Prisoners

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27 Jul, 2011

What Is the Impact of the Supreme Court’s Ruling in Freeman v. United States to the Retroactive Crack Cocaine Amendment?

2011-07-27T17:43:02-05:00July 27th, 2011|Tags: , , , , , , , |

First impressions are rarely accurate. At least mine, anyway. So when I first read Justice Sotomayor’s concurring opinion in Freeman v. United States, No. 09-10245, I didn’t think much of it. The number of guideline amendments that turn retroactive is few as are Rule 11(c) plea agreements. But giving the opinion a [...]

22 Jul, 2011

The California Hunger Strike Has Ended, Allegedly

2011-07-22T15:58:05-05:00July 22nd, 2011|Tags: , |

Several major media outlets are reporting today that the California prison hunger strike has ended. Click here, here, and here. “Yet prison advocates claim that those reports have yet to be confirmed,” ColorLines reported. You might be wondering why California prisoners started the hunger strike. It started over what prisoners call “inhumane” conditions in [...]

30 Jun, 2011

US Sentencing Commission Votes for Retroactivity of Crack Cocaine Amendment

2015-03-02T18:16:15-06:00June 30th, 2011|Tags: , , , , |

Today, the U.S. Sentencing Commission "voted unanimously" to give "retroactive effect to its proposed permanent amendment to the federal sentencing guidelines that implements the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010," a press release said. The retroactively applicable guideline amendment for crack cocaine offenses will allow over 12,000 federal prisoners to seek resentencing. According to the Sentencing Commission [...]

21 Jun, 2011

Creighton Law School Is Reducing the Size of Its Incoming Class; Nebraska Prisons Are Overcrowded

2011-06-21T19:51:39-05:00June 21st, 2011|Tags: , , , , , , |

Although there were several interesting SCOTUS decisions handed down yesterday, I instead decided to cover some local issues with national implications. Creighton University School of Law announced that they are reducing the number of seats for incoming law school students. Tthe Omaha World Herald’s story leads with this: Too many lawyers. Too few [...]

2 Jun, 2011

DOJ Backs Retroactivity for Reduction in Crack Penalties

2011-06-02T14:26:31-05:00June 2nd, 2011|

Yesterday, Attorney General Eric Holder testified before the U.S. Sentencing Commission about whether the new reductions for crack cocaine offenders should be applied retroactively--that is, to those sentenced before the new reductions occurred. Although the Department of Justice agreed that the crack cocaine sentence reductions should be applied retroactively, DOJ also contended that the Commission [...]

23 May, 2011

Prisoners Win, Prisoners Win

2019-03-18T18:48:01-05:00May 23rd, 2011|Tags: , , , , |

In what is undoubtedly the biggest win for inmates serving time in deplorable prison conditions, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today that the Prison Litigation Reform Act DOES authorize the release of prisoners to remedy the egregious violation of prisoners’ constitutional rights. The case is Brown, et al. v. Plata, et al., No. [...]

2 May, 2011

Prisoner News Roundup

2019-03-18T18:48:02-05:00May 2nd, 2011|Tags: , , , , , , |

For the next month I will be focusing on prisoners’ issues, because I know that many prisoners’ families come to the CockleBur to keep up-to-date on legal developments affecting prisoners. So here is a roundup of the latest prisoner stories in the news. Last week, the New York Times published an editorial entitled, [...]

21 Jan, 2011

A Plea for a New Crack Law; A Prisoner Sues the Kardashian Sisters; An Economy of Tinned Mackerel; and Death Row Honey Buns

2019-03-18T18:48:07-05:00January 21st, 2011|Tags: , , , , , |

Earlier in the week, Julie Stewart, from the Families Against Mandatory Minimums, urged members of Congress and the President to pass a new law making the changes to crack cocaine sentencing retroactively applicable to federal prisoners. Courtesy of the Huffington Post, Ms. Stewart pleaded for new legislation, stating that: