U.S. Supreme Court rules against automatic prison release punishments
The U.S. Supreme Court, in an 8-1 decision, decided an individual on supervised release is not automatically extended when that person absconds from their release.
The case, Rico v. US, focuses on Isabel Rico who absconded her supervised release while she was on probation after being detained in federal prison. During her probation period, Rico was convicted of a state drug offense.
A judge charged her with time in prison and several months of supervised release.
Justices on the court said Rico cannot be automatically considered for an extension of supervised release just because she violated her previous release.
“The government seeks not a rule that stops the clock or ensures a defendant takes no advantage of abscondment, but one that imposes new punishment by automatically extending supervised release,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote in the court’s majority opinion.
The justices argued that the Sentencing Reform Act protects Rico from automatic additional punishment, even though she absconded her supervised release.
In 1984, Congress passed the Sentencing Reform Act, which created mandatory uniform national guidelines to increase transparency and unity in federal sentencing practices.
“The Act already provides many ways to ensure defendants do not profit from violations without automatically extending the period beyond what a judge ordered,” Gorsuch wrote.
Justice Samuel Alito provided the lone dissenting opinion. He argued the Sentencing Reform Act was used by the judge to determine Rico’s punishment after she absconded supervised release.
“It seems strange to regard a crime committed after the expiration of “unsupervised supervised release” as a non-event,” Alito wrote. “By that logic, if petitioner had gone on a murder spree after the expiration of the period of unsupervised supervised release, the sentencing judge would have been required to put that out of his mind.”
Latest News Stories
House Oversight Committee releases trove of Epstein documents
WATCH: Trump says ‘we’re going in’ as Pritzker pushes for money instead of troops
WATCH: Trump to push Supreme Court for quick ruling on tariff authority
Newsom seeks to regain control of rest of National Guard
GOP scrutinizing litigation group that ‘educated’ 2,000+ judges on climate change
Routh, representing himself, begins picking Florida jury Monday
SPACECOM will leave Colorado for Alabama’s Rocket City
Trump administration releases AmeriCorps funding
Illinois quick hits: DOJ sues over financial support for illegal aliens; state opposes proposed labor rule change
WATCH: Chicago residents: ‘We need help’ from feds to fight crime
WATCH: Pritzker touts education spending as potential challenger focuses on literacy
Congress returns, but Trump’s ‘pocket rescissions’ snarls govt funding process