole permit. The staff member so designated shall report his findings of fact and recommendations as to parole and conditions of parole to the board. The board may grant or deny a parole permit to such inmate after considering said report and recommendations. No parole permit shall be granted until such inmate has been seen according to the provisions of paragraphs (a) or (b).

(c) In the case of an inmate serving a Massachusetts sentence in another state, the chairman may request the paroling authority of that state or at the written request of the inmate the federal paroling authority with jurisdiction over the institution in which said inmate is housed to conduct a hearing in lieu of the Massachusetts board for the purpose of ascertaining the suitability of such inmate for a parole permit and to report its findings and recommendations as to parole and conditions of parole to the board. The board may grant or deny a parole permit to such an inmate after considering said report and recommendations. No parole permit shall be granted until such inmate has been seen in accordance with the provisions of paragraphs (a) or (c).

Notes of Decisions
Cited in 2 cases, 2020–2020 · leading case: Comm. for Pub. Couns. Servs. v. Chief Just. of the Trial Court (Mass. 2020).
Sort: Relevance Newest Treatment
Comm. for Pub. Couns. Servs. v. Chief Just. of the Trial Court (Mass. 2020). “See also G. L. c. 127, § 134 (allowing employees other than parole board members to conduct hearings for inmates at houses of correction).”
Murray v. State Warden (D. Mass. 2020). “Although Murray has not yet begun to serve his Massachusetts sentences, in 2006 he filed a petition for equitable relief in Superior Court, essentially seeking an order requiring that he be considered for parole in Massachusetts, citing Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 127, § 134 (c) and…”
Annotations are extracted automatically from the opinions in the Syfert caselaw corpus and ranked by authority, recency, and treatment. Dots show Syfertize treatment of the citing case itself.