S-4305-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Marsha Blackburn (R-TN)
What it does
This bill would amend 18 U.S.C. § 111 to double the maximum prison sentence and maximum fine for anyone convicted of assaulting a Bureau of Prisons (BOP) correctional officer. The enhanced penalties would apply specifically to assaults on BOP officers, on top of the existing penalties that already apply to assaults on federal employees generally.
Who benefits
Bureau of Prisons correctional officers, who would have stronger legal deterrents protecting them on the job. Federal prison administrators, who may see a deterrent effect on inmate violence. Families of correctional officers who face workplace safety risks. Inmates who benefit from a safer prison environment if officer assaults decline. Prosecutors, who would have greater sentencing leverage in plea negotiations involving assault charges.
Who is hurt
Federal inmates convicted of assaulting a BOP officer, who would face significantly longer potential sentences and higher fines. Inmates with mental illness or those in crisis situations, who may be disproportionately represented in assault incidents and would face harsher consequences. Public defenders and legal aid organizations, who may face increased caseload complexity. Taxpayers, who could bear higher incarceration costs if longer sentences are imposed more frequently.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that BOP correctional officers work in uniquely dangerous conditions — the Bureau of Prisons reported hundreds of staff assaults annually in recent years — and that current maximum penalties are insufficient to deter violence in an environment where inmates have little to lose. They contend that doubling the sentencing ceiling gives judges and prosecutors meaningful tools to respond proportionately to the most serious assaults, and that officers who enforce federal law deserve at least the same level of statutory protection as other protected classes of federal employees.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that increasing maximum penalties does not demonstrably reduce prison violence, citing criminological research showing that incarcerated individuals — who are already serving sentences — are unlikely to be deterred by the prospect of additional time. They contend that the bill addresses a symptom rather than root causes of officer assaults, such as chronic understaffing, poor mental health resources, and overcrowding in federal facilities, and that longer sentences for inmates would increase incarceration costs without producing measurable safety gains.