Cares act prison release

In general, courts can only reduce someone’s prison sentence — or, put differently, grant a compassionate release — for “extraordinary and compelling reasons.” And, as you likely saw with the heartbreaking story about the BOP’s to grant a compassionate release to Eli Torres to be at the funeral for his daughter, Eliahna Cruz Torres, who was one of the children murdered in the May 2022 shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, the BOP rarely releases someone early unless a court makes them. During the COVID-19 pandemic, however, the CARES Act changed this.

As the U.S. Sentencing Commission has explained, the CARES Act “[e]xpands the BOP’s authority to place prisoners in home confinement based on criteria set forth in memoranda issued by the U.S. Attorney General during the statute’s ‘covered emergency period,'” which is basically the COVID-19 pandemic. Unfortunately, as the Commission also notes, “[c]ourts do not have jurisdiction over implementation of the CARES Act home confinement,” leaving it entirely up to the BOP.

What are the eligibility requirements for the CARES Act?

In most cases, the BOP will consider people who meet the following criteria for compassionate release: