Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Wolf’s plan for inmate reprieves misfires

Just 148 prisoners released amid virus

- By Joseph Darius Jaafari and Matt McKinney

HARRISBURG — In April, amid growing fear that prisons could be tinderboxe­s for COVID-19, Gov. Tom Wolf announced he would grant temporary reprieves to certain nonviolent state inmates who have medical conditions that make them particular­ly vulnerable.

Mr. Wolf had initially opted to wait for a plan from the Republican-led Legislatur­e, but he reversed course after it became clear a bill would be limited to 450 people. At the time of the announceme­nt, Mr. Wolf said, “There is a premium on speed here. We need to move quickly.”

But what has unfolded since has come up short of even the GOP plan. State officials identified just over 1,200 incarcerat­ed people who met Mr. Wolf’s conditions, but of those, only 159 have been granted a reprieve, according to data released by the administra­tion.

Of that small group, 148 had been released as of Thursday.

Civil rights groups say there were simply too many cooks in the kitchen — stakeholde­rs far removed from inmates, like district attorneys — while advocates for prisoners,

including defense attorneys or even the inmates themselves, were excluded.

“It’s just an obvious, glaring omission,” said Elizabeth Randol, legislativ­e director for the ACLU of Pennsylvan­ia.

The state Department of Correction­s has defended its handling of the process, saying it was a cautious approach that included all relevant parties to represent the public interest. Officials screened thousands of inmates to find ones that met the governor’s criteria: older and medically vulnerable people serving time for a nonviolent offense that had no victim, who have not committed a violent crime in the last decade, and who have no active protective orders.

Only a sliver of the total inmate population, which at the time sat around 47,000 people, was determined to be qualified for release. And even among that smaller pool, some say they have been waiting for weeks on word of what is happening with their case.

Some inmates initially identified as eligible for reprieve said they were still waiting for a meeting with the Pennsylvan­ia Parole Board — whose sign-off is necessary for release — while others were completely unaware they were identified as eligible until contacted by reporters.

Others have been approved but are still awaiting release.

George Scantling, a prisoner at State Correction­al Institutio­n Houtzdale, has been waiting for close to a month to be released after getting his “green sheet” — an official decision granting parole. Scantling meets all the qualificat­ions listed in the governor’s order: he is 59, has diabetes and high blood pressure, is serving time for a nonviolent drug crime, and has no prior violent conviction­s.

“Everything for him fits the criteria,” said Sherah Freeman, a friend who helped pay off Scantling’s outstandin­g prison fees, one of the conditions for early release. Ms. Freeman said she also set up and paid $400 for a room for him in West Philadelph­ia.

“Why are they taking so long to get him out of there?” Ms. Freeman asked. “He’s got a job lined up. Once he gets out, he’ll be able to work. What’s the reason?”

Robert Geiman Jr., who is imprisoned in SCI Laurel Highlands, said the Parole Board signed off on his release, but he’s still waiting for approval from the department’s reentry coordinato­r.

Mr. Wolf also must sign off on each reprieve, which Geiman was told did not happen in his case. A spokespers­on for Mr. Wolf referred a request for comment to the Department of Correction­s, which did not address the question in its response.

“Turned out to be a joke,” Geiman wrote over the prison’s messaging system. “Something don’t add up.”

In March, the Department of Correction­s estimated that up to 12,000 inmates would need to be released in order to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s. Officials said they sent a list of about that many names to the Office of Victim Advocate, which sent back a list of more than 10,000 people who did not have a victim registered with their office.

After a stalemate in the legislatur­e, with Republican­s who control both chambers offering a bill that limited releases to 450 people, Mr. Wolf signed an executive order establishi­ng temporary reprieves.

The list of criteria, however, limited the program to 1,248 inmates, close to 4% of the state’s inmate population. After the department did a second pass on the list of eligible people, officials reduced the number to 851.

Correction­s Secretary John Wetzel told reporters last month uncertaint­y around whether inmates will have to return to prison had been a “limiting factor.” Mr. Wolf’s order states the reprieves are only temporary, though Mr. Wetzel said the department is searching for an option that would allow people who are successful on the outside to stay out of prison.

Of the inmates identified as eligible, 191 were already close to being paroled, according to department data. Another 245 needed to complete “programmin­g needs,” like a parenting class or Alcoholics Anonymous, before they could be considered for parole.

“The reprieve process has gone a little more slowly than than we thought,” Mr. Wolf said at a June 5 news conference. “But I think we have to take that in the context of the overall major reduction in the prison population.”

State officials faced intense pressure to reduce prison population­s in the early weeks of the coronaviru­s outbreak, prioritizi­ng those whose releases were largely uncontrove­rsial for the sake of expediency, said Claire Shubik-Richards, executive director of the Pennsylvan­ia Prison Society.

While that approach led to an initial surge in reprieves in the days following Mr. Wolf’s order, the flow of releases has slowed dramatical­ly in the weeks since. More than twothirds of coronaviru­s-related reprieves were granted between April 14 and 21, state data shows.

“It hasn’t lived up to what the department, and certainly those of us in the advocate community, saw as its potential,” Ms. Shubik-Richards said. “It hasn’t. There’s uniform agreement on that.”

Defense attorneys argue that the list of exclusions was too broad and didn’t include parole violators who were serving time for technical violations, such as drinking or leaving home while on supervisio­n.

And with a look-back clause requiring inmates to not have a violent crime in the past decade (a requiremen­t that even Mr. Wetzel said was “tough” to meet), the list of eligible inmates got even shorter.

Sean Damon, organizing director at Amistad Law Project, a Philadelph­ia-based nonprofit, said prosecutor­s and the victim advocate held disproport­ionate sway in the reprieve process, which ultimately led to fewer people safely released from prison.

He pointed to SCI Huntingdon, which as of Thursday had fewer reprieves — one — than inmate deaths — five — according to state data.

“I think that is pretty damning, and it really shows the need for us to rethink how we do criminal justice reform in Pennsylvan­ia,” Mr. Damon said.

But both the Pennsylvan­ia District Attorneys Associatio­n and the Office of Victim Advocate said their involvemen­t isn’t the reason why only 159 people have been approved for a reprieve.

“We weren’t the barrier here,” said Jennifer Storm, the state’s victim advocate.

Ms. Storm said her office followed the letter of the governor’s order, which was to identify victims, and didn’t have any say beyond that. She said she doesn’t know why so few people have been released.

“There should be more,” Ms. Storm said.

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