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Spotlighting notable sentence reduction for prisoner sexually abused by multiple BOP guards

This new NPR piece, headlined “Prison sexual assault victims can now petition for compassionate release,” highlights a recent grant of a sentence reduction under 3582(c)(1)(A) for a prisoner who was repeatedly sexually abused by federal prison guards.  Here are the particulars and some broader context:

For years, Aimee Chavira suffered sexual abuse in a Dublin, Calif., federal prison by the officers responsible for protecting her. Now, thanks to a program known as compassionate release, she is free. And her freedom could help pave a similar path for other people who experienced physical or sexual assault behind bars.

“We are very hopeful that this can lead to more women who were abused at Dublin getting out,” said Erica Zunkel, Chavira’s lawyer.

Chavira, 44, has been home for less than two weeks after learning her request for compassionate release had been granted by a federal judge. Those petitions allow people in prison the chance to convince a court they should be freed because of extraordinary and compelling circumstances.

Typically, those cases involve terminal illness or other dire medical conditions. In April, the U.S. Sentencing Commission, a federal body that sets advisory guidelines, voted to expand the bases for compassionate release to include sexual and physical assault by prison workers.

Chavira reported her abuse to a psychologist and a warden at the Federal Correctional Institution, Dublin. But they did nothing. The warden later was convicted of sexual abuse and lying to the FBI. Five other officials have been charged with sexually abusing women at the facility, in what became known as a so-called “Rape Club.” One of them, John Bellhouse, was convicted this week on charges that include sexual abuse of an incarcerated person.

Chavira said she knows women from the Dublin prison who have been moved to other facilities, where they continue to suffer retaliation and face trauma. “This is just one prison that’s coming out to the light,” she said. “What’s happening in all the rest of the prisons with the rest of the people that don’t have any help or a voice?”

Last year, a bipartisan probe by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations found widespread sexual abuse by officers in federal prisons with few consequences for those officers….

Zunkel, the associate director of the Federal Criminal Justice Clinic at the University of Chicago Law School, said it’s important that Chavira and other survivors of assault get released as soon as possible. “The experts confirm it doesn’t matter if you’re moved to a different prison, it doesn’t matter if they’re offered the very best therapy possible, the Bureau of Prisons is a fundamentally unsafe place for a survivor of sexual violence to recover from,” Zunkel said.

In Chavira’s case, prosecutors did not object to her request for compassionate release….

Chavira said she’s determined to speak out for all the people she met in prison who are still experiencing abuse and poor conditions behind bars. “There is no help, if you went in in one piece, you’re coming back out in a million pieces, because you’re beyond broken,” she said. For now, she said she intends to get stronger emotionally and “show everybody, you know, I went through this, and I got out of it.”

The short ruling granting compassionate release is available here and the detailed motion filed by Erica Zunkel on behalf of Aimee Chavira is available here.