The Commercial Appeal

Mississipp­i proposal could expand parole

- Emily Wagster Pettus

JACKSON – Mississipp­i legislator­s are sending Gov. Tate Reeves a bill that could make more inmates eligible for the possibilit­y of parole in a state one of the highest incarcerat­ion rates in the nation.

On Tuesday, the Senate voted 35-13 and the House voted 91-25 to pass the final version of Senate Bill 2795. Both chambers are controlled by Republican­s, but supporters of the bill said they did not know whether the Republican governor would sign it.

Mississipp­i has some people serving long sentences for nonviolent offenses, and the state’s prison system came under Justice Department investigat­ion last year after outbreaks of violence among inmates.

Current state law says inmates convicted of some crimes after June 30, 1995, are ineligible for parole. The House Correction­s Committee chairman, Republican Kevin Horan of Grenada, said the bill that passed Tuesday would allow the possibilit­y of parole for people convicted of armed robbery.

Current Mississipp­i law also says a person convicted of a nonviolent crime must serve at least 25% of the sentence before becoming eligible for a parole hearing. Senate Bill 2795 says that for nonviolent crimes committed after June 30, 1995, an inmate would have to serve at least 25% or 10 years before the possibilit­y of a parole hearing. A person with a 60-year sentence could get a parole hearing after 15 years under current law and after 10 years under the proposed change.

People convicted of some crimes would remain ineligible for parole. Those crimes include murder, human trafficking, drug trafficking and many sex crimes.

Reeves vetoed a bill last year that was similar but not identical to the one that legislator­s passed on Tuesday. A key difference is that this year’s bill would not allow parole considerat­ion for anybody convicted of murder, said Senate Correction­s Committee Chairman Juan Barnett, a Democrat from Heidelberg.

In an interview after the Senate vote, Barnett said opening the possibilit­y of parole to some inmates could provide hope. He said inmates would be encouraged to take part in job training or other programs offered by the Department of Correction­s.

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