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February 22, 2023
US Sentencing Commission to begin series of public hearings on its proposed guideline amendments
For sentencing fans looking for binge-worthy viewing and reading, the United States Sentencing Commission is on the verge of starting a series of public hearings concerning its many proposed amendments to the US Sentencing Guidelines. The hearing, which start Thursday morning at 9am EST, will be live-streamed at this link. That link details that the hearing is scheduled to run all day on February 23 and for half the day on February 24 and during these two days "the Commission [will] receive testimony on proposed amendments to the federal sentencing guidelines related to Compassionate Release, Sex Abuse of a Ward, and Acquitted Conduct."
I count a full 25 witnesses scheduled for Thursday's hearing which is just considering guideline amendment for compassionate release. Nearly all the written testimony for these witnesses can be found linked within the USSC's hearing schedule. I doubt I will get a chance to review more than a few of the statements, and I welcome readers helping to flag written testimony that seems particularly notable. There are "only" 12 witnesses scheduled for Friday's hearing covering sex abuse of a ward, and acquitted conduct. A quick review of the seven statements concerning acquitted conduct reveal a wide variety of opinions from a wide variety of witnesses.
And if that's not enough for sentencing fans, the Commission today also noticed here its plans for a second two-day public hearing on Tuesday, March 7 and Wednesday, March 8. As the notice explains, the "purpose of the public hearing is for the Commission to receive testimony on proposed amendments related to Firearms, Fake Pills and the First Step Act-Drug Offenses, Circuit Conflicts, Career Offender, and Criminal History."
February 22, 2023 at 07:53 PM | Permalink
Comments
Steve Wasserman is requesting that any medical request for compassionate release must have 2 medical doctors opining on their need for release. He's there on behalf of all AUSAs.
This tells you just how disingenuous line AUSAs are about applying compassionate release in good faith.
They are not offering to pay for the medical experts.
They don't even let you have your doctor go evaluate the client inside the BOP. Source: I have tried to do this before and been denied.
Posted by: Zachary Newland | Feb 23, 2023 11:20:26 AM