We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
COVID’S GRIP
Despite the BOP’s best efforts to quickly declare COVID-suffering inmates to be “recovered” – which the agency insists is done in conformance with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines – the numbers continue to creep upward. As of yesterday, the BOP reported 627 inmates (up 13%) with COVID. The agency reported four more inmate deaths than a week ago. Staff numbers were holding at 562, down one from a week ago.
The BOP phenomenon of inmates dying of COVID weeks or months after “recovery” was noted last week by the Beaumont Enterprise. That is hardly surprising. Even if the BOP is carefully determining that “recovered” inmates have no symptoms 10 days after a positive COVID test – and a number of inmate reports suggest that the agency’s approach to “recovered” is fairly slapdash – that does not mean the inmate is “recovered.” Guidance released last week by the CDC states that this means simply that “isolation and precautions can be discontinued 10 days after symptom onset and after resolution of fever for at least 24 hours, without the use of fever-reducing medications, and with improvement of other symptoms.”
As many prisoners have found out, COVID may be a long-haul thing. A CDC study released last week reported that one in three people who survived COVID-19 may suffer from long COVID. The study found that 35% of survey responders reported at least one ongoing symptom of COVID-19 two months after the initial positive test. Fatigue was reported by 17% of those long COVID patients; difficulty breathing and loss of taste or smell were reported by 13%; and muscle or joint pain was reported by 11%.
As of last Friday, 61.6% of BOP inmates had been vaccinated. Staff vaccinations still lag at 54.0%, up only 4/10th of a point since last week. That may be changing, however. The Safer Federal Workforce Task Force last week set November 22 as the deadline for federal employees to get fully vaccinated under President Biden’s new mandate. By and large, the staff will either get vaxxed or quit (bad news for an already-understaffed BOP).
However, 24 Republican state attorneys general warned the Biden administration last week that their states would sue to block the federal employee mandate if the plan is not abandoned.
Forbes last week noted that the pandemic had not particularly influenced federal criminal sentences. It noted that in Fiscal Year 2020, federal judges cited the Covid-19 pandemic as a basis for lower sentences in just over just 2.5% of all cases at most. Forbes cited SDNY Judge J. Paul Oetken’s observation that time served during the pandemic is “essentially the equivalent of either time and a half or two times what would ordinarily be served,” and SDNY Judge Paul A. Engelmayer’s statement that “prison is supposed to be punishment, but it is not supposed to be trauma.”
That being the case, there is no truth to the rumor, reported regularly by inmate emails, that anyone – Biden, Congress, or even the shuttered Sentencing Commission – is considering an across-the-board sentence reduction for federal inmates because of the pandemic. You can expect that if that happens, President Biden will personally ride up to BOP headquarters on a pink unicorn to deliver the happy news.
Beaumont Enterprise, Second senior, COVID recovered federal inmate dies in Beaumont (September 15, 2021)
Los Angeles Times, 1 in 3 COVID-19 patients suffer from long COVID, a CDC study of Long Beach residents finds (September 16, 2021)
CDC, Ending Isolation and Precautions for People with COVID-19: Interim Guidance (September 14, 2021)
CDC, Post-Acute Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 Infection Among Adults Aged ≥18 Years — Long Beach, California, April 1–December 10, 2020 (September 17, 2021)
Government Executive, Coronavirus Roundup: A November 22 Deadline for Feds to Get Vaccinated; Booster Shot Clashes (September 14, 2021)
Columbus Dispatch, Ohio and 23 other state attorneys general tell Biden to drop vaccine mandate or be sued (September 17, 2021)
Forbes, The U.S. Sentencing Commission’s Inadequate Response To Covid-19 (September 17, 2021)
– Thomas L. Root