Witnessing a family member become ill while incarcerated in a federal facility causes a specific kind of grief. The grief of waiting, filing paperwork, and picking up legal vocabulary you never would have needed is a slower kind of grief than the clear grief of loss. The term “compassionate release” comes late, is not fully understood, and carries a great deal of weight for many families.
In its most basic form, it is a legal mechanism that permits a federal court to lower a prison sentence in cases of exceptional circumstances. a severe disease. old age. A family crisis that can only be handled by the person behind bars. The law has been around for decades in one form or another, but until recently, those who most needed it were unable to access it.
The process could only be started by the Director of the Bureau of Prisons for the majority of its existence. This meant that the institution in charge of locking someone up also served as the gatekeeper, determining whether or not they should be released early. It should come as no surprise that very few motions were ever submitted. For years, detractors claimed that the system was primarily on paper.
That was altered by the First Step Act of 2018. It changed 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(1)(A), a federal statute, to permit defendants to submit motions for compassionate release on their own behalf. It was a big change. All of a sudden, a person incarcerated by the federal government could theoretically petition the court directly. In order to facilitate the establishment of the Compassionate Release Clearinghouse, which links eligible prisoners with pro bono attorneys, organizations such as NACDL and FAMM contributed to the infrastructure surrounding this new right. This effort grew significantly during the COVID-19 pandemic, when thousands of medically vulnerable individuals were confined in facilities that were not designed to contain infectious diseases.

Nevertheless, the procedure is not easy. An inmate must first ask the facility warden for compassionate release before filing in court. The prisoner may then file a case in federal district court if the warden rejects the request or just doesn’t reply within thirty days. That window of thirty days is important. The majority of jurisdictions regard it as the cutoff point for what the statute refers to as “exhaustion,” which denotes that the defendant has fulfilled all legal obligations prior to approaching a judge.
The court then considers whether the situation is “extraordinary and compelling.” In order to fill the void left by the U.S. Sentencing Commission, courts struggled with that standard on their own for years after 2018. The Commission finally revised its guidelines in November 2023, defining six accepted categories. The most common medical conditions are terminal illness, severe conditions that make self-care difficult, insufficient care within the facility, or increased susceptibility during a public health emergency. Another consideration is age: prisoners who have completed a significant amount of their sentence, are at least sixty-five, and exhibit physical or mental decline may be eligible. When a parent, spouse, or child loses their primary caregiver and the incarcerated individual is their only option, this is referred to as a family circumstance.
Two recent additions are worth mentioning. Recognizing that the state occasionally causes its own harm, inmates who were sexually or physically abused by prison staff are now eligible to apply for release under a different clause. Additionally, if a defendant has served at least ten years, they may be eligible to petition if they are serving unusually long sentences that would result in significantly shorter terms under current law.
Approval is not assured even if every box is checked. District courts have a great deal of discretion. Judges consider the public safety, deterrence, and original offense factors listed in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) when determining a sentence. Even if a motion is legally sound and well-documented, it may still be rejected. The defendant must demonstrate that the court misused its discretion, not just that a different judge might have made a different decision, in order to appeal those denials.
Speaking with families who have gone through this process gives me the impression that the legal system frequently demands more patience than the situation permits. A deteriorating parent in a hospital. A child who is growing up without the necessary care. The briefing schedules, the discretionary standards, and the thirty-day window all proceed at a speed that is rarely respected by illness and family crises. Fundamentally, compassionate release is a recognition that justice occasionally calls for more than a set sentence. It’s worthwhile to consider whether the procedure fulfills that notion.

