U.S. Sentencing Commission cuts prison terms for 46,000 inmates
LA TIMES
he U.S. Sentencing Commission voted Friday to slash sentences for
46,000 inmates serving time for drug offenses, the latest move in a
concerted effort by state and federal officials to ease decades-old
policies that have clogged jails and prisons.
If the move is not
blocked by Congress, more than two-thirds of federal prisoners
incarcerated for drug crimes will be eligible for sentence reductions
averaging more than two years.
Atty. Gen Eric H. Holder Jr. originally
asked the commission, a group of judges and other lawyers who establish
sentencing policies, to take a much narrower approach that would affect
just 20,000 inmates.
But Holder said Friday he supports the new
policy. “This is a milestone in the effort to make more efficient use of
our law enforcement resources and to ease the burden on our overcrowded
prison system, ” he said in a statement.
Judge Patti B. Saris, chair of the commission, said, “This amendment
received unanimous support from commissioners because it is a measured
approach. It reduces prison costs and populations, and responds to
statutory and guidelines changes since the drug guidelines were
initially developed, while safeguarding public safety.”
No
prisoner would be released until a judge reviews their case to determine
whether a reduced sentence poses a risk to public safety.
The
House and Senate would have to vote by Nov. 1 to block the plan. But
there has been bipartisan support in both houses for a broad change in
prison policies.
1 comment:
I wonder how long it will take them to act if it passes. They will drag their feet as long as they can as remember prisons are all about money
Post a Comment