Cory Booker's 'Second Look' Reforms Would Create More Chances To Reduce Federal Prison Sentences
Judges would be permitted to rethink sentences after 10 years have been served, particularly for inmates over the age of 50.

Sen. Cory Booker (D–N.J.) is introducing new legislation that he hopes will follow the FIRST STEP Act by allowing for more sentence reductions and more releases for federal inmates who have served at least 10 years behind bars.
Co-sponsored in the House by Rep. Karen Bass (D–Calif.), the Second Look Act would give federal judges the ability to review an inmate's sentence after he or she has served 10 years in federal prison. Judges will get the opportunity to look over the inmate's behavior, consider input from federal prosecutors, and determine whether the inmate remains a risk to the public. Upon considering that information, the judge would be able to reduce a prisoner's sentence. People freed early under the Second Look Act would be put on supervised release for up to five years. In essence, Booker's law would restore a version of parole to the federal criminal justice system, which Congress abolished with the passage of the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984.
Inmates older than 50 who have served at least 10 years in federal prison would benefit from a rebuttable presumption in favor of their release. That means to prevent their release, federal prosecutors will have to show why these older convicts are dangerous and should not have their sentences reduced.
The Second Look Act contains an even bigger package of reforms than the FIRST STEP Act. It would essentially eliminate mandatory minimum sentences longer than 10 years by allowing federal judges to resentence prisoners who have served at least that long. It would also eliminate automatic life sentences in federal prison. In neither type of case would judges be required to resentence, only given the option. Considering the increasingly advanced age of the federal prison population, these reforms would likely allow thousands of prisoners who were given draconian sentences in their youth to return to their families and finish their lives as free men and women.
The Second Look Act would also address another ongoing problem, which is that sentencing reforms are not always made "retroactive." When Congress determined in 2010 that the sentencing disparity between equivalent weights of crack cocaine and powder cocaine was injust, it reduced the sentence lengths for crack cocaine to more closely resemble sentences for powder cocaine. But Congress did not create a mechanism by why prisoners sentenced before the 2010 reforms were signed into law could be resentenced under the new law. In response, President Barack Obama controversially commuted several thousand sentences to help crack offenders sentenced in the decades before the 2010 reforms. It wasn't until President Donald Trump signed the FIRST STEP Act into law that crack sentencing changes were made retroactive and prisoners had an avenue to pursue resentencing.
This is a good bill that has unfortunately roused the ire of America's dumb-on-crime wing.
Originally, the bill was named the Matthew Charles and William Underwood Second Look Act of 2019, but the names have since been taken off. Charles was the first person released under the FIRST STEP Act, the 2018 law that retroactively reduced the sentences of people in federal prison for crack cocaine-related convictions. He had served 21 years for selling crack to a police informant. No one has pointed to Charles as a case for why we need to keep our sentencing laws as they are, but Underwood is a different story.
Currently 65, Underwood has served nearly 30 years of a life sentence for racketeering and drug charges. He was accused of founding and leading a violent drug gang in New York City. Attempting to tie Underwood and Charles together, while downplaying Underwood's record, has prompted conservative pundits like Ann Coulter and Tucker Carlson to bring up Underwood's history to show just how serious the crimes he was sentenced for actually are.
Yet as Sen. Booker has pointed out, Underwood was convicted in the 1980s. If Underwood was convicted today of those exact same charges, he would likely receive a lesser sentence due to changes in sentencing laws. Underwood's clemency attorney, Nkechi Taifa, explained to Reason that Underwood's 30-year sentence actually covered the most serious components of the gang conspiracy charges. She says it was a judge who imposed the life sentence (not a jury) based on some criminal enterprise enhancements that hit right during the time when the government wanted to prove how tough it was willing to fight the drug wars. "If he had been sentenced earlier or later, he wouldn't have gotten life," Taifa says.
The Second Look Act does not guarantee any inmate's freedom. Based on the circumstances, it's possible that Underwood might not even be released under the law named after him.
Both Booker and Underwood's family also point out that he's been a model prisoner with a clean record who regrets his past behavior, and is now a grandfather. And so, given all that time served, is there any reason to keep Underwood behind bars? Is he still a danger to society?
"The question is, 'What is a proportionate sentence?'" Kevin Ring, president of the criminal justice reform nonprofit FAMM, tells Reason. "There has to be a sentence for those who cannot be rehabilitated, and that's not William Underwood. A life sentence has to be reserved for the worst people. … We don't have to make people saints in order to argue that they're human. Here's a person who has served 30 years, and has had no infractions."
The final text of the bill does not appear to be posted yet by Congress. However, FAMM, which supports the bill, provided the text of the House version to Reason. FAMM also has a thorough analysis of what the legislation does and a handy explainer graphic to help understand how it works. As part of the justification, FAMM notes that the United States currently has more than 53,000 people serving federal life sentences without any possibility of parole.
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Hopefully the reforms can finally get T Bone out of jail.
I'm so glad this is the top comment.
This is a good bill that has unfortunately roused the ire of America's dumb-on-crime wing.
You're not American if you don't want everything criminalized and all criminals in jail for life.
OTOH, you're no libertarian if you think government has a right to force people to associate with criminals.
The libertarian position is neither consistent with incarceration nor consistent with release from prison.
Cory Booker's 'Second Look' Reforms Would Create More Chances To Reduce Federal Prison Sentences
Blah blah blah. What did Booker do to get minor criminal released from prisons and jails in New Jersey?
Its too late for these Lefties in the Democrat Party running for President. Trump already acted on every issue that Americans care about.
You're calling a change in the tide of the culture war? The clingers are suddenly going to become competitive in marketplace of ideas?
Good luck with that.
#MAGA
the Second Look Act would give federal judges the ability to review an inmate's sentence after he or she has served 10 years in federal prison.
Of course, what with the totes-overloaded criminal justice system, they'll never have the *time* to.
Rosario Dawson - when you dump your dorky bf and are into comic books and smoking geef give me a shout.
I like the intended outcome.... but it seems like a really ripe opportunity for corruption.
I'd be willing to bet that there would be a tight correlation between your family's political connections and your probability of having a favorable "second look".
Second, sentencing isn't at all objective, even with guidelines. "Instant second looks" from a different judge might come up with completely different results even at the beginning.
So I'm not at all confident that this is an unqualified good, even though I'm all-in on the notion that we send too many people to jail for too long.
Holy crap--talk about choosing the wrong poster boy.
Look up Underwood.
I think he should have as much right to run free as his victims had.
I'm not in favor of any legislation that creates a "rebuttable assumption" that the UNABomber should be released from prison.
Booker's implicit assumption is that incarceration is for rehabilitation rather than punishment, and that rehabilitation is determined by whether a person is dangerous. Both of those assumptions are wrong according to many people.
From a practical point of view, this creates a huge amount of legal work, public defenders, etc. that taxpayers simply don't want to pay for.
We have pardons, clemency, and commutations; why aren't those enough?
I'll go along with Mr. Booker's recommendations as long they don't include violent criminals, traitors or child sexual predators.
However, there should be a caveat that goes with said reforms: If a person is released and commits another felony, especially a violent crime, then said criminal will not be eligible for any more reforms.
They are continuing to try and Make Change without realizing the ones they think they have passed are NOT being implemented! The BOP has changed the out dates for inmates and they should be being released but the Case Managers are refusing to process them stating Unless someone "Makes Me I am doing nothing so you know how much work that would be for me".
So this all sounds so great....but it is only that....sound....they need to make sure what they DID is working...before they start spouting words of gold that are nothing more than empty promises ...
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