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Carvajel’s Subcommittee Swan Song – Update for February 7, 2022

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

BOP DIRECTOR’S FINAL HOUSE OVERSIGHT HEARING LARGELY A MARSHMALLOW FIGHT

Marshmallow220207Bureau of Prisons Director Michael Carvajal dumped numbers on a largely uncritical House Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security last Thursday, in what is likely the retiring Director’s final oversight hearing.

Committee chair Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-Texas) suggested fireworks to come when she opened the session wondering how the BOP could justify turning down inmates for compassionate release who later died of COVID. But the fireworks were largely a dud, as hard questions about criminal misconduct by BOP staff, lax security, and decrepit facilities – the reasons Associated Press gave for Carvajal’s resignation in the wake of Congressional pressure for his replacement – went unasked.

The Director’s play with numbers went unchallenged as well. His written statement reported that the Bureau has transferred more than 37,000 inmates to community custody, noting parenthetically that only about a quarter of those were transferred pursuant to the authority granted by the CARES Act. In his oral testimony, the Director truncated that to the BOP having “released over or transferred over 37,000 under the CARES Act to home confinement and community placement.”

The BOP has been bandying the 37,000 number about for a long time, used to lull legislators into thinking the agency had vigorously used its CARES Act authority. What it comes down to is that the BOP kept releasing people to halfway house/home confinement as usual but could only find under 7% of BOP inmates in custody who “qualified” for CARES Act placement over a 22-month period. The “qualifications” were those laid down by the Attorney General, with additional gloss (such as the inmate must have served 50% of his or her sentence). That means that 28,000 of that 37,000 number would have gone to halfway house or home confinement under normal end-of-sentence placement, even without the CARES Act.

Maybe the number misdirection doesn’t seem like such a big deal, but it’s emblematic of BOP culture. If the BOP’s professional judgment is that the CARES Act should be no more than the 7% solution, why not tell Congress “we released 9,000 people under the CARES Act, and if you wanted us to release more, you should have written the law differently.” Instead, the BOP leads with the 37,000 number, hoping that Congress doesn’t listen that carefully, and will think the BOP has done much more than it has. It is a tacit admission by the BOP that it knows it has been unreasonably chary in applying the CARES Act, and it hopes Congress doesn’t tumble to it.

pigfly220207Perhaps the next BOP director will be candid enough to own what his agency has done or not done with its authority. (See flying pig).

Carvajal also assured the Subcommittee that the BOP “continue[s] to screen inmates for appropriate placement on CARES Act” and that while the 50%-of-sentence standard is one of the “four hard criteria,” the BOP has “discretion – there usually is a higher-level review if the staff of the institution feels that it is appropriate outside of the CARES Act, we have procedures in place to review cases such as that…”  Call this the Manafort exception. Unfortunately, but for Paul Manafort’s CARES Act release in May 2020 (and former congressman Chaka Fattah in July 2020), the BOP has been steadfast in refusing to waive the 50% rule. It should be called the “who-you-know” exception.

who201229Responding to questions from Rep. Karen Bass (D-California), Carvajal said that 80% of the BOP staff was vaccinated, but only 95,000 out of 135,100 in-custody inmates had gotten the jab. His numbers are way off the BOP’s own website, which reports that 119,500 inmates are vaccinated – 78% – but only 70.4% of the BOP’s 36,739 employees have gotten the shot.

[Note to Mike: it’s easier to fudge the numbers when you’re not simultaneously making the real data available to anyone with a smartphone.]

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) said the BOP had told his staff that 4,738 BOP employees (12.9% of the workforce) had gotten exemptions – mostly religious – from taking the vaccine, and groused that “it’s kind of it’s interesting that the inmates have more rights [to refuse vaccines] than the officers themselves.” No one knows what the Congressman might think if he knew the numbers Director Carvajal had given him were wrong. For what it’s worth, Congressman, if the BOP is getting rid of staff who refuse the vaccine, inmates would happily accept the same fate. 

One of the only tense moments in the hearing came when Rep. Cori Bush (D-MO) braced Carvajal on conditions brought to her attention by the National Council for Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated Women and Girls. Bush said:

In these emails, women in federal custody detail horrifying accounts of not being allowed to get out of their beds all day because of COVID lockdowns, being forced to eat expired food, having little to no access to medical services to treat cancers and other underlying conditions, having to pay $2.00 to file a sick complaint. This is all happening under your watch. These are complaints coming from not one or not two facilities but five different facilities, which makes clear that these issues are not isolated… These women cannot hold you accountable, Mr. Carvajal, they cannot, but we can, and I would like to use this opportunity to ask you questions that they cannot directly ask you out of fear of retaliation.

schultz220207The Director responded, “I’m not aware of those particular complaints, but I’m certainly interested in hearing from you and your staff so that we can look into them, because I find that – if that happened – I find it unacceptable.” He assured Bush that “we take all allegations seriously…” Not that I disagree – I would never dispute what the BOP director says – but I have hundreds of emails from inmates who beg to differ.

Carvajal explained to the legislators, “I’d like to stress something – we’re not here for punishment, the taking of their time by the courts and the criminal justice system, that’s the punishment, we’re here to house people that are remanded to our custody and more importantly to prepare them to reenter society, keep them safe while they’re here. We’re not here as punishment, that’s not how we look at this agency.”

The hearing had a few other bumps. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN) complained that the BOP “has unfortunately failed to protect the health of those within their custody and their staff from COVID-19 or address chronic understaffing [and] the BOP has also lacked transparency and vigor and implementing important criminal justice reforms such as the First Step Act.”

Jackson-Lee raised the reports filed by epidemiologist Homer Venters, M.D., on MDC Brooklyn and FCC Lompoc. She noted that “his investigation revealed [a] disturbing lack of access to care when a new medical problem is encountered…” Venters noted that at MDC Brooklyn, “it quickly became apparent that not only were many people reporting that their sick call requests, including COVID-19 symptoms, were being ignored, but that the facility was actually destroying their original request which violates basic correctional standards. [T]his is an accountability hearing… these are human beings deserving of respect and dignity, men and women…”

Carvajal said he was “aware of the report, we looked into it, we followed up, I won’t discuss that specific incident, but I will reassure you that each of our institutions has an outpatient health clinic that’s overseen by a board-certified physician and a medical director. We have outside oversight… If there’s a mistake made or something of that nature, we’re going to look into it and do something about it correct the issue.”

potemkin220207He did not mention and the Subcommittee did not note that the BOP’s “follow-up” consisted of vigorously contesting every aspect of Venters’ report in litigation over MDC Brooklyn.

It may not be much of a plan to testify before a subcommittee hoping that the legislators haven’t done their homework. But Director Carvajal seems to have capped his career doing just that, and with some success.

Statement of Michael Carvajal, House Committee on Judiciary (Feb 3, 2022)

Hearing, Oversight of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (Feb 3, 2022)

Fernandez-Rodriguez v. Licon-Vitale, 470 F.Supp.3d 323 (S.D.N.Y. 2020)

– Thomas L. Root

Seems Foolish To Have To Say This Again… – Update for January 7, 2022

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

BUT HOW ABOUT THE 65% BILL? DIDN’T THAT PASS?

easterbunny210916A month ago, I tried to bust the most pervasive inmate myths. Judging from my email, I failed miserably.

So I will take a day off from COVID in the BOP (now with 2,886 sick inmates – up a whopping 87% from a week ago – and 790 sick staff – up 48% in a week) and from following up on the soon-departed Michael Carvajal)… aNd I will try again.

Pay attention, kiddies. There is NO 65% bill, 65% law or 65% anything. There is NO proposal to cut federal sentences so that everyone will only serve 65%. There is NO bill, law, NO directive from Biden, and NO anything else that will give inmates extra time off because of the pandemic.

Nothing, nada, zilch, bupkis.

One guy complained after my last myth-busting post that I had “misrepresented” things because there is indeed a bill pending that would let nonviolent first-time offenders who are 45 years old get out at 50% of their sentences.

jacksonleebill220107

Yeah, I admit it. There is such a bill. Just like I have a picture of a unicorn. But the picture doesn’t make a unicorn any more real. And Rep Sheila Jackson Lee’s (D-TX) perennial tilt at the windmill doesn’t make the legislation a serious contender.

Yes, Jackson Lee has (once again) introduced a bill to dramatically cut federal sentences. She tossed it in the hopper last spring, an event that I did not bother to note at the time. Her Nonviolent Offender Relief Act of 2021 is a variation of the bill Jackson Lee has introduced in every Congress since 2003 (that’s nine times), except for the 116th (2019-2020). None has ever collected a single co-sponsor. The bill has always gone to the House Judiciary Committee, never to be seen again. Joe Biden is more likely to be Donald Trump’s running mate in 2024 than this bill is to ever see the light of day.

If you want to know what criminal justice reform legislation stands a chance in this Congress, look elsewhere.

H.R.132 – Federal Prison Bureau Nonviolent Offender Relief Act of 2021

– Thomas L. Root

Higher and Higher… – Update for December 8, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

BOP COVID CASES BREAKS 5,000 AS LEGISLATORS GRILL CARVAJAL

rocket-312767BOP inmate COVID-19 cases passed a grim milestone last Friday, rocketing past the 5,000 mark. That number jumped another 10% over the weekend. As of last night, the BOP had ended with

•     5,634 ill inmates (up 15% from the week before);

•    1,613 sick staff (up 12% from last week);

•    COVID in 128 BOP facilities; and

•    163 dead inmates.

The BOP has tested 57% of all inmates at least once, with the positivity rate climbing from 25% – where it has hovered for months – to over 32%.

To put this in perspective, one out of every five federal inmates who has ever had the virus has it right now.

BOPCOVID201208jpg

Two BOP facilities have more than 300 sick inmates, Loretto and Texarkana, three more with over 200 ill, andand another 16 with over 100 COVID cases. USP Tucson has 75 sick staffers, with Pollock in second place with 60 and Oklahoma FTC with 50.

Last Wednesday, BOP Director Michael Carvajal testified before the House Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security. It wasn’t pretty. After he delivered his prepared statement – a BOP puff piece about how in response to COVID-19, the BOP had “implemented a decisive and comprehensive action plan to protect the health of the inmates in our custody, the staff, and the public, to the greatest extent possible, consistent with sound medical and corrections principles” and how the BOP’s “procedures have proven effective as this is evidenced by the steep decline in our inmate hospitalizations, inmates on ventilators and deaths” – the knives came out.

fired161227Subcommittee Chair Karen Bass (D-California) quoted a Dept of Justice Inspector General report that found up to six days elapsed before FCI Oakdale inmates who had been exposed or tested positive for COVID-19 were isolated, and wondered how that squared with the BOP’s representations. Carvajal insisted that the situation in Oakdale was not representative of BOP policies, and blamed the then-warden. “In a nutshell, we had some leadership issues there,” he said. “Our regional director had some concerns about the procedures not being enforced or followed. In essence, without getting into details, I removed the leadership.”

Carvajal pushed back at Subcommittee demands the BOP institute a blanket staff testing plan (arguably a good idea considering that 43% of all staff who have had COVID since March are sick right now). He argued that the BOP could not compel employee COVID tests. But a written statement filed with the Subcommittee by Shane Fausey, national president of the BOP employees’ unions, disputed that, complaining that despite unions’ urging, the BOP “has repeatedly refused” to offer voluntary coronavirus testing to staff members at the prison facility where they work. Instead, Fausey said, “employees who believe they were exposed or might be infected with the coronavirus must get tested on their own time and in their own communities.” For good measure, Fausey also blasted BOP and Marshals Service for transferring inmates without adequate quarantining, which he said has put “the health and safety of tens of thousands of federal correctional workers, their families, and their communities at risk.”

covidtest200420In a separate exchange with Representative Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas), the director said he could not force his employees to get tested for Covid-19, although the BOP waives insurance copays for those tests.

“I understand civil liberties, civil rights the Constitution, but you’re talking about individuals coming into contact with incarcerated persons who can’t walk away, who can’t get out,” Jackson Lee said. “And that means they are endangering themselves, their families at home.”

Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-New York) braced Carvajal about underutilization of compassionate releases. Before filing for a compassionate release, an inmate must first ask the BOP to bring the motion for him or her, a vestige of the procedure before the First Step Act broadened the law to let inmates bring their own motions. Jeffries noted that while about 2,000 such motions had been granted by courts, the BOP had approved only 11 requests when inmates first asked to the agency to do so. Jeffries asked Carvajal, “10,929 requests out of 10,940 requests were rejected, does that sound right?”

Carvajal said the BOP has been intentionally careful. Given public safety considerations, Carvajal said, the BOP’s approval rate of 0.1% makes sense: it is “not a process that should be rushed.” This suggests that the courts, with compassionate release approval rates that are 182 times higher than the agency, are profligate.

The day before the hearing, Government Executive magazine published a sobering piece in which BOP employees said that staffing shortages and COVID-19 are creating a crisis. “If not for COVID, we would still have augmentation but it wouldn’t be as crazy,” Joe Rojas, a union official. “It’s already a dangerous workplace with COVID and it’s made worse by understaffing.”

quit201208Several employees said they expect that attrition to accelerate in the coming months. Rojas said he and many others have stuck around in part due to a retention bonus the BOP offered to veteran workers in recent years. That incentive is disappearing next year, he said. A BOP spokesman said the Bureau is providing incentives “where appropriate” and taking other steps to boost recruiting. He noted the agency has hired 3,400 employees in 2020, a sharp uptick over recent years.

Already some of the prisons in the Southeast, Rojas said, are operating at 70% or less of their expected workforce level. “You can’t run a prison like that. The seams are going to burst,” he said. “I’m afraid.”

DOJ, Statement of Michael D. Carvajal, Director Federal Bureau Of Prisons (December 2, 2020)

Courthouse News Service, Officials Spar Over Covid Spread Through Prison System (December 2, 2020)

Statement of Shane Fausey, National President, Council of Prison Locals (December 2, 2020)

Government Executive, Federal Prison Employees Fear Staff Shortages and Mass Reassignments as COVID-19 Cases Spike (Dec 1)

– Thomas L. Root

Abandon Hope? Not this Congresswoman… – Update for April 18, 2017

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

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TILTING AT WINDMILLS

We had an email from an inmate this week asking whether we were aware of a bill pending in Congress that would reduce by the half sentences of nonviolent inmates over 45 years old without any shots.

retread170418The short answer is yes, there is such a bill. The long answer is that this bill – H.R. 64, Federal Prison Bureau Nonviolent Offender Relief Act of 2017 – is the mother of all retreads, having been pending in the last Congress as H.R. 71, Federal Prison Bureau Nonviolent Offender Relief Act of 2015, and the Congress before that (H.R. 62, Federal Prison Bureau Nonviolent Offender Relief Act of 2013), and the Congress before that (H.R. 223, Federal Prison Bureau Nonviolent Offender Relief Act of 2011), and… well, you get the picture.

We can track the pedigree of the Federal Prison Bureau Nonviolent Offender Relief Act all the way back to the 108th Congress (2003-2004), which is when lone wolf Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-Texas) first introduced the measure. She’s been tilting at the same windmill ever since, with her one-sponsor-only bill as certain a fixture in each new Congress as is the State of the Union address.

In 2015, one commentator wrote about Rep. Jackson-Lee’s bill (and others like it) that “these bills have very little likelihood of passage since only one representative, their author, has officially signed on as supporting them. Most of them were also introduced last Congress but were shelved.”

About 10,000 bills get introduced in every 2-year Congress, and only about 3% of them are passed. With the last Congress not able to even bring the Sentence Reform and Corrections Act of 2015 to the floor – after virtually all of its retroactive provisions (that would have helped federal inmates) were gutted – the “nonviolent offender” sentencing bill had no chance of even being taken up by a committee.

Attorney General Jeffrey Sessions
Attorney General Jeffrey Sessions

The new Administration, to put it charitably, is considerably less concerned than were Administrations of the past that federal inmates may be serving unfairly long sentences. Breitbart News, a right-wing website formerly run by Trump confidante Steve Bannon, was beating the drum last Saturday for a close audit of the 1,715 inmates whose sentences were commuted by President Obama. Most of those inmates are not released yet, but that did not deter Brietbart News, which quoted former federal prosecutor Bill Otis as saying, “What Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ Justice Department needs to do now is track the hundreds of fellows who got these pardons and commutations. With overall recidivism rates for drug offenses already being 77%, I think we have a pretty good idea, but the public should get specifics: How many of these guys re-offend; what’s the nature of the new crime; were there related violent crimes in the mix as well; and how many victims (including but not limited to addicts and overdose victims) were there?”

We monitor the bills being introduced in Congress every week. So far, nothing approaching the 2015 SCRA has been introduced.

Just last week, The Hill reported that Attorney General Jeffrey Sessions has directed federal prosecutors to crack down on violent crime. Sessions has tapped Steven Cook, a federal prosecutor and outspoken opponent of criminal justice reform, to lead Sessions’ new Task Force on Crime Reduction and Public Safety.

Alex Whiting, faculty co-director of the Criminal Justice Policy Program at Harvard Law School, was quoted as saying,

Obama moved away from that approach, and I think in the criminal justice world there seemed to be a consensus between the right and left that those policies, those rigid policies of the war on drugs and trying to get the highest sentence all the time, had failed… I don’t know if he is really going to be able to persuade the department to follow his lead on this.

Whiting questions whether Sessions would be able find 94 prosecutors to appoint as U.S. Attorneys who will back his new tough on immigration crime/violent crime approach.

windmill170418With this attitude prevailing in the Justice Department, any surge on sentencing reform (not to mention interest in executive clemency) is extraordinarily unlikely to occur. Nevertheless, a salute to Rep. Jackson-Lee, who makes Don Quixote look like a quitter.

Breitbart News, How Federal Agencies Keep Americans In The Dark About Crime Statistics (Apr. 16, 2017)

The Hill, Sweeping change at DOJ under Sessions (Apr. 16, 2017)

– Thomas L. Root

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