Every day served inside is a day that cannot be recovered. Understanding every legal and programmatic tool available to reduce a sentence is essential knowledge for any inmate and their family. The federal system offers multiple pathways, standard good time credits, First Step Act earned time credits through programming, RDAP sentence reduction of up to 12 months, compassionate release for qualifying medical conditions, and substantial assistance motions filed by the government. State systems have their own tools including good time credits that vary dramatically from 15 percent to 67 percent depending on the state. This section covers all of these pathways in plain language, who qualifies for each, how they interact with each other, and what realistic expectations look like for different situations. The guidance here is practical and honest about what is available and what is not. See also our sections on RDAP, First Step Act, Parole and Probation, and Post Conviction Appeals.
Subject: Sentence reduction
They will serve 85% of their time unless this is a county jail and the overcrowding is critical. Some inmates with short sentences that are related to non-violent offenses might get out a bit earlier to make room.
Subject: Sentence reduction
Post-conviction sentence reduction success is rare. Getting a sentence dropped altogether will never happen, especially when you see a sentence of 103 years... this judge must have been very angry to hand down that time to an eighteen year old.
Your friend's best chance is if the judge allowed for a possibility of parole in the Judgement and Commitment papers. If that is available, then he will need to work VERY hard with the staff at the prison to make certain...
Read moreSubject: Sentence reduction
Normal state sentences that carry a ten year minimum mandatory will have to serve 85% of their imposed sentence, UNLESS the sentencing judge has a parole provision in the offender's Judgement and Commitment papers. Parole could come as soon as twenty-five percent in if the inmate is a model prisoner.
Subject: Sentence reduction
They added back his good time credits. A violation for tobacco is not an offense that can add to a sentence. MOst inmates start their bid with a 15% good time credit, giving them an "out date" of 85% of their original sentence. They can only lose that time, not have more added unless they catch another felony charge like drugs, a weapon, an assault or worse - not for tobacco.
Subject: Sentence reduction
Louisiana does have one of the more generous good-time credit systems in the country, and the 3-to-1 ratio is real, but it comes with conditions and does not apply to everyone.
Under Louisiana law, eligible inmates can earn diminution of sentence credits that effectively allow them to serve significantly less than the sentence imposed. The way it works is that for every day served without a disciplinary infraction, additional days get credited toward the sentence. In some circumstances, that ratio does...
Read moreSubject: Sentence reduction
Depending on where you are incarcerated there are only a couple of ways to get your sentence reduced. The most common way is to provide substantial assistance to the authorities that results in the conviction of another (yes, snitching - but it happens all of the time). The other way, if your inmate is in federal prison and qualifies for this program, is called RDAP. RDAP is the Residential Drug Abuse Program which is a nine month program. Once successfully...
Read moreSubject: Sentence reduction
On a 6-month sentence, good time credit is unlikely to make a meaningful difference. Most facilities do have some form of good behavior policy, but the practical reality is that short sentences rarely see significant reductions through that route. The main exceptions would be if he is an absolutely clean record and the facility is dealing with serious overcrowding, which sometimes accelerates releases to free up bed space. Outside of that, plan on him serving most or nearly all of...
Read moreSubject: Sentence reduction
The specific formula you are describing, where every six months served after five years counts as a full year, does not reflect any standard federal or state sentencing policy that exists in writing. It is likely a version of prison yard math, the informal calculations and rumors that circulate inside facilities and get passed along as fact. Inmates spend a lot of time thinking about their release dates and informal theories about how time works tend to spread and evolve...
Read moreSubject: Sentence reduction
There is no shortcut, but there are proven paths that consistently produce the best outcomes for early release. Here is what actually works.
Protect good time credits. In the federal system, inmates receive roughly 54 days per year of sentence imposed as good time credit up front. That credit can only be lost through disciplinary infractions. A clean record is the single most fundamental requirement for the earliest possible release date. Every write-up is a potential setback.
Complete RDAP if eligible. The...
Read moreSubject: Sentence reduction
A 20 do 5 sentence means a 20-year sentence with parole eligibility after 5 years. It is a state sentencing structure that gives the parole board authority to release someone after they have served the minimum term, with the maximum being the full 20 years if parole is repeatedly denied.
The 5-year minimum is the earliest possible release point, not a guaranteed release date. Whether your husband gets out at 5 years, somewhere between 5 and 20 years, or serves more...
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