Thursday, April 23, 2026
Beyond the Crime Scene
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast
No Result
View All Result
Beyond the Crime Scene
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Efforts to Ease Federal Prison Overcrowding Are Ending.

by
January 6, 2024
in News
0
Efforts to Ease Federal Prison Overcrowding Are Ending.
190
SHARES
1.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


This is The Marshall Project’s Closing Argument newsletter, a weekly deep dive into a key criminal justice issue. Want this delivered to your inbox? Subscribe to future newsletters here.

The Bureau of Prisons faces a host of major challenges. Federal prisons are chronically short-staffed, creating dangerous conditions for both the people working there and for those who are incarcerated. The aging buildings are in need of major repairs and maintenance. The bureau estimates its already overcrowded prison population will expand to 10% over capacity in 2024.

Despite the grim conditions, two programs — which allow people to live in their communities while serving their sentences if they are not likely to commit new crimes — have ended, or are at risk of ending. Former BOP staffers and advocates for prisoners’ rights say that could increase the prison population at a time when resources are already strained.

The Elderly Offender Program allowed people 60 and older who had served most of their sentences, and were incarcerated for an offense categorized as non-violent or non-sexual, to be released to home confinement. It was a pilot program expanded by the First Step Act, which took effect in 2018. The program expired in September.

Older people are far less likely to commit new crimes, according to government research. Incarcerating older adults is also expensive as they require more medical care, which is especially costly behind bars because prisons have to supply transportation to and security at hospitals. Research suggests that it costs twice as much to keep an older person in prison than a younger one.

The second program is part of the CARES Act, passed in 2020, which addressed issues related to COVID-19. It allowed people to finish their prison sentences at home, to ease overcrowding at the height of the pandemic. But legislation, sponsored by Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, could force participants to return to prison. “Now that the COVID-19 emergency is over, the policy is no longer feasible,” Blackburn tweeted last month.

Both liberal and conservative organizations have pushed back against these efforts to send people back to prison, citing data that shows the CARES program poses little public safety risk.

According to a statement from President Joe Biden’s office in November, of the more than 13,000 people released to home confinement under the CARES Act, “less than 1% have committed a new offense — mostly for nonviolent, low-level offenses — and all were returned to prison as a result.” According to the White House, the program has eased the burden on BOP staff and has saved millions of dollars.

Those savings could be especially important as the bureau tries to address deteriorating prisons that need expensive maintenance and repairs.

The agency’s Office of the Inspector General recently identified unsanitary and potentially unsafe conditions at a federal women’s prison in Florida. Among other health and safety issues, investigators found rats, moldy food and leaky roofs. “We observed housing areas in which feminine hygiene products were being used to absorb water from leaking windows, an electrical outlet that appeared to have fire damage, a sink that was detached from the wall, and a black substance on walls and ceiling,” investigators wrote.

The problems are system-wide. Colette Peters, director of the bureau, told lawmakers in November that there was a $2 billion backlog for maintenance and repairs. But over the last decade, the bureau has received an average of roughly $100 million per year for repairs. “As a result, our current infrastructure needs are significant,” Peters said.

Failing infrastructure is not the only issue Peters flagged. Despite recent improvements, she said staff recruitment and retention remains a challenge.

The New York Times reported on a federal facility in Colorado where staffing was “so low that teachers, case managers, counselors, facilities workers and even secretaries at the complex have been enlisted to serve as corrections officers, despite having only basic security training.” And The Marshall Project investigated a federal prison in Illinois, where several people died in recent years. One employee at that facility told The Quad-City Times that conditions there “have cultivated an environment with catastrophic potential.”

High prisoner-to-staff ratios can have serious consequences. High-profile deaths and injuries in federal prisons, like the stabbing of Derek Chauvin in November, have highlighted the problem. The inspector general said that short staffing contributed to conditions that allowed Jeffrey Epstein’s suicide in a federal jail in Manhattan in 2019. That jail was ultimately closed in 2021 due to the poor conditions, but its companion facility in Brooklyn has seen similar issues. Just this week a federal judge refused to send a man there citing the inhumane treatment.

In a letter to bureau officials in late 2022, Colorado senators wrote about staffing concerns at the federal complex in Florence, southwest of Colorado Springs. The complex includes the only federal Supermax prison, where there were two homicides of incarcerated people and six serious assaults in 2022. In the letter, the senators estimated that the facility was short at least 188 staff members. The dangerous conditions create a downward spiral, leading more staff to leave, the senators argued. “Fatigue, exhaustion, and low morale have reduced staff productivity and led to more sick leave, retirements, and resignations,” they wrote.

Short-staffing also creates a cycle that can make it harder to release people and ease the burden on the system. The First Step Act allows people to earn credits toward early release by participating in educational programming. But Joe Rojas, a literacy coordinator at the Coleman prison complex in central Florida, told NBC his program was rarely operational, because he had to assist with work usually done by correctional officers. “There’s no programming,” Rojas said. “If there’s no programming, you can’t do the First Step Act.”

The White House has threatened to veto any law that sends people who were released under the CARES Act back to prison.

In a rare bipartisian effort, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, a Democrat, and Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, a Republican, are co-sponsoring legislation that would revive the defunct Elderly Offenders program for older prisoners.

Hugh Hurwitz, the former acting director of the bureau, has said extending the program would make sense. Bureau staff could focus on people most in need of programming and security, “thereby reducing the risk to society,” Hurwitz said. “It will also save taxpayers money by greatly reducing BOP’s medical costs.”



Source link

Related articles

A black-and-white photo of a group of musicians dressed in white, with some wearing cowboy hats, standing in a horseshoe shape, while a Black woman in a white dress sings into a microphone. The group is standing on the rodeo grounds, and in the background are the stands where the audience is seated.

The Bootlegging, Blues Singing Star of 1930s Prison Radio

April 13, 2026
Carissa Gunter, 19,

Burglar posed as college student to spend 3 nights in dorm stealing from students: police

April 9, 2026
Share76Tweet48
Previous Post

No, Mr. Mayor, NYC hasn’t ‘turned a corner’ on crime

Next Post

Why ‘discovery reform’ is boosting crime

Related Posts

A black-and-white photo of a group of musicians dressed in white, with some wearing cowboy hats, standing in a horseshoe shape, while a Black woman in a white dress sings into a microphone. The group is standing on the rodeo grounds, and in the background are the stands where the audience is seated.

The Bootlegging, Blues Singing Star of 1930s Prison Radio

by
April 13, 2026
0

Filed 1:00 p.m. EDT 04.12.2026 Hattie Ellis was poised for post-prison fame. Then she encountered shotcallers who didn’t value her...

Carissa Gunter, 19,

Burglar posed as college student to spend 3 nights in dorm stealing from students: police

by
April 9, 2026
0

A burglar suspect allegedly posed as a college student to get into a dormitory where she spent three nights robbing...

In New York, Mamdani’s Appointee Wants to Change Policing

In New York, Mamdani’s Appointee Wants to Change Policing

by
April 9, 2026
0

This is The Marshall Project’s Closing Argument newsletter, a weekly deep dive into a key criminal justice issue. Want this...

Anti-Israel activist admits to torching 11 NYPD vehicles in arson spree

Anti-Israel activist admits to torching 11 NYPD vehicles in arson spree

by
April 9, 2026
0

A Brooklyn activist with a history of arrests at pro-Palestinian protests pleaded guilty Wednesday to setting fire to 11 empty police...

The hands of a Black woman hold the silver-colored framed black-and-white photo of her son, a young Black man wearing a dark-colored baseball cap with the logo of the Georgetown University Hoyas bulldog, a neatly trimmed goatee, a studded earring, and a light-colored baseball-style jersey.

Mac Dre Used Jail Phones to Record an Album — And Fight the System

by
April 8, 2026
0

Filed 1:00 p.m. EDT 04.05.2026 In his signature trickster style, the Vallejo, California, rapper recorded an album on jail phones...

Load More
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
The horrifying rape, torture murder of eight-year-old Nurin Jazlin Jazimin : True Crime Diva

The horrifying rape, torture murder of eight-year-old Nurin Jazlin Jazimin : True Crime Diva

May 29, 2023
What I Learned From a Year of Reading Letters From Prisoners

What I Learned From a Year of Reading Letters From Prisoners

December 16, 2024
Drunk driver who killed mother and son blamed the victims, phone calls with father reveal

Drunk driver who killed mother and son blamed the victims, phone calls with father reveal

September 22, 2024
'Gulf Coast Stapletons' influencer sentenced for child porn

‘Gulf Coast Stapletons’ influencer sentenced for child porn

July 4, 2025
NJ man who chopped neighbor's trees fined $13K — and faces $1M bill

NJ man who chopped neighbor’s trees fined $13K — and faces $1M bill

February 27, 2024
Karen Styles: map of where a deer hunter found her body

The 1994 murder of Karen Styles

May 9, 2023
Sacks of USAID yellow peas in a storage facility.

USAID official pleads guilty to taking part in $550M bribery scheme: ‘Violated the public trust’

June 14, 2025
Karen Styles: map of where a deer hunter found her body

The 1994 murder of Karen Styles

0
Dwane Roy Dreher: photo of his 2nd wife, Lois Genzler Dreher at 16 years old

The 1955 disappearance of U.S. Navy veteran Dwane Roy Dreher

0
Alta Braun: professional photo taken when she was about 4 years old.

The 1917 unsolved murder of Alta Marie Braun

0
Vacation Nightmare: The gruesome murder of Janice Pietropola and Lynn Seethaler

Vacation Nightmare: The gruesome murder of Janice Pietropola and Lynn Seethaler

0
Kristi Nikle: photo of suspect Floyd Tapson

The 1996 disappearance of Kristi Nikle

0
Frank and Tessie Pozar: photo of their son, Frank Pozar, Jr.

Motel Mystery: What happened to Frank and Tessie Pozar?

0
Evil on The Road Part 4: Desmond Joseph Runstedler

Evil on The Road Part 4: Desmond Joseph Runstedler

0
Delivery driver faces death penalty for kidnapping, killing Athena Strand

Delivery driver faces death penalty for kidnapping, killing Athena Strand

April 14, 2026
A black-and-white photo of a group of musicians dressed in white, with some wearing cowboy hats, standing in a horseshoe shape, while a Black woman in a white dress sings into a microphone. The group is standing on the rodeo grounds, and in the background are the stands where the audience is seated.

The Bootlegging, Blues Singing Star of 1930s Prison Radio

April 13, 2026
Soldier and his girlfriend fatally shot in Valentine’s Day slaying

Soldier and his girlfriend fatally shot in Valentine’s Day slaying

April 10, 2026
Carissa Gunter, 19,

Burglar posed as college student to spend 3 nights in dorm stealing from students: police

April 9, 2026
In New York, Mamdani’s Appointee Wants to Change Policing

In New York, Mamdani’s Appointee Wants to Change Policing

April 9, 2026
Anti-Israel activist admits to torching 11 NYPD vehicles in arson spree

Anti-Israel activist admits to torching 11 NYPD vehicles in arson spree

April 9, 2026
The hands of a Black woman hold the silver-colored framed black-and-white photo of her son, a young Black man wearing a dark-colored baseball cap with the logo of the Georgetown University Hoyas bulldog, a neatly trimmed goatee, a studded earring, and a light-colored baseball-style jersey.

Mac Dre Used Jail Phones to Record an Album — And Fight the System

April 8, 2026
Beyond the Crime Scene with Bee Astronaut

Categories

  • Featured
  • News
  • Podcast
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos

Legal Pages

  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
  • DMCA

© 2023 All right reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • True Crime Stories
  • Videos
  • Podcast

© 2023 All right reserved.