Parole System Could See Changes After Review Of Murder Cases
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - An internal review of Pennsylvania's parole system spurred by five parolees getting charged in quick succession with homicide is, in theory, acknowledging a long-standing complaint of parole agents.
It asks lawmakers to update a 2012 law and add a trigger for an automatic six-month to one-year jail sentence for a parolee who continually ignores parole conditions, such as going to treatment or counseling.
The 2012 law already has five such triggers, including threatening behavior or possession of a weapon.
Law enforcement groups largely welcomed the acknowledgment from the state Department of Corrections. The County District Attorneys' Association calls it a "significant recognition."
Parole agents, however, were skeptical it'll change a system that, they say, has stripped them of discretion to pull a potentially dangerous parolee off the street.
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