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Murderers among those who will be eligible for parole

The Bahamas Department of Correctional Services.

The Bahamas Department of Correctional Services.

By EARYEL BOWLEG

Tribune Staff Reporter

Ebowleg@tribunemedia.net

PEOPLE sentenced to prison for life, including murderers, will be eligible for parole under the newly released Conditional Release of Offenders Bill.

The bill, which has been in the works for over a decade, outlines the parole regime, which involves the conditional release of prisoners before they complete their sentences.

When sentencing people for life imprisonment, courts would be required to specify the minimum period of incarceration that offenders must serve before being eligible for parole consideration.

The bill says that period must "satisfy the requirements of retribution, deterrence, and rehabilitation".

Murderers sentenced to life must serve at least 25 years.

People who are not sentenced to life imprisonment could be eligible for full parole consideration after serving at least sixty percent of their sentence and for day parole after serving 50 percent.

A Unit of Offender Rehabilitation and Re-entry Services would be established to interview parole applicants and victims of offences. That unit would decide whether the applicant is a suitable candidate for conditional release on parole, assess the risks of the applicant re-offending and endangering the community, and make a recommendation regarding the suitability of the applicant's proposed residence.

The unit would also make recommendations on the conditions to be imposed on the applicant if parole is granted.

A board of twenty people would be established to review applications for conditional release on parole and either grant or refuse them. The board could also suspend or revoke conditions imposed on applicants after parole is granted.

The board could mandate that a parolee be electronically monitored.

The bill outlines the procedure for an emergency recall of a grant of parole.

Parolees who are arrested and charged with a criminal offence while on parole have "the status of an offender on remand". Their parole is immediately revoked. Once parole is forfeited, a person could be sentenced to two years.

Comments

Sickened 1 month, 1 week ago

What fool put this bill forward? Why on God's cursed earth would someone be fighting so hard to have murders and other violent offenders paroled? What is wrong with everyone??? It's hard enough getting criminals put in jail, from police competency and the lack of a properly functioning justice system, and people want to make it easier for criminals to be released after all the effort put in to get them incarcerated? No wonder God ignores our collective prayers. He's looking down at us and wondering why we are so stupid!!!! Forgive those who have sinned against us is not the same as letting people do whatever they want to you over and over again without punishment.

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stillwaters 1 month, 1 week ago

This is mind boggling, but when you think about it......most of the murderers are as free as you and me anyway.....walking around and still killing, robbing, and raping.

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