S-756-115
Became Public Law No: 115-391.
Sponsored by Dan Sullivan (R-AK)
What it does
This law creates a risk-and-needs assessment system for federal prisoners to guide program placement and earn early release credits. It reduces mandatory minimum sentences for certain repeat drug offenses, broadens eligibility for sentence reductions below mandatory minimums for nonviolent drug offenders, and makes the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010's crack cocaine sentencing reductions retroactive. It also expands reentry support — including help obtaining ID documents, home confinement for low-risk prisoners, and placement closer to home — and adds protections such as limits on restraints for pregnant prisoners and a ban on juvenile solitary confinement in federal facilities.
Who benefits
The approximately 180,000 federal inmates, particularly the roughly 46% serving drug-related sentences, who may earn earlier release or reduced sentences. Prisoners convicted under pre-2010 crack cocaine sentencing laws who can now petition for resentencing. Pregnant and postpartum federal prisoners protected from restraints. Juveniles in federal custody protected from solitary confinement. Families of incarcerated people who may have loved ones placed closer to home. Faith- and community-based reentry organizations that gain access to federal grant funding. Employers and communities that benefit from reduced recidivism. Federal correctional officers who gain secure firearms storage rights on BOP premises.
Who is hurt
Prosecutors and law enforcement agencies that lose leverage from mandatory minimum sentencing tools. Victims' advocacy groups that argue reduced sentences diminish accountability. Taxpayers who bear the cost of implementing the new assessment system and reentry programs (authorized at hundreds of millions over five years). Competing secular reentry service providers who may face new competition from faith-based organizations receiving equal access to grants. Communities that may bear risk if risk-assessment tools misclassify prisoners for early release.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the federal prison population had grown by 700% since 1980 largely due to mandatory minimums for nonviolent drug offenses, producing enormous costs — over $37,000 per inmate per year — with little public safety return. They contend that evidence-based recidivism reduction programs, combined with targeted sentencing reductions, address the root causes of reoffending: studies of similar state-level programs show recidivism reductions of 10–20%. They also argue that the retroactive application of the Fair Sentencing Act corrects a documented racial disparity — the 100:1 crack-to-powder cocaine sentencing ratio disproportionately affected Black defendants — making the law both fiscally responsible and more equitable.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that reducing mandatory minimums for repeat drug offenders — including those with prior serious violent felony convictions — undermines the deterrent effect that drove the sustained crime decline of the 1990s and 2000s. They contend that risk-assessment tools have documented racial and socioeconomic bias, potentially producing disparate outcomes under the guise of objectivity, and that the GAO audit mechanism is insufficient oversight for a system governing early release of tens of thousands of prisoners. They further argue that making sentencing reductions retroactive disrupts the finality of criminal judgments and may overwhelm federal courts with resentencing petitions, straining judicial resources without a clear public safety benefit.