The Prisoners Envy The Turkeys… – Update for November 26, 2019

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

PARDONS, COMMUTATIONS, SENTENCE REDUCTIONS…

At some point in the next 48 hours, President Trump will likely pardon a pair of turkeys. The turkeys will be given silly names (past recipients have included birds named Mac and Cheese), some children and White House staffers will look on, and there will be forced jokes and stiff laughter.

turkey181128“It’s painful to watch,” Minnesota law professor Mark Osler wrote in the Washington Post last week. “Worse, it mocks the raw truth that the federal clemency system is completely broken. While those two turkeys receive their pardons, nearly 14,000 clemency petitions sit in a sludgy backlog. Many of the federal inmates who have followed the rules, assembled documents, poured out their hearts in petitions and worked hours at a prison job just to pay for the stamps on the envelope have waited for years in that queue.”

Osler and the students in his law school clinic have helped people file clemency petitions for almost a decade. “Many of them are well-deserving,” Osler wrote. “It was rewarding to tell their stories of rehabilitation and hope… [But now,] most of my mail is from people who have already filed a petition. They want to know what is happening, and what else they can do. Too many of them have unrealistic plans — often, and very specifically, the plan is that Kim Kardashian West will help them. Or, as one man put it ‘I’ll take any Kardashian.’ It is true that Kardashian West advocated for Alice Marie Johnson, and that Johnson did get clemency from President Trump. But that is a sample size of precisely one, while thousands wait.”

Meanwhile, a government pleading in a compassionate release motion filed under 18 USC 3582(c)(1)(A)(i) last week provided an object lesson for people seeking to get a sentence cut or home confinement because of illness. Federal prosecutors argued that a claim of dementia filed by Bernie Ebbers, former CEO of Worldcom, was bogus.

The government argued that the 78-year-old Ebbers may not be in as bad shape as indicated in his own filings, citing a note from a prison psychologist who listened in on phone calls between the inmate and his daughter in recent weeks. The daughter has claimed in an affidavit that her father has dementia.

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“In the calls, he was alert, aware and oriented to person, place, time and situation,” a Bureau of Prisons psychologist is quoted as saying, adding that the inmate was asking about his daughter’s efforts to get him out of prison. The psychologist notes that the inmate has presented a much different persona when he knows he is being observed. “The conversations between him and his daughter were very different than how he presented to this writer during our last encounter on 10/11/19 when he presented to this writer as though he didn’t know he was in a prison nor the date and time,” the psychologist writes.

Remember inmates, the BOP knows more about you than you may think. And what the BOP knows, the government knows, which means the U.S. Attorney knows it too. Rather tautological, but very true.

Many inmates eligible for serving the last one-third of their sentences under the Elderly Home Detention Offender program have complained that their case managers will not even submit an application for them to be a part of the program until they qualify by reaching the two-thirds mark of their sentences. Approval may take six months, meaning that an elderly offender may well miss much of the time he or she could be on home confinement, and the BOP continues to spend $100 a day to house someone who could be confined at home on his or her own dime.

Last week, a reliable inmate correspondent reported that his case manager  said BOP Central Office had issued “new guidance” that Elderly Offender Home Detention packages should be prepared and submitted six months prior to the inmate’s eligibility for the program (age 60 and two-thirds of total sentence completed). This way, he reported his case manager reported, everything will be in place so that the prisoner can leave for home detention on his or her earliest eligibility date.

I have not been able to confirm the report through the BOP yet.

Osler, Let’s Pardon Prisoners, Not Turkeys, Washington Post (Nov. 21)

CNBC, NY prosecutors suggest former WorldCom CEO is faking illness to get out of jail (Nov. 19)

– Thomas L. Root

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