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A '''judicial recommendation after sentencing''' is a statement a federal judge makes at sentencing, asking the [[Index_of_Federal_Prison_Facilities|Federal Bureau of Prisons]] (BOP) to handle some part of a defendant's incarceration a certain way. A judge might recommend a prison close to the defendant's family. A judge might recommend enrollment in the Residential Drug Abuse Program. A judge might recommend a minimum-security camp instead of a higher-security institution. None of these recommendations bind the BOP. The agency decides where a federal prisoner serves time, and a judge cannot order a specific facility.<ref name="3621">{{cite web |title=18 U.S.C. § 3621 - Imprisonment of a convicted person |url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/3621 |publisher=Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> | |||
''' | |||
= | The authority sits in 18 U.S.C. § 3621(b). That statute hands placement decisions to the BOP and lists the factors the agency weighs. One of those factors is "any statement by the court that imposed the sentence." So the recommendation has a real place in the law. It just does not control the outcome. The BOP reads it, considers it, and then designates the facility it considers appropriate.<ref name="3621" /> | ||
Defendants and their attorneys treat these recommendations as worth fighting for anyway. A judge's words carry weight with the designation staff, and a well-supported request often gets honored. Defense lawyers raise the request in a sentencing memorandum, argue it at the hearing, and ask the judge to put it in the written judgment. The earlier and clearer the recommendation, the better its odds. | |||
== Overview == | |||
Two branches of government touch a federal prison sentence. The judge imposes it. The executive branch, through the BOP, administers it. The line between those roles matters here. A judge sets the number of months. The BOP picks the prison. | |||
A recommendation is how a judge reaches across that line without crossing it. Common subjects include the institution itself, the region or distance from home, drug and alcohol treatment, medical or mental-health programming, and security level. A defendant heading to prison for a non-violent first offense might ask the judge to recommend a low-security or minimum-security setting. A defendant with a documented substance problem might ask for an RDAP recommendation, since completing that program can shorten a sentence by up to a year.<ref name="rdap">{{cite web |title=Substance Abuse Treatment |url=https://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/substance_abuse_treatment.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> | |||
== | The BOP routes initial designations through its Designation and Sentence Computation Center in Grand Prairie, Texas. Staff there read the judgment, the presentence report, and the security scoring before assigning a facility.<ref name="designations">{{cite web |title=Designations |url=https://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/designations.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> Judicial input is one piece of that file. Bed space, security needs, medical care, and separation orders are others. As of fiscal year 2024 the BOP held roughly 134,766 sentenced people, and every one of them passed through that designation process.<ref name="ussc-pop">{{cite web |title=Individuals in the Federal Bureau of Prisons |url=https://www.ussc.gov/research/quick-facts/individuals-federal-bureau-prisons |publisher=United States Sentencing Commission |date=May 1, 2025 |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> | ||
== Legal Framework (18 U.S.C. § 3621(b)) == | |||
The | Section 3621(b) is the controlling statute. It says the BOP "shall designate the place of the prisoner's imprisonment" and that the agency "may designate any available penal or correctional facility" it considers appropriate. The choice rests with the agency, not the court.<ref name="3621" /> | ||
The statute then lists the factors the BOP must consider. They are the resources of the contemplated facility, the nature and circumstances of the offense, the history and characteristics of the prisoner, any statement by the sentencing court, and any pertinent policy statement from the U.S. Sentencing Commission.<ref name="findlaw">{{cite web |title=18 U.S.C. § 3621 |url=https://codes.findlaw.com/us/title-18-crimes-and-criminal-procedure/18-usc-sect-3621/ |publisher=FindLaw |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> A court's statement is the fourth item on that list. The statute spells out that the court may recommend a type of facility, but it adds that the recommendation has no binding effect on the BOP's authority to designate the place of imprisonment.<ref name="3621" /> | |||
Congress wrote that limit in plainly. The 1994 crime bill amended § 3621(b) to state that a sentencing court's recommendation "shall have no binding effect on the authority of the Bureau under this subsection to determine or change the place of imprisonment."<ref name="govregs">{{cite web |title=18 USC 3621 - Imprisonment of a convicted person |url=https://www.govregs.com/uscode/title18_partII_chapter229_subchapterC_section3621 |publisher=GovRegs |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> The same provision bars the BOP from favoring a facility because of its operator. The point of both changes was to keep designation decisions inside one agency answering to one set of rules. | |||
The statute also closes the courthouse door on review. Section 3621(b) provides that a designation made by the BOP is not reviewable by any court. A prisoner unhappy with a placement cannot ask a judge to overturn it on a direct appeal of the designation. The narrow exception is a habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, which reaches the manner of confinement rather than the designation decision itself, and which succeeds only in unusual circumstances.<ref name="findlaw" /> | |||
The BOP carries the statute into practice through its own policy. Program Statement 5100.08 governs inmate security designation and custody classification. It tells designation staff to honor a sentencing court's recommendation when doing so is consistent with the inmate's security level, public safety, and sound correctional management. When a recommendation conflicts with those priorities, the security factors win.<ref name="ps5100">{{cite web |title=Inmate Security Designation and Custody Classification, Program Statement 5100.08 |url=https://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/5100_008.pdf |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> | |||
== How It Works == | |||
A recommendation enters the system at sentencing. The defense usually lays the groundwork first, in a sentencing memorandum that cites § 3621(b) and explains what the defendant needs and why. Medical records, proof of a treatment history, or a showing that the defendant's family lives in a particular region all help. The judge hears the request at the hearing, weighs it against the presentence report, and decides whether to make the recommendation.<ref name="fd-tips">{{cite web |title=Practical Tips if Your Client Faces Incarceration in a Federal Prison |url=https://moe.fd.org/sites/moe/files/resources/bop-incarceration-issues/practical-tips-if-your-client-facing-incarceration-federal-prison_0.pdf |publisher=Federal Public Defender, Western District of Missouri |access-date=June 3, 2026}}</ref> | |||
If the judge agrees, the recommendation goes into the written Judgment in a Criminal Case, the AO 245B form. Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32 governs the sentencing hearing and the judgment that follows. Getting the recommendation onto the judgment itself, not just into the hearing transcript, is what makes it travel with the file to the BOP.<ref name="fd-tips" /> | |||
The judgment then moves to the BOP. The Designation and Sentence Computation Center reads it alongside the presentence report and the security scoring, runs the calculation, and assigns a facility. For defendants who self-surrender, the designation often lands within a few weeks of sentencing. The court and the defendant are notified of the institution.<ref name="designations" /> | |||
= | |||
== | The BOP can follow the recommendation, follow part of it, or decline it. A judge who recommends a low-security camp will be overruled if the defendant's criminal-history points or a detainer push the security level higher. A judge who recommends a prison within 500 miles of home will be told no if no bed exists at a suitable institution in that radius. When the agency departs from a recommendation, it does so on those operational grounds, and the prisoner has no appeal of the choice itself.<ref name="ps5100" /> A defendant can still pursue a later transfer through the BOP's administrative remedy process, asking the agency to move closer to home or into a needed program once a bed opens.<ref name="designations" /> | ||
* [ | |||
Three kinds of recommendations come up most often: | |||
* '''Facility or location.''' A judge may recommend a minimum-security camp, a specific institution, or placement near the defendant's release address. The BOP's stated goal is to place inmates within 500 miles of home when security and bed space allow, which makes a location recommendation a natural fit with existing policy.<ref name="designations" /> | |||
* '''Program participation.''' A judge may recommend RDAP for a defendant with a substance-abuse history. Completing RDAP can earn up to a year off the sentence, so this recommendation carries real stakes. Other recommendations point toward education or evidence-based reentry programming under the [[First_Step_Act:_Overview_and_Implementation|First Step Act]].<ref name="rdap" /> | |||
* '''Medical or mental-health needs.''' A judge may recommend a facility equipped for a chronic condition or for mental-health care. The BOP assigns a medical care level to every inmate, and that level can override a location request when the nearest institution cannot provide the needed care.<ref name="designations" /> | |||
== Frequently Asked Questions == | |||
{{FAQSection/Start}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=Can a federal judge order which prison a defendant serves time in?|answer=No. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3621(b), the Federal Bureau of Prisons designates the place of imprisonment. A judge can recommend a facility, a region, or a program, but the recommendation does not bind the BOP. The agency reads it as one of several factors and then makes the final designation.}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=Does the Bureau of Prisons have to follow a judge's recommendation?|answer=No. The statute lists a sentencing court's statement as a factor the BOP must consider, but it states the recommendation has no binding effect. BOP policy directs staff to honor a recommendation when it is consistent with the inmate's security level and sound correctional management, and to decline it when it is not.}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=What can a judge recommend at sentencing?|answer=Common recommendations cover the facility or its location, often a prison near the defendant's family, enrollment in the Residential Drug Abuse Program (RDAP), placement in a low-security or minimum-security setting, and assignment to an institution able to handle a specific medical or mental-health need.}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=How do you get a judge to recommend a specific prison?|answer=The request usually goes in a defense sentencing memorandum that cites 18 U.S.C. § 3621(b) and backs the request with evidence, such as medical records or proof of where family lives. The lawyer argues it at the hearing and asks the judge to place the recommendation in the written judgment so it travels with the file to the BOP.}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=Can you appeal where the Bureau of Prisons sends you?|answer=A designation is not reviewable on direct appeal. Section 3621(b) makes the BOP's placement decision unreviewable by any court. A prisoner can pursue an administrative transfer request through the BOP, or in unusual circumstances file a habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, which challenges the conditions of confinement rather than the designation itself.}} | |||
{{FAQ|question=Does a judicial recommendation help with RDAP placement?|answer=It can. A judge's recommendation for RDAP signals the defendant's treatment need to the BOP, and completing the program can reduce a sentence by up to a year. Final eligibility still rests with the BOP, which screens inmates for a documented substance-use disorder before admitting them.}} | |||
{{FAQSection/End}} | |||
== References == | |||
<references /> | <references /> | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sentencing, Judicial Recommendations After}} | |||
[[Category:Federal Criminal Law]] | |||
{{#seo: | {{#seo: | ||
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| | |title_mode=replace | ||
|description= | |description=How a federal judge can recommend BOP facility placement, RDAP, or a prison near family at sentencing, why the recommendation is not binding, and what 18 U.S.C. § 3621(b) controls. | ||
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{{MetaDescription|How a federal judge can recommend BOP facility placement, RDAP, or a prison near family at sentencing, why it is not binding, and what 18 U.S.C. § 3621(b) controls.}} | |||
Latest revision as of 13:49, 3 June 2026
A judicial recommendation after sentencing is a statement a federal judge makes at sentencing, asking the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) to handle some part of a defendant's incarceration a certain way. A judge might recommend a prison close to the defendant's family. A judge might recommend enrollment in the Residential Drug Abuse Program. A judge might recommend a minimum-security camp instead of a higher-security institution. None of these recommendations bind the BOP. The agency decides where a federal prisoner serves time, and a judge cannot order a specific facility.Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name cannot be a simple integer. Use a descriptive title
The authority sits in 18 U.S.C. § 3621(b). That statute hands placement decisions to the BOP and lists the factors the agency weighs. One of those factors is "any statement by the court that imposed the sentence." So the recommendation has a real place in the law. It just does not control the outcome. The BOP reads it, considers it, and then designates the facility it considers appropriate.Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name cannot be a simple integer. Use a descriptive title
Defendants and their attorneys treat these recommendations as worth fighting for anyway. A judge's words carry weight with the designation staff, and a well-supported request often gets honored. Defense lawyers raise the request in a sentencing memorandum, argue it at the hearing, and ask the judge to put it in the written judgment. The earlier and clearer the recommendation, the better its odds.
Overview
Two branches of government touch a federal prison sentence. The judge imposes it. The executive branch, through the BOP, administers it. The line between those roles matters here. A judge sets the number of months. The BOP picks the prison.
A recommendation is how a judge reaches across that line without crossing it. Common subjects include the institution itself, the region or distance from home, drug and alcohol treatment, medical or mental-health programming, and security level. A defendant heading to prison for a non-violent first offense might ask the judge to recommend a low-security or minimum-security setting. A defendant with a documented substance problem might ask for an RDAP recommendation, since completing that program can shorten a sentence by up to a year.[1]
The BOP routes initial designations through its Designation and Sentence Computation Center in Grand Prairie, Texas. Staff there read the judgment, the presentence report, and the security scoring before assigning a facility.[2] Judicial input is one piece of that file. Bed space, security needs, medical care, and separation orders are others. As of fiscal year 2024 the BOP held roughly 134,766 sentenced people, and every one of them passed through that designation process.[3]
Legal Framework (18 U.S.C. § 3621(b))
Section 3621(b) is the controlling statute. It says the BOP "shall designate the place of the prisoner's imprisonment" and that the agency "may designate any available penal or correctional facility" it considers appropriate. The choice rests with the agency, not the court.Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name cannot be a simple integer. Use a descriptive title
The statute then lists the factors the BOP must consider. They are the resources of the contemplated facility, the nature and circumstances of the offense, the history and characteristics of the prisoner, any statement by the sentencing court, and any pertinent policy statement from the U.S. Sentencing Commission.[4] A court's statement is the fourth item on that list. The statute spells out that the court may recommend a type of facility, but it adds that the recommendation has no binding effect on the BOP's authority to designate the place of imprisonment.Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name cannot be a simple integer. Use a descriptive title
Congress wrote that limit in plainly. The 1994 crime bill amended § 3621(b) to state that a sentencing court's recommendation "shall have no binding effect on the authority of the Bureau under this subsection to determine or change the place of imprisonment."[5] The same provision bars the BOP from favoring a facility because of its operator. The point of both changes was to keep designation decisions inside one agency answering to one set of rules.
The statute also closes the courthouse door on review. Section 3621(b) provides that a designation made by the BOP is not reviewable by any court. A prisoner unhappy with a placement cannot ask a judge to overturn it on a direct appeal of the designation. The narrow exception is a habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, which reaches the manner of confinement rather than the designation decision itself, and which succeeds only in unusual circumstances.[4]
The BOP carries the statute into practice through its own policy. Program Statement 5100.08 governs inmate security designation and custody classification. It tells designation staff to honor a sentencing court's recommendation when doing so is consistent with the inmate's security level, public safety, and sound correctional management. When a recommendation conflicts with those priorities, the security factors win.[6]
How It Works
A recommendation enters the system at sentencing. The defense usually lays the groundwork first, in a sentencing memorandum that cites § 3621(b) and explains what the defendant needs and why. Medical records, proof of a treatment history, or a showing that the defendant's family lives in a particular region all help. The judge hears the request at the hearing, weighs it against the presentence report, and decides whether to make the recommendation.[7]
If the judge agrees, the recommendation goes into the written Judgment in a Criminal Case, the AO 245B form. Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32 governs the sentencing hearing and the judgment that follows. Getting the recommendation onto the judgment itself, not just into the hearing transcript, is what makes it travel with the file to the BOP.[7]
The judgment then moves to the BOP. The Designation and Sentence Computation Center reads it alongside the presentence report and the security scoring, runs the calculation, and assigns a facility. For defendants who self-surrender, the designation often lands within a few weeks of sentencing. The court and the defendant are notified of the institution.[2]
The BOP can follow the recommendation, follow part of it, or decline it. A judge who recommends a low-security camp will be overruled if the defendant's criminal-history points or a detainer push the security level higher. A judge who recommends a prison within 500 miles of home will be told no if no bed exists at a suitable institution in that radius. When the agency departs from a recommendation, it does so on those operational grounds, and the prisoner has no appeal of the choice itself.[6] A defendant can still pursue a later transfer through the BOP's administrative remedy process, asking the agency to move closer to home or into a needed program once a bed opens.[2]
Three kinds of recommendations come up most often:
- Facility or location. A judge may recommend a minimum-security camp, a specific institution, or placement near the defendant's release address. The BOP's stated goal is to place inmates within 500 miles of home when security and bed space allow, which makes a location recommendation a natural fit with existing policy.[2]
- Program participation. A judge may recommend RDAP for a defendant with a substance-abuse history. Completing RDAP can earn up to a year off the sentence, so this recommendation carries real stakes. Other recommendations point toward education or evidence-based reentry programming under the First Step Act.[1]
- Medical or mental-health needs. A judge may recommend a facility equipped for a chronic condition or for mental-health care. The BOP assigns a medical care level to every inmate, and that level can override a location request when the nearest institution cannot provide the needed care.[2]
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can a federal judge order which prison a defendant serves time in?
No. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3621(b), the Federal Bureau of Prisons designates the place of imprisonment. A judge can recommend a facility, a region, or a program, but the recommendation does not bind the BOP. The agency reads it as one of several factors and then makes the final designation.
Q: Does the Bureau of Prisons have to follow a judge's recommendation?
No. The statute lists a sentencing court's statement as a factor the BOP must consider, but it states the recommendation has no binding effect. BOP policy directs staff to honor a recommendation when it is consistent with the inmate's security level and sound correctional management, and to decline it when it is not.
Q: What can a judge recommend at sentencing?
Common recommendations cover the facility or its location, often a prison near the defendant's family, enrollment in the Residential Drug Abuse Program (RDAP), placement in a low-security or minimum-security setting, and assignment to an institution able to handle a specific medical or mental-health need.
Q: How do you get a judge to recommend a specific prison?
The request usually goes in a defense sentencing memorandum that cites 18 U.S.C. § 3621(b) and backs the request with evidence, such as medical records or proof of where family lives. The lawyer argues it at the hearing and asks the judge to place the recommendation in the written judgment so it travels with the file to the BOP.
Q: Can you appeal where the Bureau of Prisons sends you?
A designation is not reviewable on direct appeal. Section 3621(b) makes the BOP's placement decision unreviewable by any court. A prisoner can pursue an administrative transfer request through the BOP, or in unusual circumstances file a habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, which challenges the conditions of confinement rather than the designation itself.
Q: Does a judicial recommendation help with RDAP placement?
It can. A judge's recommendation for RDAP signals the defendant's treatment need to the BOP, and completing the program can reduce a sentence by up to a year. Final eligibility still rests with the BOP, which screens inmates for a documented substance-use disorder before admitting them.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Substance Abuse Treatment". Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 "Designations". Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
- ↑ "Individuals in the Federal Bureau of Prisons". United States Sentencing Commission. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 "18 U.S.C. § 3621". FindLaw. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
- ↑ "18 USC 3621 - Imprisonment of a convicted person". GovRegs. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 "Inmate Security Designation and Custody Classification, Program Statement 5100.08". Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 "Practical Tips if Your Client Faces Incarceration in a Federal Prison". Federal Public Defender, Western District of Missouri. Retrieved June 3, 2026.