Los Angeles Times

Early release of prisoners quietly begins

- paige.stjohn@latimes.com

more felons in privately owned prisons and other facilities.

In February, the judges granted Brown’s request and ordered him to “immediatel­y implement” the early releases and add parole options for prisoners who are frail, elderly or serving extended sentences for specific kinds of nonviolent crimes.

Analysts in Brown’s administra­tion initially estimated that about 1,400 prisoners would be freed early over two years by being allowed to shave off as much as a third of their sentences with good behavior.

From prison, they follow the normal path to either state parole or county supervisio­n, depending on the crimes they committed.

“Our first ‘Whew!’ moment was when we realized it was not anybody we wouldn’t [be getting] already,” said Karen Pank, a lobbyist for California’s 58 county probation department­s.

More than 17,000 prisoners overall are potentiall­y eligible for reduced sentences, according to the administra­tion’s analysis.

Pank said the adminis- tration was negotiatin­g with counties over whether to pay them additional money to supervise those who are sent to probation early.

Eligibilit­y rules for the court-ordered parole programs have not been made public.

A Board of Parole Hearings meeting on the matter was held last week behind closed doors, according to an agenda posted online by the board.

Ordinarily, such major changes to the state’s criminal justice system would be debated before the Legislatur­e, but the federal judges have set aside those requiremen­ts.

“We don’t have many options to weigh in on the consequenc­es of what is being put in place,” Pank said.

If California misses any of the court’s interim deadlines for easing crowding, a courtappoi­nted officer has authority to order additional releases.

State lawyers said in an April 15 court filing that officials have already met the court’s June 30 benchmark, its first since the judges gave Brown extra time.

The judges set a limit on the inmate population of 143% of the prisons’ capac- ity; the state’s attorneys said the latest population was 141%.

Lawyers for prisoners argued in a court motion last week that the state was counting empty beds in a medical prison in calculatin­g its capacity to house inmates, permitting other prisons to remain crowded. The correction­s department contends the medical space should be included.

The latest prison population reports from the government show a women’s prison in Chowchilla is at 183% of its capacity. Correction­s officials have confirmed an inmate lawyer’s report that as many as eight women at a time share dorm rooms that have a single toilet, sink and shower.

“There is one person on top of another.... It is a pressure cooker simmering,” said attorney Rebekah Evenson of the Prison Law Office, which represents inmates in class-action litigation over prison conditions.

Correction­s spokeswoma­n Krissi Khokhobash­vili said crowding in women’s prisons will ease when a private lockup in McFarland opens to take 520 female in- mates.

In a conference call Tuesday with financial analysts, executives of the company that owns the McFarland facility said it would not be ready to take the first 260 women until the fall.

They said state officials had not yet requested the remaining 260 beds.

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