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Washington Good Time Cap Clarified
Loaded on June 15, 1998
published in Prison Legal News
June, 1998, page 22
AWashington state court of appeals held that prisoners convicted of violent class B felonies were entitled to a one third good time sentence reduction and not the fifteen percent reduction calculated by the Washington DOC. Craig Mahrle was convicted of solicitation to commit second degree murder. The Washington DOC applied ...
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More from this issue:
- Mis-Managed Health Care in Texas Prisons
- Pelican Bay Cellie Slayings
- From the Editor, by Dan Pens
- Human Rights Watch Condemns Indiana Control Units, by Daniel Burton-Rose
- Descent Into Madness: An Inmate's Experience in the New Mexico State Prison Riot, by Daniel Burton-Rose
- Prisons and Aids: A Public Health Challenge, by Daniel Burton-Rose
- Pro Se Tips and Tactics: Limiting the Burdens of Pro Se Inmate Litigation, by John Midgley
- New York Prisoner Awarded $56,000 for Beating
- Bureau of Prisons Sexual Abuse Suit Settled for $500,000
- Delay in Medical Treatment States Claim
- Bob Bensing, Hero, Dies Suddenly
- Spokane County Corrections Officials Accused of Cover-up
- PLRA Filing Fee Provisions Not Retroactive
- PLRA Termination Provisions Unconstitutional
- Some PLRA Fee Questions Answered by the Seventh Circuit
- Eighth Circuit Issues PLRA IFP Procedures
- Fatal Mismanagement at Ohio CCA Prison
- California Prison Psychologist Kills Child, Self
- Parolee Must Receive Morrissey Hearing
- $6.5 Million Spent in California Sexual Harassment Suit
- Involuntary Medical Experiments Violate Due Process
- PLN Writer Exiled by CCA
- Illinois Court Access Suit Dismissed
- Refusal of Non-Lethal Injection Kills Arizona Prisoner
- State Weasel Monitors Private Prison Chicken Coop in Texas
- San Francisco City and County Jail Conditions Held Unconstitutional
- Discriminatory Policy Enforcement Actionable
- Michigan's Parole Amendments Constitutional
- Colorado Prisoners Passing Up Parole
- Alabama HIV+ Prisoners Case Remanded Once Again for Proper RA Consideration
- Segregation Conditions Defined for Sandin Purposes
- Attention Veteran Prisoner Activists
- Race Requirement for Religion Struck Down
- Washington Good Time Cap Clarified
- Trial Required in Religious Diet Claim
- Repeal of South Carolina Furlough Law Violates Ex Post Facto
- Beating by Unknown Guards States Claim
- News in Brief
- Vigilante Attack on Prisoner Requires Trial
- Sexual Harassment Actionable
- PA County Medical Co-Payment Constitutional
More from these topics:
- Nebraska Supreme Court Clarifies Award of Time Served Credit for Non-Citizen Awaiting Extradition, Aug. 1, 2025. Good Time, Federal Extradition Act, Credits.
- DOJ Finds Unconstitutional Conditions in Texas Juvenile Detention, Aug. 1, 2025. Staff-Prisoner Assault, Retaliation for Filing Grievances, Pepper Spray/Tear Gas, Sentencing, Control Units/SHU/Solitary Confinement, Failure to Protect (Juveniles), Juvenile Prisons.
- Nebraska Supreme Court Clarifies Procedure for Crediting Jail Time to Multiple Contemporaneously-Imposed Sentences, Aug. 1, 2025. Good Time, Credits, Concurrent and Consecutive Sentences.
- D.C. District Court Dismisses Class Action Against BOP Over Earned Sentence Credits, July 15, 2025. Good Time, First Step Act, Sentences - Corrections or Modifications of.
- Georgia Moves to Shield Intellectually Disabled Prisoners from Execution, June 1, 2025. Sentencing, Death Penalty.
- Fourth Circuit: District Court Failed to Provide Sufficient Explanation for Sentence Imposed and Did Not Address Defendant’s Arguments for Downward Variant Sentence, May 15, 2025. Sentencing, Drug Laws/Offenses.
- Fourth Circuit: Procedurally Unreasonable Sentence Where District Court Failed to Address Defendant’s Non-Frivolous Downward Variance Argument Based on Sentencing Disparity Due to Which State’s Statute Prior Conviction Based Upon, May 15, 2025. Sentencing, Failure To Consider Disparity, Federal-State Differences/Disparity/Conflicts, Disparity in Charging/Sentencing Practices.
- SCOTUS Announces Only ‘False’ Statements Made to FDIC Are Criminalized Under 18 U.S.C. § 1014, Not Statements That Are ‘Misleading’ but True, May 15, 2025. Sentencing, False Statements/Perjury.
- Virginia Legislature Tables “Second-Look” Bills, July 1, 2024. Criminal justice system reform, Good Time.
- Virginia Supreme Court Denies New Sentence Credits to State Prisoner Serving “Mixed” Sentence, May 1, 2024. Ex Post Facto, Good Time, Credits, Multiple Sentences.