We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
BOP ROLLS OUT PROPOSED FSA EARNED TIME RULES
Twenty-three months after passage of the First Step Act authorized the Federal Bureau of Prisons to give earned time credits to inmates who complete programs that have been shown to reduce recidivism, the BOP is finally getting around to adopting rules on how such credits will be rewarded. And, unsurprisingly, the BOP is making Ebenezer Scrooge look like Santa Claus.
First Step focused on assessing each prisoner’s likelihood of recidivism and rolling that assessment into a recidivism and needs assessment system known as PATTERN. The BOP was then to determine which of the programs identified as likely to reduce recidivism each inmate needed. As the inmate completed the programs, he or she would see the PATTERN score – ranging from “high risk” down to “minimum risk” – decrease. To encourage the prisoners to complete the programs, First Step authorized the award of “earned time credits,” equal to 10 to 15 days for each 30 days of programming completed. The earned-time credits can be used for more halfway house, more home confinement, or up to 12 months of early release.
Of course, the devil’s in the details. The language in the Act says:
A prisoner shall earn 10 days of time credits for every 30 days of successful participation in evidence-based recidivism reduction programming or productive activities.
What exactly does First Step mean by “30 days of successful participation?” The BOP has finally announced proposed rules to define that, and the definition is a doozy.
The proposed rule figures that “30 days” means 30 program days. A “program day” is eight hours, the BOP says. In other words, a 500-hour program would be worth 500 hours/8 hours-to-a-day, or 62.5 program days. Completion of the 500-hour program would award an inmate two months (60 days) of program credit, which is worth 20 days earned time credit for inmates with medium or high recidivism risk, and 30 days credit for inmates with minimum or low risk.
In the BOP, a 500-hour program takes 12-18 months to complete. That may seem like a fairly substantial commitment for a month more of home confinement. But it is consistent with what we’ve come to expect from the BOP: given a chance to interpret the extent of its authority to be lenient, it invariably interprets that authority in the most chary way possible.
The proposed rule does settle one question which has been coming up often in the last few months: FSA earned time credits may only be earned for successful completion of an Evidence-Based Recidivism Reduction Program and Productive Activity assigned to the inmate based on the inmate’s risk and needs assessment, and only for those successfully completed on or after January 15, 2020.
The proposed rule does not address the procedures for determining whether an individual inmate will have FSA earned time credits applied towards prerelease custody, early transfer to supervised release, a combination of both, or neither. Instead, it only addresses the procedures for earning, awarding, loss, and restoration of FSA credits.
The public may submit comments to the BOP on the proposed rule until January 25, 2021.
Federal Register, Proposed Rule: FSA Time Credits (November 25, 2020)
– Thomas L. Root