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		U.S. panel votes to expand compassionate release for prisoners
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		 [April 06, 2023]  
		By Sarah N. Lynch and Nate Raymond 
 (Reuters) - The U.S. Sentencing Commission approved new guidelines on 
		Wednesday that will expand federal inmates' ability to qualify for 
		compassionate release from prison.
 
 The new policy, approved in a vote of 4-3, was part of a broader package 
		of amendments, and represent the most sweeping criminal justice reforms 
		the commission has enacted in more than four years.
 
 The seven-member U.S. Sentencing Commission is the agency tasked with 
		setting sentencing guidelines for federal judges.
 
 Commission Chairman Judge Carlton Reeves said the panel had received 
		thousands of public comments on its slate of reforms from across the 
		country.
 
 "If the commission is to select a correct policy, the fair policy, the 
		just policy, we must listen to those who have lived out the consequences 
		of our choices," he said.
 
 "If you have spoken to the commission, whether from the halls of 
		Congress or the desk of a prison library, you have been heard."
 
 
		 
		The First Step Act, signed into law by former President Donald Trump in 
		2018, expanded compassionate release criteria for sick and elderly 
		federal inmates. Requests for compassionate release then surged during 
		the COVID-19 pandemic, with 7,014 motions filed in fiscal year 2020. 
		Those requests have not been granted on a consistent basis without the 
		panel's guidance.
 
 The new compassionate release guidelines approved on Wednesday expanded 
		the criteria for what can qualify as "extraordinary and compelling 
		reasons" to grant compassionate release, and it will give judges more 
		discretion to determine when a sentence reduction is warranted.
 
 Among the new categories that could make an inmate eligible for 
		compassionate release is if he or she becomes the victim of sexual 
		assault by a corrections officer.
 
		Three members of the panel opposed the final policy, saying they 
		disagreed with a provision that could allow judges to grant 
		compassionate release to inmates if changes to federal sentencing laws 
		renders their prison term inequitable.
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             Prison officials patrol around the 
			United States Penitentiary at the Federal Correctional Complex in 
			Terre Haute, Indiana, U.S. January 15, 2021. REUTERS/Bryan Woolston/File 
			Photo 
            
			 
            The policy "makes a systemic, structural change without 
			congressional authorization," commission member Candice Wong said.
 LIMITS ON LONGER SENTENCES
 
 The commission had been considering a vote on another high-profile 
			reform to limit federal judges from imposing longer sentences on 
			defendants based on alleged crimes even if a unanimous jury has 
			acquitted the defendant of those very same allegations in a split 
			verdict.
 
 However, Reeves said the commission decided it needed more time 
			before making a final determination.
 
 Under current practice, a defendant who is acquitted on some counts 
			and convicted on others could still face a harsher sentence if the 
			judge factors the acquitted conduct into the sentencing 
			calculations.
 
 Michael P. Heiskell, the President-Elect of the National Association 
			of Criminal Defense Lawyers, said he was disappointed by the delay.
 
 “Permitting people to be sentenced based on conduct for which a jury 
			has acquitted them is fundamentally unfair because it eviscerates 
			the constitutional right to trial and disrespects the jury’s role," 
			he said in a statement.
 
 Other reforms approved on Wednesday include the implementation of a 
			major gun law passed last year which would stiffen prison sentences 
			for straw purchasers who buy a firearm on behalf of someone else, 
			and for people who knowingly sell pills laced with deadly fentanyl, 
			or who act with willful blindness.
 
            
			 
			(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston and Sarah N. Lynch in 
			Washington; Editing by Andy Sullivan and Aurora Ellis) 
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