Archive 06/13/2023

DC Corrections Information Council

SPECIFIC TO DC RESIDENTS – BUT PARTS APPLY TO ALL

The CIC now has additional powers regarding requests for information and unannounced inspections at the DOC, which promote intragovernmental transparency.

The first of the FCC Hazleton reports, SFF Hazleton, has been published.

PDF icon Home Confinement – 297.8 KB (pdf)
PDF icon BOP Medical Care Levels – 215.3 KB (pdf)
PDF icon BOP Mental Health Care Levels – 328.1 KB (pdf)
PDF icon COVID-19 Non-Legal Resource Guide – 84.7 KB (pdf)
PDF icon DC Census July 22 – 16.7 KB (pdf)
PDF icon Voting While Incarcerated – 88.1 KB (pdf)
PDF icon Residents with Extended Sentences – 209.9 KB (pdf)

2nd Chance Federal Pell Grants For Incarcerated Individuals

Federal Pell Grant Program

Education For Those In Prison

First established in 2015 by the Obama-Biden Administration, the Initiative has expanded under the Biden Administration to 73 additional schools, providing access to education to thousands of additional students, reducing recidivism rates, and improving public safety.  This expansion should bring the total number of schools able to participate in the Second Chance Pell Experiment to 200.

The Department of Education also announced changes to policies to help incarcerated individuals with defaulted loans, allowing them to qualify for a “fresh start,” which returns borrowers with defaulted loans to repayment in good standing, and allows them to access programs like the Second Chance Pell Experiment. The Department will also allow incarcerated individuals to consolidate their loans to help them exit default in the long term”.

Multiple studies, some done by RAND.org and funded by the DOJ were shown to reduce recidivism rates and were associated with higher employment, which improved public safety and allow individuals to return home to their communities and contribute to society.

It also showed that they were 48% less likely to return to prison within three years, than those incarcerated individuals who did not participate.

The Department intends to then fully implement the legislative changes to allow eligible students in college-in-prison programs to access Federal Pell Grants beginning on July 1, 2023. To see a full experimental list of participating sites.

Launching Historic DOJ-DOL Partnership. The Department of Justice and the Department of Labor are investing:

  • $145 million over FY22-FY23 to provide job skills training and individualized employment and
  • reentry plans for people incarcerated in Bureau of Prisons (BOP) facilities and to provide
  • pathways for a seamless transition to employment and reentry support upon release.
  • $55 million for job training, pre-apprenticeship programs, digital literacy training, and pre-release and post-release career counseling for justice-involved adults.

All of this works together, hand in glove with your efforts to get out of prison the earliest you can, on the most successful path that you can. While you may not see it now, together with the BOP (and the monster organization that it is) programs, education is something that nobody can take away from you.

I’m serious, give me a call.

Med Law Consulting: White-Collar INDICTMENT

What areas do you feel comfortable opining about? In other words, what’s your area of expertise/ what are you known for?*

I practice in the Federal Criminal Defense for those who find themselves facing this life-altering event. For An Example of How Preparation Can Positively Impact One’s Sentence – if they have been Prepared for their Interview, see my 5/2023 Elizabeth Holmes YouTube:

Once the DOJ has its Investigation underway, the quicker you act, the better your client’s chances will be of mitigating or getting their best or lowest sentence. Why, because the DOJ comes to the table with a 98% conviction rate and bottomless financial pockets with which to prosecute.

After all the legal work is done, and the guilty verdict is in, two parties are left.
1st The JUDGE, who understands that people don’t commit crimes in a vacuum and wants to understand the defendant, and
2nd, the defendant has to help the Judge understand what changed or brought them to this point where they broke the law. Humanizing themselves before the Judge takes work is done by changing the current NARRATIVE, or story of who they are, their INDICTMENT.

This is an arduous, self-reflective experience for them to go through, forcing a face-to-face with their innermost thoughts.

Taking weeks to months to complete, can result in a distilled version of themselves that is honest and pure, a version where they have Remorse, Accepted Responsibility, and Identify with the Victims of the Crime They Have Perpetrated.

Standing at your sentencing hearing anticipating their conversation with the Judge, they’ll realize that writing the narrative has been an unexpectedly cathartic experience. Speaking from the heart now ‘could’ influence the court, and ‘may’ impact their sentence.

 

ALL OF THIS IS PREPARED, COMPLETED, AND PRESENTED TO THE PROBATION OFFICER ~2 WEEKS BEFORE THE PRESENTENCE INTERVIEW, IN ADDITION TO THE REQUESTED BIOGRAPHICAL AND PERSONAL I.D. INFORMATION.

Also covered are The Reentry Plan, PATTERN Score, SPARC-13 Assessment, and The Administrative Remedy Process (BP 8-11, 2241; which the BOP encourages inmates to use).

 

Published:
The Federal Lawyer, 12/2021,
The Critical Role of The Presentence Report, Dr. Marc Blatstein, and Faye Spence, Esq

ABA, 11/2022, REPRESENTING PEOPLE WITH DEMENTIA
CHAPTER 1. What Is Dementia? Page 1, Dr. Marc Blatstein, and Faye Spence, Esq.
CHAPTER 13. Jail and Prison Conditions, Page 155, Dr. Marc Blatstein, and Faye Spence, Esq.

SERVICE.
Preparation starts with the defense team encouraging their client to start thinking and drafting their,
a) PERSONAL NARRATIVE,
b) RELEASE PLAN,
c) ALLOCUTION,
Reviewing and understanding their,
d) PATTERN Score, and
e) SPARC-13 Risk Assessment Questions,
Providing,
f) Copies of all Biographical and Personal Information as instructed by their counsel.
When everything is complete, counsel will then provide it to the Probation Officer 1-3 weeks before the Interview.
g) Administrative Remedy Process (BP 8-11, 2241; which the BOP encourages inmates to use).
h) What to Expect Inside The BOP

This provides the Officer with the quality time needed to enter your information into their Probation Report, and later at the interview personally meet you and ask questions.

As most of their report has already been filled out due to your hard work before the meeting, this can be a casual conversation with less stress, and maybe the Officer comes away from the meeting thinking that you were prepared, and has an overall better feeling about your client – quite different from the NARRATIVE released by the DOJ.

3. The defendant must also understand how to navigate prison, how Not To Loose their GOOD TIME CREDITS, EARNED TIME CREDITS, and RDAP CREDITS (if applicable), and how to Advocate for themselves using The Administrative Remedy Process.

IS YOUR CLIENT PREPARED FOR THEIR PRESENTENCE INTERVIEW AND SENTENCING HEARING?

“Judges want to hear from the defendants” because they understand that crimes do Not Happen In A Vacuum, they need and want to understand What Changed In Their Lives That Precipitated this event?

A WELL-THOUGHT OUT; PERSONAL NARRATIVE, ALLOCUTION, and REENTRY Plan is your Story or Autobiography.

This takes time to write and self-introspection to think. It can be as long as it needs to be, but after multiple re-writes, is distilled down until it reveals a version of you that accepts Responsibility, has Remorse, and agrees with the court to the Victims you have created.

Your client understands it’s their responsibility to make things right by their Victims 1st, the Community 2nd, family 3rd, and themselves last. This comes from interviews with Federal Judges, across the country.

Contact Us ☎️ OUR SERVICE

Elizabeth Holmes Enters Prison 5-30-2023

ENTERS BOP CAMP IN TEXAS, Likely PATTERN = Low or Minimum

Original Sentence: 11.25 Years (x) 12Months = 135 Months (x) 15 % [GTC] = 19.8 (Months Good Time Credit)

Months: 135 – 19.8 = 115.2 Months, or 9.6 yrs As long as there are No Disciplinary Infractions

115.2: With The FSA, after 2 years of ETC – you can earn 12 Months Off Sentence, Or: [115.2 -12 = 103.2], or 8.6 years

Earning more FSA Credits = more RRC or Halfway House Time

BUT 1st, Take the Assessment Survey In Order to Earn The ETC

  • Otherwise, you could take the programs – just not Earn The Credits Toward Early Release
  • Financial Responsibility Program
  • Daily Writing What You’ve Learned from FSA Programs
  • Daily Writing your Takeaways from Non-Fiction Books (or Painting), anything you are interested in.
  • Why documenting? INSURANCE
  • WHY DO ALL OF THIS WRITING? Consider this as insurance; similar to purchasing  Life,  Health,  or  Auto Insurance: You hope you don’t need it – Until you do.

WHY INSURANCE?

WHAT HAPPENS IF 6 MONTHS AFTER YOU HAVE STARTED TAKING FSA CLASSES, YOUR CASE MANAGER TELLS YOU THAT THE BOP RECORDS SHOW THAT 6 MONTHS PRIOR, YOU MISSED 2 CLASS SESSIONS – AND YOU HAVE NO PAPER TRAIL, NO DOCUMENTED PROOF?

YOU’RE KICKED OUT OF THE FSA – OR MADE TO START OVER, ETC ARE REMOVED, AND NO EARLY RELEASE. NOW, THERE’S NOT MUCH YOU CAN DO, BUT WISH YOU HAD THAT INSURANCE.

RDAP = up to 1 year off Sentence: 103.2 – 12 = 91.2 Months or 7.6 yrs

  • In the 12 months before the arrest, was a substance abused?
  • Either Over-the-counter, prescription, legal, or illegal.
  • Was your pursuit of this unique laboratory blood testing quest something (similar to gambling) to think about…?
  • Did she start therapy before sentencing or her interview?

NARRATIVE/RELEASE PLAN = ITS NEVER TOO LATE TO START

  • DON’T PAY SOMEONE ELSE TO DO HER JOBS
  • TAKE QUIET TIME TO GET SETTLED
  • IT WILL BE A SHOCK TO THE SYSTEM
  • THERE WILL BE THOSE WHO WILL WANT TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF HER AS A CELEBRITY WITH $$

2nd Chance:

  • With (2nd CHANCE ACT, is up to CASE MANAGERS: Reducing Criminogenic Needs
  •  RRC – or Home last 6 months in home confinement= 12 months RRC §3624(c)(2).
  • The regulation implementing this mandate states that “[i]nmates may be designated to community confinement as a condition of pre-release custody and programming during the final months of the inmate’s term of imprisonment, not to exceed twelve months.” 28 C.F.R. § 570.21(a).
  • This regulation also provides for “home detention as a condition of pre-release custody and programming during the final months of the inmate’s term of imprisonment, not to exceed the shorter of ten percent of the inmate’s term of imprisonment or six months.”

SENTENCING, YOUR JUDGE WILL WANT TO SPEAK WITH YOU. MAKE THAT A GREAT 1ST IMPRESSION

This video is for you. If you received a Target letter invitation to speak to a Grand Jury, you need Legal Representation. For a federal crime, it is best to have an attorney who practices federal criminal defense, having had cases similar to yours, and practices in federal court. After that, hopefully, you will have time for follow-up questions to see if he/she is the best fit for you.

Facing the Criminal Justice System is not easy. Are You Pre-Prepared?

 

Your attorney has taken you this far, The Rest Is Up to You.
Your Sentencing Hearing and Presentence Interview Is Coming, and Will Change Your Life.
Today, Are You Prepared to Speak to Your Judge?

Your Judge Sees a Lot of Defendants – How Do You Stand Out?

The Judge Knows that the Prosecutor wants to convict you, and your Attorney wants a lesser sentence for you.

  1. Help the Judge Understand Who You Are – And Why You Deserve Leniency
  2. What Changed in Your Life That Caused You to Break the Law

Your Judge Already Knows 
The DOJ wants you in Jail.
The Prosecutor wants to convict you.
Your Attorney is paid to keep you out of prison.
Judges Also Know That Crimes Aren’t Committed In A Vacuum.
This is Your Opportunity to Help Your Judge Understand Who You Are

Write Your Story, your Narrative that tells how you came to this point in your life, to the Judge.  This is an arduous, reflective experience for you to go through, forcing a face-to-face with your innermost thoughts, and may require you to enlist an outside mitigation expert to work with you, but you have to participate in doing the work. 

Federal Judge Mark Bennett highlights the significance of incorporating your personal account or Narrative into your Presentence Report. This will enable the court to understand your background and the factors that led you to commit the offense. Taking responsibility for your actions, expressing regret for the harm you caused, and speaking humbly from the heart are all imperative during your court appearance. Listen to my video, and help your judge understand who you are while challenging the DOJ INDICTMENT with your Personal NARRATIVE  included in your Presentence Report.

Taking weeks to months to complete, this can result in a distilled version of you that is honest and true, a version where you have Remorse, Accepted Responsibility, and Identified with the Victims of the Crime You Perpetrated.

  • The resulting Narrative or Story of you is quite the opposite of the one that the DOJ previously presented through their Indictment. As you now stand at your sentencing hearing waiting on the judge, you may also have an unexpectedly cathartic experience as a result of revealing all of your life through your writing.

Now, Are You Prepared to Speak to Your Judge?


CLIENT PREPARATION: THE WORK YOU DO – IS ADVOCATING FOR YOURSELF

The Personal NarrativeReentry-Release Plan, and answers to the SPARC-13 Assessment Questions (as you are expected to answer these questions when you first arrive, you might as well become familiar with them early), are written as one document and weaved into the Presentence Report when provided to your Probation Officer, a few weeks before your Presentence Interview.

Here the defendant has accepted responsibility, expressed remorse for the victim(s) pain, suffering, and how it has impacted them, and agrees with the court about the seriousness of the crime without minimizing it.

  • The caveat is that the defendant must put time and effort into writing their Narrative, Allocution, and Reentry Plan because their future depends on it being honest, pure, and from the heart.

PERSONAL NARRATIVE. Writing your story through Your Narrative tells the Judge how you came to this point in your life. This is an arduous, self-reflective experience for you to go through, forcing a face-to-face with your innermost thoughts. This is your autobiography (of you and those around you), the good, the bad, and the ugly. It may require you to enlist someone with federal sentencing mitigation experience to guide you in drafting your narrative, but this is the story of your client’s life and requires their participation. Listen to this video regarding your Narrative.

  • 18 U.S.C. § 3553
  • Judges
    • Look for WHY and HOW the incident happened –
    • Did they have PTSD
    • People don’t commit crimes in a vacuumtherefore
      • It’s important for the Judge to Know ABOUT the Person
      • Before they pass judgment
    • NATURE and CIRCUMSTANCE You want to include,
        1. What led you to do this, 
        2. How did you get involved, and 
        3. What was your involvement? [check that your involvement reflects what is in the official Presentence Report].
    • HISTORY and CHARACTERISTICS Here, you want to include,
        1. Your remorse, 
        2. How you ruined your victim’s lives, 
        3. Show what you’re doing to change and improve yourself regarding rehabilitation (NA, AA, GA, Therapy, etc.) and paying restitution – if you can, 
        4. Where there was a positive or negative family life – explain this, 
        5. Traumatic event – review with details, 
        6. Good things you’ve done, explain with examples, 
        7. Show Judge your Future Plans to not come back and 
        8. Cooperation = Substantial Information that does not implicate another.
    • Include if Applicable,
        1. FAMILIAL HISTORY: Married – Children – parents’ responsibilities and sole caregiver
        2. DEFENDANT’S PHYSICAL CONDITION: Medically documented bad Back-Hip-Knees-Shoulder could provide you with a Bottom Bunk. Diabetic, Vascular Disease, Raynaud’s could allow the Medicare soft shoe or sneakers.
        3. MEDICAL/PHYSICAL HEALTH, MENTAL AND EMOTIONAL HEALTH: Include ALL medical records, Labs, Surgery Reports, X-ray – CT-MRI-Ultrasound-Pet Scans (in Written and CD Format), Prescriptions for medications (Check Generic Medication Availability), and medical devices, along will ALL physician contact information.
        4. SUBSTANCE ABUSE: Alcohol, Drug (Legal or Illegal), within the previous 12 months before the arrest. RDAP allows up to 1 year off the sentence. They may do a Urine test.
        5. EDUCATION AND VOCATIONAL SKILLS: Copied of the highest level. Otherwise, a GED will be required in prison. If you have experience in/with computers, administrators frown on these skills, so you may want to consider not using them.
        6. MILITARY: Copies, branch, discharge?
        7. EMPLOYMENT: The PO will check. Judges love an excellent work record/history.
        8. STATEMENT FINANCIAL RECORDS: If there are financial fines/restitution, Congress and The BOP now require a Financial Responsibility Plan to benefit from all Earned Time Credits and access to Programming. Therefore, if the events allow, counsel could ask that the court write into the record that payments should only start after release from the BOP.

RELEASE PLAN. Include that you realize you need to learn from the FSA Risk Reduction Programs and implement their lessons into your daily life. Then expand on an appropriate theme, “Since my indictment, arrest, criminal charge, plea hearing, trial or guilty plea, presentence investigation, and sentencing process, I had the time to think about all that I have done. I made BAD decisions, except it shouldn’t be about ME – It’s about MY Victims and What I did. This is most important, as I must Prove my Remorse and my Efforts to Change and Accept Responsibility for The Pain I caused to my victims, the community, my family, and myself. To the court, I do not want to be here again – I have learned a hard and humbling lesson.

If you are currently taking FSA Programs for AA, NA, Gambling, or a Sex Therapy Program, where applicable when released, you want to continue the Therapy and Rehab for AA, NA, Gambling, or Sex therapy rehab. sessions. State this in your Reentry Plan.

You also should refer to (or have) copies of your Social Security Card, Driver’s License (if expired, it needs to be updated with a new test likely), and Birth Certificate. You are also grateful to be moving into a home with a support structure where they will keep you accountable. While you have been self-employed in your career, you have a letter from a friend willing to hire you, “all I have to do is let them know that you are released, as they are expecting my call”. “As you see, the letter was also a character letter that I initially provided.”

At the same time, you can also plan to be self-employed again if your role was not part of your criminal charge. Then everything that goes into a traditional business plan, including what you would present to a bank, should be professionally (not handwritten, not expensive), put together, as your Probation Officer will want to see this during or before your Supervised Release.


ALLOCUTION. You may begin by writing (in your own words) something like this…, “I am embarrassed and since my indictment, I’ve had the time to think about how I have damaged so many (victims) and I am 100% responsible. I was raised to do the right thing, and I brought this on myself facing my demons is humbling and I owe it to the victims, community, and my family to make things right. 

I have looked into the FSA programs that may help like Threshold Program, a non-residential faith-based, and I’ve already started AA.  I understand that it is about my victims, and for me to somehow make it right – even with my medical license being debarred, this is something that I must do.

 

  1. “No punishment will be enough. If I could go back and change everything, I would.”
  2. I am persuaded that the defendant is sincere and demonstrates insight into the crime.
  3. Allocution is very important, “I’d like to have a conversation with the defendant” …
  4. I want him/her to apologize to the victim and their family, mainly if they are in the courtroom.
  5. “Allocution, however, changes this when I see the defendant has insight into the harm they have done,” when I see they have insight into this.”
  6. “I am looking for remorse and insight as to why he did what he did and what he is doing to ensure that it doesn’t happen again.

As you stand at your sentencing hearing, nervous, anticipating the conversation with your Judge (your Allocution), you may also realize that writing your narrative has been an ‘unexpectedly cathartic experience’. Speaking from the heart could influence the court, and ‘may’ impact your sentence…


CHARACTER REFERENCE LETTER. These are letters to one’s character, they are aware that you have broken the law, and they have known you for a long time. Should an employer be willing to write a letter that states they are still willing to rehire you after release from prison due to your ‘character and skills’ – that is a Great letter and should be included.

EXAMPLE. The ‘writer’ states that they know that you are in trouble and facing federal charges and that you feel terrible about what you did. They have known you for 40+ years, “We went to college together, and this is so out of character,” and you are so remorseful.

I know that he/she won’t be back to this court because we will be looking out for them in the future, and we will hold them accountable.


Now… Do You Feel More Prepared to Speak with Your Judge?


My 30+ years in practice, and experience in the BOP, have provided me with the answers to almost all of your questions and concerns about how to craft your Sentence Mitigation Strategy.

For Free,

  • On my website, YouTube channel, Podcast, and various other social media venues you may find the tools you need to do this on your own.
  • Whether using these free services, or engaging me, or someone else, please get experienced assistance.
    • This will impact your future through your Presentence Report and will influence the actions of your Judge (Your 1st  STAKEHOLDER), and
    • Other STAKEHOLDERS as you move through the prison on your pathway home.

Once you are incarcerated, expect that life in The Federal BOP will come with,

  • Promises are made and broken, timelines are not kept, and sometimes rules are broken.
  • Having been in prison, despair, discomfort, frustration, and the like will become all too frequent and familiar, but this is all Temporary.
  • Therefore the only person who can control your reactions to all of this, and this person is you, so work at keeping positive and humble, focusing your efforts on the goal of getting home.

Remember that no consultant or attorney, can promise any special relationship with any judge, or any outcome if it sounds too easy or too good to be true, then Next. This takes hard work, and Self-Advocacy on your part.

Let’s take the next step together and answer your questions. Marc 


OUR SERVICE

I) PREPARATION

    1. The first Expert You Need is a Federal Criminal Defense Attorney who practices in Federal Court. Next, they should be experienced in working cases similar to yours, and most importantly, You Should Feel Comfortable with them accepting advice from you, as you hold each other accountable.
    2. Personal Narrative. Your only opportunity to speak directly to the Judge and share your personal history, accept responsibility, and remorse, and explain why you will not revisit this courtroom again. This can be in written, video, or both formats.
    3. Allocution. This is the Judges 1st and only time to meet and speak with you – he really does not want to see you back in this courtroom on a criminal matter, again. 
    4. Release/Reentry Planning 
    5. Preparation for Early Release
    6. Pre-Surrender Reminder List 
    7. Self-Surrender List (What You Can Bring) 
    8. Financial Responsibility Program (FRP). Guidance as to what makes a great Character Letter Recommendation – From People That Have Known You.
    9. Character Reference letters
    10. Preparation for The Sentencing Hearing
    11. Preparation for Your Presentence Interview
    12. Preparing for your 1st Day In Prison
    13. Sentence Mitigation Video (Helpful, this can be professionally done with us, or with a smartphone)
    14. Instructions on the Administrative Remedy Process, as the BOP encourages its use, and attorneys will not be inside with you.
    15. BOP Visitor Form
    16. BOP TRULINCS Email
    17. Sample BOP Commissary List
    18. BOP MEDICAL INTAKE SCREENING UPON ARRIVAL
    19. Sample BOP INMATE ADMISSION & ORIENTATION HANDBOOK

How To Avoid A Medical CoPayment.

II) SCORING 

  1. Public Safety Factors vs Management Variables (Approximate),
  2. Criminal History vs Offense Level (Approximate)

Your Probation Officer will be scoring you, it makes sense that you be prepared, as this could impact your sentence and placement.

III) PREPARATION For Your Presentence Interview and optimal BOP Placement Facility with supporting BOP Programs

The Presentence Interview is done by the Courts Representative, The Probation Officer (PO), who will try to learn as much about your as they can – in a short period of time. After they have spoken with The Prosecutor and Googled You, they will have learned all of the Negative Information available online, provided by the DOJ. Then they will concentrate on conducting their Presentence Interview of you, followed by their Investigation.

After they have assembled your biographical background information, they will write your official Presentence Report, and passed to the Judge, along with recommendations regarding your sentencing and placement.

  1. First, your legal team is currently prepping for the date of your Presentence Interview.
    • They work to establish 1st contact with your Probation Officer (PO) before they learn more about you, so they are not biased against you – before you ever meet,
    • They will quickly learn 1) what the Officer knows, 2) provides the opportunity to explain their client’s defense strategy, 3) you now have a timeline regarding The Interview Date, along with the Documents you need, and 4) The Dictation Date Deadline – which is when their final Presentence Report of you is due to their supervisor.
  2. You begin to assemble your Biographical Information
    • Highest education level achieved
    • Identification documentation
    • Character Letters
    • Past and First Work Character Letters
    • Military Service, what branch, type of discharge, and highest rank.
    • Past Medical (and Mental Healthcare) Care History
      • Comprehensive Medical and Mental Healthcare Profile Development 
        • Mental Healthcare needs directly matched to FSA Specific Programs
        • Your Medication list checked for availability according to the BOP 3 Tier Formulary
  3.  Pregnancy:
  4. RDAP Eligible, if yes – include it, there are minimal negative repercussions.
  5. 18 U.S. Code § 3553 – The imposition of a Sentence, addressing other factors could be considered.
  6. COVID Modified Operational Levels (BOP.gov): for those concerned who are self-surrendering 2022/2023
  7. Also, answering the question regarding, who listens to the ‘AM’ Radio Station: W.I.I.F.M., all the time?
  8. I provide you and your legal team with; 1) a personalized, court-ready BOP Placement Packet, and 2) supporting reasons for the request, with the appropriate documentation; Medical Care, First Step Act Programming, or other pertinent issues. (Example – Alderson)
  9. A Surrender list of what to bring, and a Pre-Surrender Checklist of what to prepare for you and your family

IV) Our Presentence Investigation Report

We can also provide an “alternative presentence investigation report” for the defense so that it can be submitted to the court for consideration. This may also include the expense of additional experts.

V) When To Make Your BOP PLacement Request To The Court 

  • JUST BEFORE SENTENCING, or
  • WITH THE SENTENCING MEMORANDUM, or
  • IF THE TIMING WAS RIGHT – AT YOUR PRESENTENCE INTERVIEW
  • AT SENTENCING

Learn CPR – Save Lives – Hands-Only (30 sec)

It could be yours, a friend, a stranger, or a relative.


 

If You Suspect You’re The Target of a Federal Investigation | Before The Presentence Interview (PSI) | After The PSI – But Before The Sentencing Hearing | or After Sentencing or You’re Already Incarcerated – There Are Still Things – At All Levels, We Can Do

We are not Attorneys, you need legal representation.


There is no implied or otherwise guaranteed final prison placement, medical and medication availability, or program enrollment.

SELF-SURRENDERING? DO YOU KNOW WHAT TO BRING, WHERE YOU SHOULD GO?

In this YouTube, I cover what you can bring when you self-surrender. The optimal time is before noon and then before 4 P.M. In the weeks before, there is additional planning, which I cover below.

1) WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU SURRENDER?
  • Learn what prison you have been designated to.
  • If it’s a Satellite Camp – You Surrender to the Higher Facility or Prison.
  • While the Higher Secure Prison may house Violent Persons, you will not (Should Not) be interacting with them.
  • You will Interact with the staff, and as they deal with Violent persons (or higher security persons), their attitude toward you may reflect the same harshness.
  • …in other words, it won’t be a warm welcome or warm first impression.
  • Bring actual or copies of your Driver’s License, Social Security Card, Medical File, prescriptions for your Medications, and Medical Device, if applicable.
  • If you owe and Paid your Restitution, bring Proof and contact your attorney ASAP to get that to you. Next, once paid, you can keep any amount of money in your Trust or Commissary account.
  • Sending Money: Western Union $3 – $500, MoneyGram is $300 Max, BOP Lockbox is any amount.
  • Wedding Band, Religious Neckless; Max value of $100 is permitted.
  • Release Plan, Phone Contact list (No Color, Not Double Sided): Bring it saying that you read online that this was important, and I wanted to give it to my Case Manager. You can also mail it to yourself that day [no more than three pages per envelope]).
  • The soonest early release is after you’ve served 25% of your time.
  • Letters to your PO in the District of your Permanent Legal Residence.
  • The 1st Case Manager meeting is within 30 Days.

2) ENSURE A SMOOTHER PROCESS WHEN YOU SURRENDER 

    1. Verify with all parties that the receiving facility has received all the required judge’s orders for your arrival before you get there18 U.S.C. § 3621(c).
      • If you arrive before your commitment orders (no matter how rare that may be), you may find yourself being placed in an Isolation Cell, and now that they have you, they’re not likely to let you go.
      • If we have prepared you, you will have books arriving soon, which should take the edge off should they keep you in Isolation longer than several days.
    2. If you’re ultimately designated to a ‘satellite’ camp, know that you must present yourself to the adjacent, ‘higher’ secure facility – not the satellite camp. If you’re going to a Free Standing Federal Prison Camp (FPC), No Worries, and you will not be facing most of these challenges.
      • Also, know that at the higher secure facility, you will likely see prisoners in handcuffs and shackles, guards with long guns, guard towers, etc., so just an FYI.
      • Being prepared is essential – as this is not the time for surprises. This is because every client will deal with the emotional aspects of “prison,” each in their own way, especially if it’s their first time.
    3. Once inside you will be screened and given a change of clothes. The clothes they came with and peripherals will then be boxed and mailed to your ‘legal residence’. You’ll also have to strip, squat, and cough.
    4. The copies (or originals) of your birth certificate, passport, driver’s license, and social security card will all be kept and returned to you at the time of your release.
    5. What Not to do while you’re there,
      • No Alcohol, Drugs, Gambling, or Sex with Inmates or Staff.
      • When you’re first there, keep a low profile until you understand prison better; look for someone like you.
      • No chit-chat, casual talking to guards.
      • Don’t be an informant.
      • Don’t use anyone’s Cell Phone.
      • It’s normal to be apprehensive at first.
      • Emails and USPS letters are read, and calls are monitored (Never do a 3-WayCall)
      • Don’t use someone else’s medications.
      • The TV Room is under others’ control – don’t change the channel if others are watching TV.
      • Don’t miss counts, find out where the Call-Out Sheet is, and look at it daily for your name.
      • Be Respectful to other inmates, their personal space, and staff.
    6. Be aware that banks and different investment, mortgage, and other loan companies may elect to close your accounts due to your charge(s).
      • Be sure to have someone you trust notarized as your Power of Attorney. They could also be your Emergency Contact person with the prison and for your visits.
      • Start looking at smaller local banks, possibly in different states, and look to open different accounts.
      • To not get financial penalties as some of your investments are being forced to close, here too, look for other places to move your funds to avoid those penalties.
    7. Case Managers will be looking for Personal Growth and Development in addition to your taking the First Step Act (FSA) Programs. To keep a record your yourself, like insurance – where you don’t need it, until You Do.
    8. Reading Books (Non-Fiction) for Personal Growth,
      • Amazon sells cheap paperback journals with lined pages, but they will also need writing inside – because the BOP may not let in blank pages. These can be inspirational quotes, religious, or anything, but something is necessary.
      • Constructive Learning. Whatever you are interested in, Art, History, Famous people, Banking, Real estate, or if you like to paint or draw, then do that.
      • Now The Journal. Every day, start a routine for yourself once you get inside. Every day, write what you’ve done,
        • 1) you’ve taken an FSA Class [note the day, time, class name and find something that you learned],
        • 2)  note every conversation that you had with a correction officer (BOP Staff), just in case…
        • 3) once you start reading BOOKS (Non-Fiction), again [note the day, time, book, and find something that you learned and may want to implement later].
        • 4) As you document your journey, this is also Building your Release Plan
        • 5) You’ve been educated to the max as a Ph.D., Doctor, Lawyer, Scientist, etc., so consider teaching a class to inspire those around you.
    9. Reputation Management. Create a website for yourself before you surrender, and then email home everything you’re doing to rebuild your life. So far, all that is there is your INDICTMENT, and Reputation Management Companies don’t hold in the long run. I’ve paid for it, and it hasn’t held.
    10. Once you enter the BOP, this is another Planet. Frustration and Disappointment are to be expected and will test you to your core.
      • Please don’t vent your frustrations to your unit team and case managers; you will only worsen things for yourself. For you, this period is Temporary, but for the BOP Staff, this is their job; they are here every day and have heard every complaint. Please stay under their radar and don’t get the reputation of a complainer.
    11. When you first arrive, as soon as you can get to a computer, take your first SPARC 13 Assessment Questions, because without it, you may still be offered Programs to take, you just will not get any credit.
3) WHAT YOU CAN BRING: (P5580.08)
    1. Wedding band, Bible, under $100.
    2. Bring verification if you have had all your Flu and COVID vaccines and boosters.
    3. Prescriptions for Medical Devices and Medications (2-3 weeks recommended; at worst, they are thrown out); at best, they are available for your use. When surrendering on weekends or holidays, the BOP may allow these to be used if not available from their on-site pharmacy, medical devices, and glasses (that are not made with metal).
    4. ID: birth certificate, passport, driver’s license, and social security card. Copies or originals: It depends on how long your sentence is, and whether you will remember where and who holds your document originals.
    5. Cash may or may not be allowed, but you can try: $320 ($370 in November and December). Otherwise, use either Money Gram or Western Union, as the funds will be deposited within hours.
    6. Legal papers (not your PSR) can include your Medical File and personal contact list. List of personal names (including phone numbers and addresses). Type on the back of a page from your court case, and put it in an envelope labeled ‘Legal’ to take with you when you self-surrender.
    7. Schedule your list of books you’d like to read to start being sent (2 at a time) 2 days before your arrival, lasting most of your pre-calculated stay.
    8. Don’t arrive at lunchtime.
    9. Do present to the higher security facility if you are expecting a satellite camp.
    10. Speeding is sometimes understood at three mph over the limit when driving to surrender.
    11. Arrive early.

4) THINGS TO UNDERSTAND AND PREPARE FOR BEFORE YOUR SURRENDER – POSSIBLY LEADING TOWARD EARLY RELEASE

I. Compassionate Release – What is this?

II. RDAP: What is this, and do I Qualify?

III. Your Reentry/Release Plan – Is this Important? What is this?

IV. FSA—How does it work? What is this? In this video, I review how to implement The First Step Act (FSA) successfully.

 

V. Case Managers, what power do they have on me, and who are they – what do they do?



WHY A RELEASE PLAN?

THIS IS ALL ABOUT PREPARATION; YOU WILL BE GOING HOME ONE DAY
SUCCESS IS A MENTAL PROACTIVE DECISION – THAT DOESN’T HAPPEN OVERNIGHT

I’m here to help you Navagate Through What You Going To Encounter – Because I’ve Been Where You Are Now, And Understand Your Fears


VI. Who should you tell the prison to call in case of an Emergency?

VII. What are the BOP policies for phone calls, email, and personal Contacts, and how do you get money for the commissary?

VIII. Do you have a business that will be running while you are in prison? What can and can’t you do?

IX. Understand Your Medical Needs Is your healthcare available? This is a big deal. Yes, you can get Surgical 2nd Opinions –  and there may be a 1-3 year wait to get an appointment. After the medical 2nd opinion consult reaches your medical team, The BOP Is Under No Obligation To Follow It.

X. Financial Considerations

    • Banks, Power of Attorney, and what they have in common. 
    • You have a court-ordered Financial Penalty, so understand its impact on your life in prison and release date.

XI. Did you know that your Judge wants to learn about you because Crimes Do Not Occur in a Vacuum;

    • Narrative,
    • Allocution,
    • Reentry/Release Plan
    • Letters That Attest To Your Character
    • Are you Prepared?

Call 240.888.7778 for a personal one-on-one call
to discuss your current issue or that of a loved one.

-Marc Blatstein

We are not Attorneys; you need Legal Representation.

2023 GAO, High Risk Update: Management of the Federal Prison System

The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) is an independent, nonpartisan agency that works for Congress.

Taken directly from  www.gao.gov

Transcript for: High Risk Update 2023:

Management of the Federal Prison System Description:

As part of GAO’s 2023 update to our High-Risk List, we added the Bureau of Prisons for staffing issues that can affect inmate and staff safety, and the need to better monitor rehabilitation programs that help inmates return to the community.

Related GAO work: GAO-23-106203, High-Risk Series: Efforts Made to Achieve Progress Need to Be Maintained and Expanded to Fully Address All Areas Released: April 2023 [Gretta Goodwin:] Nearly 45% of federal prisoners who complete their time in prison are re-arrested or returned to federal prison within 3 years of their release. The Bureau of Prisons, or BOP, is charged with providing safe and secure confinement for inmates and with reducing recidivism by helping people successfully return to the community.

While BOP received $8.5 billion in the current fiscal year to do this, it continues to face challenges in its efforts to manage the federal prison system. We have reported longstanding and increasing concerns with the federal prison system across three areas. For 2023, we added Management of the Federal Prison System to our High-Risk List to help BOP focus its attention on the root causes of these matters, as well as the more than 20 recommendations we’ve made in these areas.

First, BOP has had challenges managing its staff and resources. For example, there have been six different individuals serving as BOP directors in the past 6 years. BOP also has increasingly used overtime to address staff vacancies. But that’s not a solution because officer fatigue presents a serious threat to prison safety.

Second, BOP’s plans to manage some of its inmate rehabilitation programs are limited. These programs require better planning and ongoing review for BOP to be successful in reducing some incarcerated individual sentences through credit-earning programs and in lowering the rates of recidivism.

Third, BOP needs to improve how it monitors and evaluates all of its programs. Some efforts that haven’t yet been evaluated include BOP’s management of disaster risk at its facilities, efforts to help incarcerated individuals secure ID documents before they leave prison, and the delivery of programs that may lower the risk of recidivism.

In March 2023, we recommended that BOP monitor whether it’s offering enough recidivism reduction programs. GAO and BOP leadership recently met on these issues, and the new Director of the Bureau of Prisons expressed her commitment to bringing sustained attention to resolving this high-risk area. In addition to sustaining leadership commitment, BOP needs to address the other four criteria for which GAO assesses high-risk areas–capacity, an action plan, monitoring efforts, and demonstrated progress. Attention to these and other issues we’ve identified could ultimately improve prison safety, reduce recidivism, and save taxpayers money.

Second Chance Reauthorization Act

Second Chance Reauthorization Act (SCRA). 12 MONTHS in an RRC Law  

  1. The regulation mandates that 
    • “Inmates may be designated to community confinement as a condition of pre-release custody and Programming during their final months not to exceed twelve months.” 28 C.F.R. § 570.21(a).
  1. This regulation also provides for 
    • home detention as a condition of pre-release custody during their final months of imprisonment,
    • not to exceed the shorter of ten percent of the inmate’s term of imprisonment or
    • six months.”
  1. BOP staff is required to review inmates for RRC placement 17-19 months before their projected release date, and inmates are to be individually considered using the five factors listed in §3621(b).

(1)the resources of the facility contemplated;
(2)the nature and circumstances of the offense;
(3)the history and characteristics of the prisoner;
(4)any statement by the court that imposed the sentence—
(A)concerning the purposes for which the sentence to imprisonment was determined to be warranted; or
(B)recommending a type of penal or correctional facility as appropriate; and
(5)any pertinent policy statement issued by the Sentencing Commission pursuant to section 994(a)(2) of title 28.

    • In designating the place of imprisonment or making transfers under this subsection, there shall be no favoritism given to prisoners of high social or economic status.
    • The Bureau may at any time, having regard for the same matters, direct the transfer of a prisoner from one penal or correctional facility to another.
    • The Bureau shall make available appropriate substance abuse treatment for each prisoner the Bureau determines has a treatable condition of substance addiction or abuse.
    • Any order, recommendation, or request by a sentencing court that a convicted person serve a term of imprisonment in a community corrections facility shall have no binding effect on the authority of the Bureau under this section to determine or change the place of imprisonment of that person.
      • Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a designation of a place of imprisonment under this subsection is not reviewable by any court.
  1. Elderly Home Detention through the First Step Act: Rare to Get Program availability at all BOP facilities.
    • The qualifying age of 60+ years and You can serve that last part at Home
    • you must have served two-thirds of the sentence must be served to be eligible.
    • the offender must be serving a term of imprisonment other than life imprisonment based on a conviction for an offense or offenses that
      • the offender must not have been convicted in the past of any Federal or State crime of violence, sex offense, or other offense enumerated in the statute.
    • the offender must not have escaped or attempted to escape from a BOP institution;
    • the BOP must determine that the release of the offender to home detention will result in a substantial net reduction of costs to the federal government, and
    • the BOP must determine that the offender poses no substantial risk of engaging in criminal conduct or of endangering any person if released to home detention.

THE PRESENTENCE INTERVIEW; Determines Placement and How Fast You’re Released

Is your referral to the Judge and then into the BOP

  • The Probation Officer, as he/she drafts The Presentence Report based on what they learn from you and their investigation.
  • The Judge, as we all know, he/she uses at sentencing,
  • The BOP uses THE PRESENTENCE REPORT as a Referral for placement, based on your clients:
  • 18 U.S. Code §3553, Provides options: critical in mitigating your client’s sentence and requires time to be developed by the defense.
    DrMB@PPRSUS.com

THE ADMINISTRATIVE REMEDY – BP 8, 9 10, 11, and USC § 2241

The Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) Allows For US District Judges To Provide Relief 

 

But Only After The Administrative Remedy Process Is Complete

Lawyers Are Not In Prison With  You – You ARE Your Best Advocate


Supplies you will need;

  1. If you have access to a copy machine (possibly in the library) then learn how to use it. You may need a pen, a tablet with paper, envelopes, and likely stamps.
  2. Calendar – is critical.

EXAMPLE:

The Administrative Remedy Process – Only 1 Complaint at a Time

 

1st) The Informal Complaint Is Called Your Cop-Out or BP-8 – Which Is Your Informal Complaint, or Resolution

You’re expected to try and resolve the matter through this simple conversation or BP-8.

  • As each facility has its own rules, to start the process, speak with your counselor 1st to learn how their process works.
  • When the counselor responds, remember what they tell you – with attention to detail writing your notes later, noting the conversation’s date, content, and time. Once the counselor explains the process, follow the process exactly.

When writing out your Informal Complaint, “Cop-Out or BP-8,” follow this process;

Write the date that the incident“Happened”, not the date that you’re filling out the form – unless it’s the same date. 

    1. Write an informal complaint, preferably on the day of the incident, or the next.
    2. Because the Formal complaint (BP-9) comes next and must be written within 20 days of the incident, begin to track these dates on your calendar.

Deadlines are critical, as the BOP-Staff may be Late, you are not given that same grace period, and if you are late, the staff may reject the complaint because the time to complain has expired.

1. Write down the day the incident happened.
2. Write down the day that you made the informal complaint (which has to be within 20 days of the incident – or Sooner)
3. Although a person in prison must adhere to the deadline of 20 days, staff members are not required to respond, nor do they have to respond. Nevertheless, you must show that you attempted to resolve the matter with an informal complaint.

Only after you’ve lodged The Informal Complaint (BP-8 or Cop-Out), can you next launch a formal complaint.

  • If the informal complaint is submitted to the counselor on day 1, and if the counselor does not reply within one day, that next day I would ask the counselor for the BP-9 form to launch the formal complaint.

Remember the rules: they provide 20 days from the time of the incident – for you to start the administrative remedy process with a BP-9.

 

Launching the “informal complaint”  (BP-8 or Cop-Out) allows you to, 1) Populate the Record, and 2) shows that you’ve given staff members an opportunity to Resolve The Complaint Informally. 

The Formal Process Starts with the BP-9

The record becomes crucial to the administrative remedy process, so keep copies of everything you’ve done.

An Example of a BP-8 or Cop-Out – regarding ETC Calculation Discrepancy

“I’m filing this (on insert date) because my release date does not reflect what I believe to be my Earned Time Credits. I feel by my calculations that I have met all the criteria of the First Step Act, as I have participated in (xx #) Productive Activities over the past (xx#) months. I request that the BOP update my sentence computation sheet to include my Earned Time Credits, thank you.” 

Make a copy for your records.

CASE MANAGERS HAVE 24 HRS TO RESPOND – IF THEY RESPOND, OR IF THEY PROVIDE A COMPUTATION SHEET THAT DOESN’T MATCH YOURS, POLITELY ASK WHY, OTHERWISE – NEXT:


2nd. AFTER 24 HOURS, WITH NO RESPONSE OR AN UNSATISFACTORY RESPONSE FROM YOUR BP-8

You now can request your BP-9 (Your Administrative Remedy Request to the Warden)

 

Again, the rules require you to receive the BP-9 from your counselor, who then enters your name and the date you requested the Form BP-9 into their BP-9 logbook. This logbook is now part of the record. This should be the 2nd or 3rd day from when the incident happened.

Instructions to complete a BP-9:

  1. This form has a limited amount of space, so if you need additional space, you may write “See attachment,” where you can attach just one page to the form.
  2. On that page provide a complete explanation, using as many details as possible to strengthen your position.
    Only list One Complaint per Administrative Remedy. 

    1. If you have different complaints, each requires different and separate Administrative Remedy Requests.

Be very organized as you begin to write your complaint, including;

  1. Start with the date and time of your informal complaint (BP-8) –different from when the incident occurred.
    • If you did not receive a response to your informal complaint
      • Write that the staff member did not respond to your informal complaint, and to comply with deadlines, you filed the (BP-9) formal administrative remedy request.
    • If you received an unfavorable response,
      • Write that you disagree with the decision on the informal complaint.
      • This is why you’re filing a (BP-9) formal administrative remedy request.
  2. If you’ve missed the deadline to file the formal complaint within 20 days of the “Incident”, you must explain the reason why.
    • For example, if you’re locked in the SHU and your counselor did not provide you with a BP-9 form.
  3. Do your best to comply with the deadlines, because the BOP will do its best to deny your requests.

At the end of the form, indicate how you are submitting the form.

  1. If you’re submitting it to the counselor, include their name, date, and time.
  2. If you’re putting it into the unit mailbox, write the date and time you’re putting it into the mailbox.
  3. If you’re in the SHU and you want to submit to a staff member that works in the SHUwrite the date and time and the name of the staff person you’re passing the form to.

Make at 3-4 copies of the form and the supporting documentation.

  1. If no copy machine is available, then make sure you handwrite the 3-4 copies.
  2. You will need these copies for the next phases of the process when you appeal to The region, Central Office, and possibly, the District Court.

Your personal record should indicate,

  1. The date that you filed the BP-9,
  2. How you made copies (and the number of copies) of the BP-9, and
  3. The date that you anticipate receiving a response from staff members – mark your Calendar.
    1. To anticipate the approximate date that you expect a response,
      • Add three weeks, or
      • You Expect a Response to your BP-9 21 days to the day after it’s filed
      • Don’t Wait – the Warden doesn’t reply.
    2. Theoretically, the warden is supposed to respond to the BP-9 within 20 days after the date that the warden received the form.

Example of BP-9
“I’m filing this so that my Earned Time Credits can be applied to my sentence computation. I have attached the initial request I made to staff on (insert date) when I requested my updated sentence computation sheet that should have reflected my Earned Time Credits.

As I did not receive an updated sentence computation reflecting the Earned Time Credits that I have earned, per the First Step Act and BOP policy Number 5410.01, please provide an updated computation sheet describing why my sentence computation sheet does not reflect the time credits I believe I have earned in accordance with the First Step Act and BOP policy Number 5410.01.
(I am attaching a copy of my initial copout)


3rd. AFTER 20 DAYS WITH NO RESPONSE OR AN UNSATISFACTORY RESPONSE

You may request a BP-10, Administrative Remedy Request to the Regional Director

 

If the counselor is unavailable, 

  1. you should record that the counselor is unavailable and then
  2. write a letter, requesting that the Regional Director treat the letter as a BP-10, Regional Administrative Remedy Appeal.

Options once this form is sent:

  1. The warden replied but did not resolve the matter in your favor, or you believe the warden made an error, or
  2. You did not receive a response from the warden within the allowed time, as identified in the First Step Act and BOP policy Number 5410.01.
  3. Either #1 or #2, allows you to file the appeal with the regional director for the region where your prison is located.

THE PROCESS OF COMPLETING THIS FORM

I. The warden replied to your BP-9 but did not resolve the matter in your favor, or you believe the warden made an error, or

YOUR RESPONSE:

  • I disagree with the decision that the warden gave regarding my initial administrative remedy request.
    1. I am now exercising my right to appeal, in accordance with the BOP policy.
    2. Use the same description for your problem as you used in the BP-9.
    3. Should you have to write out the copy by hand, you must make at least two copies.
    4. Ensure that you do not introduce anything new into the BP-10 that you did not introduce in BP-9.
    5. The BOP will only consider what you submitted to the warden.
    6. I am filing this appeal within the allotted time frame.

II. You didn’t receive a response from your warden within 20 days, as the rule for administrative stipulates in Program Statement 1330.18, Section 542.18.

YOUR RESPONSE:

  1. I attached a copy of the administrative remedy request form that I filed on (insert date).
  2. I am now exercising my right to appeal, in accordance with the BOP policy.
  3. Use the same description for your problem as you used in the BP-9.
  4. Should you have to write out the copy by hand, you must make at least two copies.
  5. Ensure that you do not introduce anything new into the BP-10 that you did not introduce in BP-9.
  6. The BOP will only consider what you submitted to the warden.
  7. “I am filing this appeal within the allotted time frame”.

DEADLINES:

As described in the section above on BP-9, make sure that you’re conscious of deadlines.

The rules require a person to file the BP-10, 

  1. Within three weeks (21 Days) of the time the person receives a response to the BP-9 or
  2. The time of the extension was supplied by the warden or BOP staff.
  3. Be super cautious about maintaining these deadlines and keep an accurate record(s) of why you cannot.

COPIES:

Make sure to attach a copy of the original Form BP-9 that you sent earlier.

And also make at least two copies of the form BP-10, for the same reasons we discussed earlier

RESPONSE:

The policy provides that the Regional Director has 30 days to respond to the BP-10.

  • I would recommend that you keep a calendar to keep track of (time and days) their four weeks, but allow five weeks for mail slowdowns – keep an accurate record in the same way that we describe above:

The date you filed the BP-9; the Date you received, or expected response to your BP-9

The date you filed the BP-10; the Date you received or expect a response to your BP-10

Example BP-10
I appeal the warden’s response to my request for administrative remedy. On (insert date) I filed a notice requesting an accurate sentence computation sheet showing the Earned Time Credits I earned per the First Step Act and BOP policy Number 5410.01. I did not receive a favorable response and I appealed. The warden did not grant the relief requested. To comply with the Prison Litigation Reform Act, I appealed the BOP’s denial to apply Earned Time Credits to my sentence computation and request administrative remedy.
(I am attaching copies of my initial copout and BP-9)


Regional Director Addresses
Regional Director / Mid-Atlantic Regional Office
10010 Junction Drive, Suite 100-N
Annapolis Junction, Maryland 20701

Regional Director / North Central Regional Office
Gateway Complex Tower II, 8th Floor
400 State Avenue, Kansas City, KS 66101-2492

Regional Director / Northeast Regional Office
U.S. Custom House, 7th Floor
2nd and Chestnut Streets
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106

Regional Director / South Central Regional Office
4211 Cedar Springs Road, Suite 300
Dallas, Texas 75219

Regional Director / Southeast Regional Office
3800 Camp Creek Parkway, S.W.
Building 2000
Atlanta, Georgia 30331-6226

Regional Director / Western Regional Office
7950 Dublin Boulevard, 3rd Floor
Dublin, California 94568

When the time is right, proceed to the final stage of the administrative remedy process, with an appeal to the General Counsel in the Central Office, on a form BP-11.


 

4th. AFTER 30 DAYS WITH NO RESPONSE OR AN UNSATISFACTORY RESPONSE

BP-11, Administrative Remedy Request to BOP General Counsel in Washington DC

  • If the counselor is unavailable, you should record that the counselor is unavailable and write a letter, requesting that the Central Office treat the letter as a BP-11, Central Office Administrative Remedy Appeal.

If the regional director responded to the BP-10, but you do not think the regional director made the correct decision, then take the next step of filing a BP-11.

  • When the staff member provides the response to the BP-10, request a form BP-11 to appeal.

File your BP-11 at the following address:
Bureau of Prisons
National Inmate Appeals Administrator,
Office of General Counsel
320 First Street, NW
Washington, DC 20534

Use the same instructions provided in the previous section, but begin by writing:

I disagree with the regional director’s decision regarding my administrative remedy appeal request that I filed on (insert date).

Consistent with BOP policy, I am filing this appeal.”

  1. You should write your description in the same way that you wrote in the BP-9 and the BP-10.
  2. Make sure that you create three copies of each page, even if you have to write it by hand.
  3. Write/document the manner you’re using to submit the appeal, indicating whether you,
    • Put it in a mailbox, including the date and time, or
    • Giving it to a staff memberincluding the date and time.

DEADLINE:

The rules: you must file the appeal to headquarters within 30 days of the date that the regional director responded.

 If there is a valid reason for being late,

  1. Be clear in explaining the reason for missing the deadline.
  2. It had better be a reason that is beyond a person’s ability to control, and
  3. not because of disorganization.

Attachments: attach a copy of the BP-9 and a copy of the BP-10.

  • Make at least two copies of the BP-11, even if you must write by hand. 

At the conclusion of this process, you want to have in your possession:

  • Two copies of the informal complaint (BP-8)
  • Two copies of the BP-9
  • Two copies of the BP-10
  • Two copies of the BP-11

You may need those copies to continue the process with a motion to the US District Court.

RECORDS:

Make sure that you memorialize all dates with accurate records.

  1. I filed my BP-11 on (insert date), which is within 30 days of the time I received the regional director’s response.
  2. I made two copies of my BP-11 and have two copies of the previous submissions.
  3. I expect to get a response to my BP-11 within 40 days, but I will wait for 45 days to account for mail delays.
  4. If the regional director did not respond to the BP-10 within the appropriate time, then follow the same instructions as above, but change the first line to read:
    • I have complied with all deadlines in my administrative remedy request, but
    • I did not receive a response from the regional director within 35 days. For that reason,
    • “I am filing this appeal”

Example BP-11
I appeal the Regional Director’s response to my request for administrative remedy. On (insert date) I filed a notice requesting an accurate sentence computation sheet showing the Earned Time Credits I earned per the First Step Act and BOP policy Number 5410.01. I did not receive a favorable response, and I appealed to the warden on (insert date). The warden did not grant the relief requested. To comply with the Prison Litigation Reform Act, on (insert date) I appealed to the Regional Director for administrative relief. The BOP continues to deny the application of my Earned Time Credits to my sentence computation, and I request an administrative remedy.

(I am attaching copies of my initial copout, BP-9, and BP-10)


 

5th. If the Central Office does not grant relief within 30 days,you have complied with the PLRA Process and exhausted all requests for Administrative Remedy. 

You’re Now Ready For U.S. District Court

The PRO SE HABEAS CORPUS GUIDEBOOK

The Actual § 2241 pdf. Form, For HABEAS CORPUS UNDER Title 28 U.S.C. § 2241

  1. This goes to the Federal District Court.
  2. You may now submit a: Pro Se Motion pursuant to Title 28 USC § 2241FORM § 2241
  3. They should have copies of all previous correspondence regarding your pursuit of administrative remedy.

This letter is ready to be written to the court, as below,

YOUR NAME (Petitioner)

V.

Warden (Respondent)

Beneath the heading insert the following heading, in bold or in all caps:

Regarding: Pro Se Motion – For Application of First Step Act (FSA) Earned Time Credits Toward Sentence Computation.

Then write it as a standard letter to the judge:

ATTACH LETTER TO FORM, DEAR JUDGE

Dear Judge ….:
I am not an attorney, and I am filing this pro se motion, moving this Honorable Court to order the Bureau of Prisons to apply First Step Act (FSA) Earned Time Credit to my federal prison sentence.

Background:

On (insert date), the President of the United States signed into law the “First Step Act” (FSA) 18 U.S.C. § 3632. The FSA grants eligible inmates the ability to earn time credits (ETC) for successfully participating in and completing approved Evidence-Based Recidivism Reduction (EBRR) programs or Productive Activities (PAs).

My conviction qualifies me to earn the FSA credits.

Since entering federal prison on (insert date) to serve a sentence of (insert the number of months), the record shows that I have avoided disciplinary infractions and participated in Evidence-Based Recidivism Reduction (EBRR) programs or Productive Activities (PAs) as directed by staff members.

On several occasions, I requested BOP staff members to apply the credits ETC toward my sentence computation. Despite numerous requests, the BOP has not updated my computation sheet to reflect the ETC I earned, in accordance with the First Step Act and BOP policy Number 5410.01.

Pursuant to Title 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a), I have complied with the Prison Litigation Reform Act, requiring me to exhaust administrative remedies to resolve this grievance.

Petitioner contends that the BOP failed to adhere to the FSA in its imposition of his sentence in two distinct areas:
1. The BOP failed to apply 15 days of ETC for every 30 days of confinement, and
2. The BOP failed to correctly calculate the FSA and Productive Activity or EBRR credits toward the remainder of his sentence.

Petitioner contends that not applying the correctly calculated FSA Earned Time Credits violates the Congressional intent under Title 18 U.S.C. § 3632 and inflicts irrefutable harm, by sanctioning him to a longer prison term than allowed under Title 18 U.S.C. § 3553 and § 3632.

Petitioner contends that he made a good faith effort in attempting to resolve these concerns prior to filing in the District Court. The movant submitted the following administrative remedy forms:
1. Initial request on (insert date)
2. BP-9 Administrative remedy form (insert date)
3. BP-10 Regional Appeal for Administrative remedy form (insert date)
4. BP-11 Central Office Appeal for Administrative remedy form (insert date)

Section (4) Time Credits: Application of Time Credits Toward Pre-Release Custody holds that:

Time credits earned by prisoners who successfully participate in recidivism reduction programs or productive activities and who have been determined to be at minimum or low risk for recidivating pursuant to their last two reassessments shall be applied toward time in pre-release custody. The Director of the Bureau of Prisons shall transfer prisoners described in this subsection into prerelease custody (also known as Supervised Release).

Conclusion:

For the foregoing reasons, Petitioner moves this Honorable Court to GRANT immediate Habeas Corpus relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, forcing the Bureau of Prisons to apply all Earned Time Credit to the Sentence Computation and grant an immediate release.

I, Your Name, under penalty of perjury, hereby affirm that all statements given hereof are truthful to the best of my knowledge. I have mailed a certified copy of this motion to the Assistant United States Attorney’s Office for the (insert district), and I also sent a copy to the Clerk of the Court.

The petitioner requests the Clerk of the Court to return a stamped copy to the petitioner showing this motion has been filed with this Honorable Court and showing the appropriate case number for this pro se motion filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241.

Respectfully submitted,

//signature//

YOUR NAME

(Insert address)

Note: To complete this pro se motion, I would have taken the additional steps:

Included copies of all my requests for administrative remedy (BP-8, 9 10, and 11).
Send a copy to the Assistant United States Attorney for the district.
Send a copy to the Clerk of the Court for the district of confinement (not the district that imposed the sentence).



ADMINISTRATIVE REMEDY PROCESS: FROM YOUR HALFWAY HOUSE (RRC) or HOME CONFINEMENT

  • BOTH ARE MANAGED BY: THE RESIDENTIAL RENTRY MANAGERS of each Halfway House, and their contact information should be posted there.
  • If you cannot get a BP-8 (Cop-Out), start the process by writing a letter to them there, preferably a registered return receipt, unless you can call them.