COVID-19 Outbreak Information Updates (Reboot) [over 150.000,000 US cases (est.), 6,422,520 US hospitilizations, 1,148,691 US deaths.]

Putting this here even though it’s only semi Covid related
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We are keeping many people in prison even though they are no danger to the public, a jaw-dropping new statistic shows.

That serves as proof that it’s time to rethink our incarceration policies for those with a low risk of reoffending.


To protect those most vulnerable to covid-19 during the pandemic, the Cares Act allowed the Justice Department to order the release of people in federal prisons and place them on home confinement.

More than 11,000 people were eventually released.

Of those, the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) reported that only 17 of them committed new crimes.

That’s not a typo. Seventeen.

That’s a 0.15 percent recidivism rate in a country where it’s normal for 30 to 65 percent of people coming home from prison to reoffend within three years of release.


Of those 17 people, most new offenses were for possessing or selling drugs or other minor offenses. Of the 17 new crimes, only one was violent (an aggravated assault), and none were sex offenses.


This extremely low recidivism rate shows there are many, many people in prison we can safely release to the community.

These 11,000 releases were not random. People in low- and minimum-security prisons or at high risk of complications from covid were prioritized for consideration for release.


Except for people convicted of some offenses, such as sex offenses, no one was automatically barred from consideration because of their crime, sentence length or time served.

The BOP instead assessed each eligible person individually, looking at their prison disciplinary record, any violent or gang-related conduct and their risk to the public……

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/09/29/prison-release-covid-pandemic-incarceration/