From News Nation:
“76,000 California inmates
eligible for earlier release due to change in good behavior credits”
California is giving 76,000
inmates, including violent and repeat felons, the opportunity to leave prison
earlier as the state aims to further trim the population of what once was the
nation’s largest state correctional system. More than 63,000 inmates convicted
of violent crimes will be eligible for good behavior credits that shorten their
sentences by one-third instead of the one-fifth that had been in place since
2017. That includes nearly 20,000 inmates who are serving life sentences with
the possibility of parole. The new rules take effect Saturday but it will be
months or years before any inmates go free earlier. Corrections officials say
the goal is to reward inmates who better themselves while critics said the move
will endanger the public. Under the change, more than 10,000 prisoners
convicted of a second serious but nonviolent offense under the state’s “three
strikes” law will be eligible for release after serving half their sentences.
That’s an increase from the current time-served credit of one-third of their
sentence. The same increased release time will apply to nearly 2,900 nonviolent
third strikers, the corrections department projected.
Also as of Saturday, all
minimum-security inmates in work camps, including those in firefighting camps,
will be eligible for the same month of earlier release for every month they
spend in the camp, regardless of the severity of their crime. The changes were
approved this week by the state Office of Administrative Law. ‘Steven, you’re
gonna get shot’: Bodycam video shows officer fatally shooting homeless man “The
goal is to increase incentives for the incarcerated population to practice good
behavior and follow the rules while serving their time, and participate in
rehabilitative and educational programs, which will lead to safer prisons,”
department spokeswoman Dana Simas said in a statement. “Additionally, these
changes would help to reduce the prison population by allowing incarcerated
persons to earn their way home sooner,” she said. Simas provided the emergency
regulations and estimates of how many inmates they will affect at the request of
The Associated Press. Simas said the department was granted authority to make
the changes through the rulemaking process and under the current budget. By
making them “emergency regulations” the agency could impose the new rules
without public comment.
The department now must submit
permanent regulations next year. They will be considered a public hearing and
opportunity for public comment. Kent Scheidegger, legal director of the
Criminal Justice Legal Foundation that represents crime victims, said the notion
that the credits are for good behavior is a misnomer. “You don’t have to be
good to get good time credits. People who lose good time credits for misconduct
get them back, they don’t stay gone,” he said. “They could be a useful device
for managing the population if they had more teeth in them. But they don’t.
They’re in reality just a giveaway.” Republican state Sen. Jim Nielsen, who
once headed the state parole board, criticized Gov. Gavin Newsom’s
administration for unilaterally deciding to make the changes. “He’s doing it on
his own authority, instead of the will of the people through their elected
representatives or directly through their own votes,” Nielsen said. “This is
what I call Newsom’s time off for bad behavior. He’s putting us all at greater
risk and there seems to be no end to the degree to which he wants to do that.”
California has been under court
orders to reduce a prison population that peaked at 160,000 in 2006 and saw
inmates being housed in gymnasiums and activity rooms. In 2011, the U.S.
Supreme Court backed federal judges’ requirement that the state reduce
overcrowding. The population has been declining since the high court’s
decision, starting when the state began keeping lower-level felons in county
jails instead of state prisons. In 2014, voters reduced penalties for property
and drug crimes. Two years later, voters approved allowing earlier parole for
most inmates. Before the pandemic hit, the population had dropped to 117,00
inmates. In the last year, 21,000 more have left state prisons — with about
half being held temporarily in county jails. Meantime, officials announced in
mid-April that they will close a second prison as a result of the dwindling
population, fulfilling a promise made by Newsom. California Correctional Center
in Susanville will close by July 2022. Officials announced last fall that Deuel
Vocational Institution in Tracy, east of San Francisco, will close by this
October. Many Democratic lawmakers and advocacy groups have been calling for
further releases or shorter sentences. Californians United for a Responsible
Budget, for instance, earlier in April said the state should shutter at least
10 more of its 35 prisons.
^ No one (whether in California
or anywhere else) who is in for a violent offense like rape, murder, etc. or - especially those on their second or more
offense – should be allowed early release for good behavior. ^
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