We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
SO WHAT HAPPENS NOW?
The morning after President Biden announced an executive order that all federal employees would get the COVID vaccine, the Bureau of Prisons numbers were stubbornly high. The number of sick inmates was up 5% from a week ago, standing at 553 (the highest count since March 15). More ominously, the number of sick staff jumped 12% to 563, nearly equal to the number of sick inmates, and the highest since April 20. COVID is present at 112 of 122 institutions, and the death toll notched up to at least 267 inmates.
What remains puzzling is the BOP’s testing. The agency said it tested 127 people last week, a very low number of tests for the number of inmate cases the BOP is reporting.
Meanwhile, the number of vaccinated inmates hit the 60% mark, while the staff percentage barely moved, from 53.39% to 53.62%.
The staff number should change. On Thursday, Biden signed an Executive Order that, among other things, “require[s] COVID-19 vaccination for all Federal employees, subject to such exceptions as required by law.” The exceptions are for medical and religious reasons only, and (I already received one email asking this) the Order does not exempt BOP employees. Biden ordered each Federal agency to implement a program to require COVID-19 vaccination for all Federal employees and directed the Safer Federal Workforce Task Force to issue guidance within 7 days of the date of this order on agency implementation of this requirement for all agencies covered by this order.
The BOP announced two more COVID-19 deaths, one on September 4th at FCI Bennettsville and another from last November at FCI Talladega. The Talladega death was of a 29-year old who had contracted COVID on August 5, 2020, but who was declared “recovered” 12 days later.
At the 43-minute mark of last Friday morning’s White House press briefing, Press Secretary Jen Psaki had an exchange with an unidentified reporter:
Q: Jen, I’m hearing that the Bureau of Prisons issued a memo today telling approximately about 1,000 drug offenders how to apply for clemency. Have you — do you have anything on that?
MS. PSAKI: I would certainly point you to the Department of Justice. I would say that the President has been clear about his openness to using clemency powers, but I don’t — I wouldn’t say that’s an assessment of decisions made — and certainly targeting those toward nonviolent drug offenders. But I’d point you to the Department of Justice for any further details.
The riddle was solved yesterday when POLITICO reported that the Biden administration has begun asking people on CARES Act home confinement inmates to “formally submit commutation applications, criminal justice reform advocates and one inmate herself tell POLITICO.”
“Those who have been asked for the applications fall into a specific category,’ POLITICO reported, “drug offenders released to home under the pandemic relief bill known as the CARES Act with four years or less on their sentences. Neither the White House nor the Department of Justice clarified how many individuals have been asked for commutation applications or whether it would be expanding the universe of those it reached out to beyond that subset. But it did confirm that the president was beginning to take action.”
Business Insider published a piece on Saturday noting that “the Biden administration is considering granting commutations to those under home confinement who have federal drug charges and have less than four years left in their sentences. If enacted, that decision would only affect about 2,000 out of the 4,000 people currently under home confinement. To those that don’t fit the criteria, the administration will force them back to federal prison. For these individuals, the decision could be devastating to the progress they’ve made since emerging from behind bars. Sending [inmates] back to prison and hampering [their] progress would have the opposite effect of what our justice system purports to achieve.”
White House, Executive Order on Requiring Coronavirus Disease 2019 Vaccination for Federal Employees (September 9, 2021)
BOP, Inmate Death at FCI Talladega (September 10, 2021)
White House, Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jen Psaki (September 10, 2021)
Politico, Biden starts clemency process for inmates released due to Covid conditions (September 13, 2021)
Business Insider, Thousands of people who were released from prison due to the pandemic are now thriving with their families. But if Biden doesn’t act now, they will be cruelly sent back. (September 11, 2021)
– Thomas L. Root