Do prisoners serve half their sentence?

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asked Dec 26, 2021 in Law/Ethics by figgynewton (1,180 points)
Do prisoners serve half their sentence?

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answered Dec 26, 2021 by Aarttoos (2,910 points)
Some prisoners serve half of their sentence while other prisoners may serve the entire sentence.

For example if a person gets sentenced to prison for 10 years then they may likely serve 10 years unless they get some good time credits and then they may only serve 5 years.

Or if a person gets sentenced to life with parole and they serve 25 years then they may be released after 25 years if they are deemed safe to enter society again and they have been good the entire time in prison.

Typically courts are willing to reduce your sentence in cases of extraordinary circumstances such as terminal illness.

Federal law allows a sentence reduction or modification upon motion filed by the Director of the Bureau of Prisons.

A prisoner can apply for parole once they have served enough time leading up to their parole date.

A prisoner will be given a parole date in which they can then apply for parole once that parole date arrives.

For example if a prisoner is sentenced to 25 years to life with parole or life with parole then the prisoner must serve at least the 25 years of their prison sentence before they are able to apply for parole.

However for someone who may have a 30 year sentence then they usually have to serve at least 9 to 10 years before applying for parole.

The parole could be denied or accepted.

Then the prisoner may have to wait another 5 to 10 years before applying for parole again.

A year in jail is 365 days.

When you're sentenced to a year in jail you'll serve 365 days which is a year.

Although the year in jail will not be a good year and will seem to take longer than a normal year when you're at home and not in jail.

Jail is very boring and there's nothing to really do in there and so the time will slow down to a crawl and you're around a lot of bad people in the jail.

There's no parole once you get a jail sentence and are just serving a year in jail.

So you'll serve the entire year in jail and may also serve an additional day.

In the US federal system there is no parole so you could serve a year and a day.

You can earn up to 15% off of your sentence for good time.

This is not automatic and has to be earned.

However in some places you might only serve 50 percent of the year in jail sentence.

For example.

Under California law for most crimes, if you are sentenced to one year in county jail you will actually serve 50% of that sentence or six months.

However, there are certain more serious crimes, where you could serve as much as 80% or 85% of the one year sentence.

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