Federal Prison Sentence - We also Assist White-Collar Offenders with Prison Reduction Strategies and Preparing For A Term Of Incar
It really depends on what the sentencing provisions are for the crimes that are the basis for your convictions

Federal Prison Sentence - If you are being held on something else, like a state criminal case, the federal court may not recognize "time served" when you are sentenced. You have to be held by the federal court that has your federal case to be credited for the time you are waiting to resolve that federal case and you have to be held on that case. In other words, if you are held in a federal detention center waiting for trial on your federal case, but you are being held, for instance, on a probation violation and not technically on the federal case that caused the probation violation, you may not get credit for time served when you are sentenced on the new federal case. In a case like this, you would probably try and get the probation violation and the federal case resolved at the same time or get any sentences imposed on both to run at the same time.
If you have state cases and federal cases, you have to be very careful to be sentenced in the state court after you are sentenced in the federal court. A state court will consider running the state sentence concurrently or during the time you are serving the federal sentence but the federal court will not run their sentence concurrently or while you are serving time on a state sentence. So you would have to "wrap up" or finish serving your state sentence before you begin serving your federal sentence. That means you could be serving a sentence far greater than you have anticipated serving for crimes that are identical when you have been charged both in federal court and state court.
Under the Second Chance Act the Bureau of Prisons can automatically deduct 54 days per year off your total sentence. This is usually calculated when you arrive at the federal prison where you will be serving your time. Currently, they are only deducting 47 days per year. The Bureau of Prisons has stated that they have not put into effect the 54 day per year deduction because they have not yet written and put into effect policies to use the 54 day per year calculation.
About the Author:
Federal Sentencing Guidelines - Jail Time Consulting has programs and techniques to properly position our clients for eligibility and acceptance into various BOP programs including the 500-Hour Residential Drug Abuse Program, the Second Chance Act Program, the Compassionate Release Program and the Commutation of Sentence Program. These programs have the potential to dramatically reduce the length of actual time served by our clients
Contact Details
Jail Time Consulting
P.O. Box 7055
Seminole, Florida 33775
USA
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