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Trump endorses U. S. House prison reform bill

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President Donald Trump endorsed a bipartisan U. S. House bill on Wednesday intended to reform the federal prison system and help inmates prepare for life after their release, but the legislation faces an uncertain future in the Senate.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Donald Trump endorsed a bipartisan U. S. House bill on Wednesday intended to reform the federal prison system and help inmates prepare for life after their release, but the legislation faces an uncertain future in the Senate.
The First Step Act, co-sponsored by Republican Doug Collins of Georgia and Democrat Hakeem Jeffries of New York, passed overwhelmingly in the House of Representatives in May.
But it has not gained traction in the U. S. Senate because it does not contain a broader overhaul favored by liberal progressives and some moderate conservatives seeking changes to mandatory minimum sentencing laws that have kept many low-level offenders behind bars for decades.
The bill in its current form would have to pass the Senate by year’s end before the new Congress is seated in January.
“Today I’m thrilled to announce my support for this bipartisan bill that will make our communities safer and give former inmates a second chance at life after they have served their time,” Trump told reporters at the White House.
“I urge lawmakers in both (the) House and Senate to work hard and to act quickly and send a final bill to my desk, and I look very much forward to signing it,” he added.
The First Step Act directs the federal Bureau of Prisons to assess which inmates should earn credits toward completing their sentences in halfway houses or home confinement.
It also broadens employment opportunities for inmates and expands compassionate release programs for the terminally ill, among other things.
Kevin Ring, the president of FAMM, a group that pushes for criminal justice reform, said the bill “will keep more families together, strengthen communities, and keep crime low.”
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Grassley has pushed his own criminal justice reform bill for years that is more comprehensive than the House version because it would also reduce harsh prison sentences for non-violent offenders.
On Thursday, he praised the First Step Act as “an important step in our shared effort to promote safe communities and improve justice… by ensuring that punishments fit the crimes, we can better balance the scales of justice.”
Earlier this year, Grassley was stunned when then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions wrote a letter condemning his legislation as a “grave error” that would reduce prison terms for “a highly dangerous cohort of criminals,” leading to a feud between the pair.
Trump forced Sessions to resign last week and replaced him with acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker.

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