When a federal judge revoked bail for FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, the embattled crypto entrepreneur was sent to a crowded Brooklyn administrative prison…
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Why an Effort To Reduce Repeat Offenders Is Failing, and What Biden Can Do About It
When the U.S. Government initiated efforts in 2018 to reduce recidivism in federal prisons, the aim was to end the cycle that makes many inmates repeat offenders.
When the U.S. government initiated efforts in 2018 to reduce recidivism in federal prisons, the aim was to end the cycle that makes many inmates repeat offenders.
To achieve that goal, inmates would engage in recidivism-reduction programs to earn increased good-conduct time.
But the lofty objectives of the First Step Act, approved by Congress and signed by President Donald Trump, still have a long way to go to live up to their potential, says Christopher Zoukis, author of the Directory of Federal Prisons and managing director of Zoukis Consulting Group (www.prisonerresource.com).
“The Act was a good first step, no pun intended, but where it fails is by excluding too many categories of inmates from various benefit provisions,” says Zoukis, whose firm provides assistance and advice to people already in prison or who are about to be incarcerated.