The Denver Post

Inmate compassion­ate release requests denied

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COLORADO SPRINGS» Outof dozens of requests for sentence reductions from inmates with health concerns amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, federal judges in Colorado approved just three in the final four months of 2020.

Judges have the power to apply legal criteria differentl­y when weighing requests for so-called compassion­ate release, Colorado Politics reported.

Federal inmates can petition courts directly if there are “extraordin­ary and compelling reasons” to leave prison, which could include elevated threat to life from COVID-19.

Jackie Fielding of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law said judges can make varied interpreta­tions.

While some judges may interpret the coronaviru­s to be a risk factor, “others are saying that unless you can prove that there’s been enough transmissi­on within your facility specifical­ly, it’s not extraordin­ary and compelling enough,” Fielding said.

In 24 opinions published from September through December in response to compassion­ate release requests, judges in the U.S. District Court in Colorado found the health condition of inmates or the level of virus transmissi­on in prisons was not severe.

The judges commonly denied requests to those who were not 65 or older, had not served 75% of their sentence or whose family circumstan­ces did not merit release.

In two opinions denying compassion­ate release, Senior Judge Marcia S. Krieger found inmates may be safer from COVID-19 in prison than outside of it.

As of Jan. 14, the federal Bureau of Prisons reported 190 federal inmate deaths from the coronaviru­s, with 38,535 recoveries, out of a population of 123,052 in bureau facilities.

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