Louisiana, nation’s top jailer, now trying early releases
BATON ROUGE, La. — Hundreds of inmates are about to get early releases from Louisiana prisons and jails, a milestone in a push to reduce the nation’s highest incarceration rate.
The early release of roughly 1,900 inmates on Wednesday is the product of a new package of laws overhauling the state’s criminal justice system.
The legislation won bipartisan support from state lawmakers, but some elected officials have denounced the changes. Outrage has been stirred up by racially charged remarks by a sheriff who warned that “bad” prisoners will be freed from his north Louisiana jail and also complained that he’s losing free labour from the “good ones.”
The law allowing for earlier “good time” releases is limited to inmates serving sentences for nonviolent offences, a designation defined by law, according to state corrections secretary James LeBlanc. They are getting out an average of eight weeks early.