US to release 6,000 prisoners as part of sentencing-reform campaign

WASHINGTON — The federal Bureau of Prisons plans to release 6,000 prisoners at the end of October, implementing a decision last year to slash the number of incarcerated drug offenders by nearly half.

Officials said the nationwide releases over four days starting Oct. 30 will be the largest in U.S. history.

Last year, in line with a concerted effort by the Obama administration to reduce the number of drug offenders in U.S. prisons, the U.S. Sentencing Commission voted to cut drug sentences by an average of two years, potentially affecting as many as 46,000 out of 100,000 cases.

In the coming year, an additional 8,550 prisoners will be eligible for release, according to Sentencing Commission spokesman Matt Osterrieder, though he added that not all of them will be approved.

When the mass release was first proposed, some federal prosecutors and even then-Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. preferred a much narrower approach.

Under a compromise, the Sentencing Commission agreed to delay the releases until late this year, permitting a more thorough vetting of each case. Congress, where sentencing reform has had bipartisan support, allowed the changes to go into effect.

On Tuesday, the Justice Department was solidly behind the releases.

“The Department of Justice strongly supports sentencing reform for low-level, nonviolent drug offenders,” said Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates. “The Sentencing Commission’s actions – which create modest reductions for drug offenders – is a step toward these necessary reforms.”

Bureau of Prisons spokesman Edmund Ross said Tuesday he could not confirm that the releases are limited to nonviolent offenders.

Each release is individually approved by a federal judge, who must make a determination that the person is not a threat to public safety. So far, Osterrieder said, judges are approving about 75 percent of requests for release.

Studies of previous but smaller mass releases in 2007, when sentences were adjusted for crack cocaine, showed that the recidivism rate for those released early was about the same as those released at the completion of their sentences, about 40 percent, Osterrieder said.

Justice Department spokeswoman Emily Pierce said that roughly one-third of those released will be deported because they are not U.S. citizens. Most of the others will be sent to halfway houses or supervised home-release, officials said.

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