We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
AG NOMINEE COMMITS TO CORRECT CORRECTIONS
During Attorney General nominee Pam Bondi’s otherwise predictable Senate Judiciary Committee hearing yesterday – where Republicans lobbed softball questions and Democrats demonized President-elect Donald Trump – it was noteworthy that in her brief opening statement she devoted several paragraphs to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.
“Making America safe again also requires reducing recidivism,” Bondi’s statement asserted. “We must fix the Bureau of Prisons and follow through on the promise of the First Step Act by building new halfway houses. The Bureau has suffered from years of mismanagement, lack of funding, and low morale. Federal corrections officers serve in challenging conditions on minimal pay and need more support. Our prison system can and will do better.”
She noted Trump’s “leadership on criminal justice reform” in securing passage of the First Step Act during his last Administration, a piece of legislation with which the President-elect has had a love-hate relationship ever since. Her statement argued that First Step “demonstrates what is possible when a President is unafraid to do things that have been deemed ‘too difficult’ and to reach across the aisle to bring about real solutions. Like the President, I believe we are on the ‘cusp of a New Golden age’ where the Department of Justice can and will do better.”
Further First Step Act success requires reducing how many prisoners commit another offense after they are released, she said. She vowed to reverse the “years of mismanagement, lack of funding and low morale” that plagues the BOP.
Bondi told the Committee, “We have to fix the Bureau of Prisons, and I am looking on both sides of the aisle.”
If Bondi convinces the incoming President that further implementation of First Step can burnish his image, he is likely to support efforts to expand halfway house resources and clean up BOP. This is a President who can be mercurial on criminal justice. Just last weekend, Representative Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) told Fox News that Trump was “absolutely… supportive” about her set of bills that could have child sexual predators facing the death penalty and would even sign “an executive order levying the death penalty for pedophilia-related crimes but that it would likely be impossible to accomplish that way.”
One can only hope that the incoming President’s grasp of the federal system of governance is sufficient to understand that he cannot change criminal penalties at the stroke of a pen.
Writing in Forbes a week ago, Walter Pavlo noted that Trump’s “hallmark criminal justice reform law, The First Step Act, is still struggling to gain traction. The BOP has accomplished much under Director Peters to implement the program but there are still problems. There is insufficient halfway house and many case managers, the primary BOP employees implementing the program, remain confused over the exact interpretation of the law.”
Opening Statement, Pam Bondi, Nominee for Attorney General of the United States (January 15, 2025)
Washington Times, Pam Bondi, AG nominee, says she will ‘fix’ the Bureau of Prisons (January 15, 2025)
Roll Call, Pam Bondi tells Senate panel she would end ‘partisanship’ at DOJ (January 15, 2025)
Forbes, How Trump Can Shake Up The Bureau Of Prisons (January 6, 2025)
Fox News, Pedophiles could see death penalty under new House GOP bill: ‘Taken off the streets permanently’ (January 14, 2025)
– Thomas L. Root