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March 14, 2023
New CRS piece reviews circuit split over justifications for revoking supervised release
A helpful reader alerted me to this notable new "Legal Sidebar" from the Congressional Research Service. As suggested by the title, "Can Retribution Justify the Revocation of Supervised Release? Courts Disagree," the piece details a jurisprudential divide among the circuits for the justification for supervised release revocation. Here is how the five-page report begins:
What are the legitimate reasons that a government may subject an individual to criminal punishment? Western penological theory and American legal history generally identify four principled bases for criminal punishment: retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, and rehabilitation. The Sentencing Reform Act (SRA) requires federal courts to impose an initial sentence that reflects these purposes of punishment.
The SRA also authorizes federal courts to sentence defendants to supervised release, encompassing a set of conditions that the defendant must comply with upon release from prison for a period of time (or, for some offenses, for up to life). A defendant’s compliance with these conditions is “supervised” or monitored by a federal probation officer. If a defendant violates a condition, the court may revoke the supervised release and send the defendant back to prison, among other things. The SRA lists deterrence, incapacitation, and rehabilitation among the factors that a judge must consider in making these revocation determinations. The SRA does not, however, expressly include retribution as one such factor.
The federal appeals courts disagree as to whether, and to what extent, retribution may justify the revocation of supervised release in light of this statutory omission. On one side of the divide, the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the First, Second, Third, Sixth, and Seventh Circuits have held that federal courts may consider retribution in making revocation decisions. On the other side, the Fourth, Fifth, and Ninth Circuits have concluded that courts either may not consider retribution in these decisions at all or may consider it only to a limited degree.
This Sidebar summarizes the four purposes of punishment, including retribution; offers an overview of supervised release; and summarizes the aforementioned split. The Sidebar concludes with congressional considerations.
March 14, 2023 at 07:34 PM | Permalink
Comments
In the second circuit.. I had been on supervised release for 18 months and I’m those 18 months received 3 violations for marijuana use…….. I had an extremely successful reentry and any incarceration would destroyyyyyyy me.,,, guess what? the chief Justice in the northern disctrict sentenced me to 4 months incarceration.., I was recently released.. my life is fcked.
Posted by: Syracuse FED | Mar 20, 2023 12:56:05 AM