We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
ADMINISTRATION HINTS AT DRUG CLEMENCY (MAYBE)
Biden Press Secretary Jen Psaki started hearts and tongues fluttering last week when she said the Administration was looking at clemency for federal drug offenders.
“The president is deeply committed to reducing incarceration and helping people successfully reenter society,” Psaki said in a press briefing. “And he said too many people are incarcerated — too many are black and brown — and he’s therefore exploring multiple avenues to provide relief to certain nonviolent drug offenders, including through the use of his clemency power.”
As a candidate, Biden said in 2019 that he wanted to release “everyone” in prison for marijuana, but Psaki has referred questions on whether he will do so to the Justice Department, saying last April it was “a legal question.”
The New York Post reported that “Psaki’s remark thrilled clemency advocates who have been pushing for Biden to commute prison sentences and issue pardons early in his term, which is uncommon for presidents. Clemency advocate Amy Povah said, “We are elated that President Biden has expressed an interest in using his executive clemency power with an emphasis upon drug cases.”
Meanwhile, other advocates feel frustrated that Biden has done nothing on a matter as small as addressing the status of people on CARES Act home confinement. Last Wednesday, Senators Richard Durbin (D-Illinois) and Cory Booker (D-New Jersey) wrote to President Biden, urging him to act on keeping CARES Act home confinees at home. They suggested, in part, that the Bureau of Prisons could “provide relief for certain individuals through prerelease home confinement, under 18 USC § 3624(c)(2), and the Elderly Home Detention Pilot Program, pursuant to 34 USC 6054l(g). For those who do not qualify for those provisions, BOP can recommend, and DOJ should support, compassionate release pursuant to 18 USC § 3582(c)(l)(A). Compassionate release is authorized whenever extraordinary and compelling reasons warrant a sentence reduction, and the once-in-a-century global pandemic that led to these home confinement placements certainly constitutes such an extraordinary and compelling circumstance.”
Reuters last week reported that the Justice Department had asked an Oregon federal judge on Tuesday to deny a bid by federal inmates to qualify for early release through First Step earned time credits. Prosecutors argued that no programs or activities completed by the inmates qualified for earned time credits.
Reuters said, “The rift could increase pressure on the Justice Department, which is under fire from civil rights advocates for its inaction to prevent BOP from sending thousands of federal inmates back to prison once the pandemic emergency is lifted.”
At issue is a provision from the 2018 First Step Act, which aims to ease harsh sentencing for non-violent offenders and reduce recidivism. The BOP may award 10 or 15 days’ credit for every 30 days of participation in recidivism-reduction or activities such as academic classes or certain prison jobs.
In a November 2020 proposed rule, the BOP defined a day of participation as eight hours and limited the menu of qualifying programs.
One issue is the BOP’s definition of a day of participation as 8 hours. “The math speaks for itself,” federal defenders wrote in a January 2021 letter to BOP. “It would take 219 weeks, or over 4 years to earn a full year of credit under the BOP’s proposed rule.”
In Tuesday’s case, the lead plaintiff has held prison jobs such as a painter and an HVAC worker and completed courses such as anger management, entrepreneurship, and a residential drug abuse program. But the government argued that none of those programs is on the BOP’s EBRR program list.
“If HVAC work doesn’t qualify, what kinds of jobs do?” asked Magistrate Judge John Acosta, noting the program’s goal of reducing recidivism and facilitating reintegration into society.
“The ones that are identified by the Bureau of Prisons,” AUSA Jared Hager replied, noting the inmates have “not shown entitlement to any credit.” The list of qualifying programs and activities will be updated by Attorney General Merrick Garland, he added.
Similar suits are on file in federal courts throughout the country.
Finally, JDSupra.com reported last week that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York) has partnered with Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) and Sen Booker to draft comprehensive federal cannabis reform legislation, which the sponsors plan to introduce this fall.
The measure, called the Cannabis Administration and Opportunity Act (the CAOA), would – among other matters – would require the federal government to expunge any arrest or conviction for a non-violent federal cannabis offense, and allow any person serving a criminal justice sentence for a non-violent federal cannabis offense to move for sentence reduction. After the hearing, the court would be required to expunge each arrest, conviction, or adjudication for a non-violent federal cannabis offense.
The drafting of the bill is in its early stages. The sponsors are actively soliciting comments prior to CAOA’s introduction. Comments may be submitted through September 1, 2021, at Cannabis_Reform@finance.senate.gov.
New York Post, Biden ‘exploring’ clemency for federal drug crimes, Psaki says (August 11, 2021)
Letter from Senators Durbin and Booker to President Biden (August 12, 2021)
Reuters, U.S. Justice Dept clashes with inmates over credits to shave prison time (August 10, 2021)
JDSupra.com, US Senators Seeking Input on Comprehensive Federal Cannabis Reform Legislation (August 11, 2021)
– Thomas L. Root