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Criminal Justice Magazine
Summer 2005
Volume 20 Issue 2
Federal Sentencing
Getting Out Early: BOP Drug Program
By Alan Ellis and J. Michael Henderson
Alan Ellis, of the Law Offices of Alan Ellis in San Rafael, California, and Ardmore, Pennsylvania, is a nationally recognized authority in the fields of plea negotiations, sentencing, appeals, parole and prison matters, habeas corpus 2241 and 2255 petitions, and international prisoner transfer treaties. He is the publisher of Federal Presentence and Post Conviction News, and coauthor of the Federal Prison Guidebook, The Federal Sentencing Guidebook and the Federal Post Conviction Guidebook. He is also a contributing editor to Criminal Justice magazine. J. Michael Henderson is a federal prison consultant to the Law Offices of Alan Ellis with more than 23 years of experience working with the Bureau of Prisons where he served as the former regional designator for the Western Region of the United States.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons provides a very specialized program that can
benefit offenders with substance abuse problems, which include not only alcohol
and illicit drugs addictions, but also abuse of pharmaceutical medications.
As an incentive, the program offers qualified offenders time off their sentences
in addition to good conduct time. This program is known as the 500-hour Comprehensive
Residential Drug Abuse Program (RDAP). Indeed, RDAP is the only mechanism by
which federal inmates can now potentially receive a reduction in their sentences
beyond earning good conduct time credit.
There is a broad category of offenders who are eligible for this program. Some
of them will be eligible for early release benefit of up to 12 months (the BOP
average is 8.5 months) and an extended halfway house and home confinement placement
(usually six months) at the end of their sentence. (18 U.S.C. § 3621(e).)
Eligibility for RDAP is determined by institutional case management, the RDAP
coordinator, and psychology services staff. First, they look for verification
of an inmate’s substance abuse problem through a check of available official
documents, which almost always includes the presentence investigation report.
Next, the offender must meet formal psychological diagnostic criteria. Again,
Bureau of Prisons staff will look at official background documentation, such
as the presentence report, for information that supports the diagnosis. The
offender must not have a serious mental disorder that would interfere with the
ability to successfully participate in RDAP. The program is voluntary and the
eligible offender must sign a formal participation agreement.
Once placed in BOP custody and within 36 months of release, a prisoner can request
an eligibility interview. The submission of the request initiates the RDAP application,
and, within a short period, the inmate should receive notice of an interview
with either the institution’s RDAP coordinator or a drug treatment specialist,
or, if the facility does not offer RDAP, a member of the psychological services
staff. Ideally, the eligibility interview should be scheduled within sufficient
time for persons to be in RDAP within 27 months or more from projected release
(sentence length less any pretrial or anticipated good time credits).
The interview itself can be a source of extreme stress. Given the § 3621(e)
incentive, as well as a general suspicion of prisoners, interviewers approach
each applicant with an abundance of cynicism. An applicant can safely assume
that no matter what appears in the presentence report, the interviewer will
pose difficult questions and insist on knowing whether voluntary admission is
sought in good faith to obtain treatment, or simply to secure a quicker return
home. Customary inquiries include when applicants learned about the program,
particularly about the § 3621(c) credit; whether attorneys advised them
to exaggerate treatment needs when meeting with Probation; and exacting details
about drug or alcohol use (e.g., when, how often, where, with whom, others’
awareness, etc.).
(Todd Bussert and Joel Sickler, Bureau of Prisons Update: More Beds, Less Rehabilitation,
THE CHAMPION, 42, 44 (March 2005).)
The RDAP program is available at many of the Bureau’s institutions, and
for all security levels except high security at the federal penitentiaries.
(See list of facilities that offer the program on page 69.) RDAP is currently
in high demand, which sometimes necessitates the transfer of an offender from
one facility to another where space is available. RDAP classes are called cohorts,
as participants are housed together in designated quarters. These offenders
are expected to devote a portion of each day to RDAP, with a part-time institutional
work assignment. RDAP can be completed in as little as nine months, and, optimally,
when offenders complete it they are transferred to community correctional centers
(halfway houses) for transitional prerelease program assistance that lasts for
up to six months.
When inmates are 90 percent of the way to their 3621(e) release date (full sentence
less good conduct time less reduction for successful completion of the RDAP
in- and outpatient program), they are eligible for referral to home confinement.
The following categories of inmates are not eligible for the RDAP program:
• INS detainees;
• pretrial inmates;
• contractual boarders (for example, District of Columbia, state, or military
inmates).
Inmates not eligible for early release, include those who have a prior felony
or misdemeanor conviction for homicide, forcible rape, robbery, aggravated assault,
or child sexual abuse, and inmates whose current offense is a felony that 1)
has an element, the actual, attempted, or threatened use of physical force against
the person or property of another, 2) involved the carrying, possession, or
use of a firearm or other dangerous weapon or explosives, 3) by its nature or
conduct presents a serious potential risk of physical force against the person
or property of another, or 4) by its nature or conduct involves sexual abuse
offenses committed upon children. Inmates with firearm convictions and inmates
who have received a two-level adjustment in their drug guideline offense severity
score for possession of a dangerous weapon (including a firearm) pursuant to
section 2D1.1(b)(1) of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines are also ineligible for
early release. (For information on the specific crimes that would preclude an
inmate from an early release, see Bureau of Prison Program Statement 5162.04,
available at www.bop.gov. While precluding early release, these offenses do
not necessarily preclude the offender from the RDAP program and its extended
prerelease placement.)