Albuquerque Journal

At least 3 prisoners let out early committed new crimes

Wash. governor orders error fixed

- BY RACHEL LA CORTE

OLYMPIA, Wash. — At least three Washington state prisoners released early because of a computer error committed crimes while they should have been behind bars, state officials said Thursday.

During a conference call with reporters, officials from the Department of Correction­s could not say whether those prisoners have yet been re-arrested. They also didn’t release specific informatio­n on the new crimes, saying they were working to confirm the informatio­n.

Correction­s officials say the three are among 27 others who have been released since June, and potentiall­y need to be arrested and returned to prison because of an error the agency made calculatin­g sentences.

Earlier this week, Gov. Jay Inslee said that he ordered immediate steps to correct the mistake that has wrongly released as many as 3,200 offenders early since 2002.

Five prisoners released in error since June have already been re-incarcerat­ed. Another 3,000 who are still incarcerat­ed also had inaccurate release dates. Officials have said most of the errors were 100 days or less.

In some cases, inmates were released just a few days early, but at least one person who is still incarcerat­ed had a release date that was off by about 600 days.

“We’re casting a wide net and doing extensive reviews of each case,” Correction­s Secretary Dan Pacholke said Thursday.

Pacholke said that, once they have all the informatio­n, they will prioritize expediting the arrests of those who committed new crimes. He noted that, on average, about 10.5 percent of inmates released from prison commit a crime within the first year of their release. “This group will probably be comparable to that overall statistic,” he said.

The mistake came following a July 2002 state Supreme Court ruling that required the Department of Correction­s to apply good-behavior credits earned in county jail to state prison sentences. However, the programmin­g fix ended up giving prisoners with sentencing enhancemen­ts too much so-called good time credit.

Sentencing enhancemen­ts include additional time given for certain crimes, like those using firearms or those committed near schools. Under state law, prisoners who get extra time for sentencing enhancemen­ts cannot have that time reduced for good behavior.

Based on another Supreme Court ruling that credits time out to the sentence of prisoners who have been mistakenly released early, most of the affected offenders won’t have to go back to prison.

The Department of Correction­s was first alerted to the error in December 2012, when a victim’s family learned of a prisoner’s imminent release. The family did its own calculatio­ns and found he was being credited with too much time. However, even though the agency consulted with attorneys regarding the error the same month and scheduled a fix for the program, it was repeatedly delayed and, ultimately, never done. Pacholke said he didn’t learn of the error until last week and the governor says he didn’t learn of the issue until that same time, when correction­s’ officials notified his staff.

Inslee has told correction­s officials to stop releasing prisoners affected by the glitch until a hand calculatio­n is done to ensure the offender is being released on the correct date. A broad fix to the software problem is expected to be in place by early January.

Two retired federal prosecutor­s have been brought in to conduct an independen­t investigat­ion to determine why the error occurred and went unfixed for more than 13 years.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Inmates seen here in 2011 walk past correction­al officers at the Washington Correction­s Center in Shelton, Wash. Gov. Jay Inslee said Tuesday that more than 3,000 prisoners in the state have been released early since 2002 because of an error.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Inmates seen here in 2011 walk past correction­al officers at the Washington Correction­s Center in Shelton, Wash. Gov. Jay Inslee said Tuesday that more than 3,000 prisoners in the state have been released early since 2002 because of an error.

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