We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
SLEEPER
It’s hardly ever news when the Federal Bureau of Prisons updates one of its program statements, those tributes to bureaucratese that govern everything that goes on in the BOP from designation to flag protocol to use of force against inmates to distribution of toilet paper. The agency has over 300 program statements posted on its website alone, and that list leaves out more than a few the Bureau really doesn’t want people to see.
Program statements are constantly being adopted, updated and changed. In the first half of this year, the BOP has tinkered with over a fifth of the program statements posted at BOP.gov. Few people notice. But one change – a real sleeper – was posted last month, and it took Elizabeth Oyer, the former pardon attorney now turned Internet DOJ critic, to catch the change and note its significance.
Program Statement 5100.08, entitled Inmate Security Designation and Custody Classification Manual, regulates how inmates are placed in the appropriate level of BOP facility, be it a minimum-security camp or the ADMAX at Florence or any of the 119 joints in the BOP system. It doesn’t matter who you are. All that matters is how you score on a well-defined matrix that measures everything from your offense and criminal history to your behavior inside to amount of time left to serve and over a dozen other factors.
And the exceptions to placement are well-regulated, too, by what are called “management variables.” A person with a sex-offender variable cannot be placed in a minimum-security camp. A camper needing a particular program or medical care only available at a low-security facility could receive a variable to permit placement at the higher-security prison. There are a lot of valid criticisms of Program Statement 5100.08, but it embodies the best of bureaucracy, what German sociologist Max Weber defines as “a form of general organization characterized by the majority of rules and procedures applied impersonally by specialized agents.”
No longer. In a change notice to P.S. 5100.08 issued in early May, the BOP recognized a new DOJ policy – adopted without fanfare – that gives the Attorney General the power to send any federal prisoner to any prison in the country. Nothing limits the AG’s discretion, not regulation, not the BOP, not P.S. 5100.08.
This change notice could be intended to blunt the firestorm of criticism flowing from Jeffrey Epstein confidante Ghislaine Maxwell, who was sent to a camp despite her sex offense conviction after she sat for an interview last year with Todd Blanche. In the interview, she denied that President Trump had engaged in sexual misconduct with women in Epstein’s orbit. A number of legislators have suggested that designation to a camp – contrary to P.S. 5100.08 policy – was a payoff for her favorable testimony.
The change that Liz Oyer cited last week would, after the fact, give Blanche the power to redesignate Maxwell regardless of BOP policy. But the policy is a dangerous one. Oyer said the policy means that “[i]f you are facing a federal prison sentence, Todd Blanche has total discretion to decide where you’ll serve your time… Under this rule, Blanche could direct the Bureau of Prisons to put anyone who opposes the Trump Administration in a maximum security prison. if you’re prosecuted for protesting ICE, for example, or for vandalizing Trump’s Reflecting Pool, you could serve your sentence alongside murderers and rapists. Blanche could decide to put all of Trump’s enemies in maximum security prisons. He could put all Democrats in maximum security prisons. There are no limits no checks and no review of his decisions.”
The converse is equally problematic. “This policy permits preferential treatment for Trump’s allies,” Liz Oyer said. “If you’re MAGA, you might go to a minimum security camp, or if you’ve got a couple million bucks to spend, you could buy your way into a halfway house or even home detention. That’s exactly what’s happening with pardons under Donald Trump – the wealthy and the well-connected are paying for special treatment. There’s no reason to think the same thing won’t happen with prison placements.”
Section 3621(b) of Title 18 would seem to limit this kind of wanton designation-selling by directing that “there shall be no favoritism given to prisoners of high social or economic status.” The problem comes with the last line of the subsection: “Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a designation of a place of imprisonment under this subsection is not reviewable by any court.” If there is no right of review – and the provision is pretty unambiguous on that score in depriving federal courts of subject-matter jurisdiction – then the AG can do as he or she pleases.
However, one interesting twist: If the AG can designate federal prisoners to whatever level, then the AG could designate someone to serve their entire sentences in a halfway house. What’s more, the AG could delegate the power to designate to a subordinate, such as a US Attorney who could then offer preferential designation as a benefit under plea agreements or cooperation agreements.
And it can all be done very quietly, no public announcement, no fanfare, just a phone call from Todd Blanche to the BOP.
Program Statement 5100.08 CN-3, Inmate Security Designation and Custody Classification Manual (May 6, 2026)
Youtube, @Lawyeroyer (June 22, 2026)
~ Thomas L. Root




















