Sunday, October 30, 2016

Do ex-cops have it harder in prison?

In most cases, former law enforcement officers who are sent to prison will live under an assumed name, and often in another state entirely.

Most state prison systems have an "interstate compact" with correctional agencies in other states. Under this agreement, states can trade prisoners for the purpose of protecting the inmate from harm or compromising an investigation.

When an inmate is sent to another state under the interstate compact, he will acquire a new file and identity. Only the top management in each state will have access to the inmates' true identities. The prisoner has to agree to the transfer, and further to agree to the change in name and record. This is usually in the prisoner's best interests, so compliance is seldom a problem.

If the inmate commits a new crime while incarcerated, he will be prosecuted in the state where the new offense takes place. The court will be notified of the assumed identity, but otherwise he will be treated as having the name and record of the pseudonym.

Once released or paroled, the prisoner usually returns to his home state and re-assumes his true name. If he has "maxed out," or served his entire sentence, he can live wherever he wants. If he is on parole, he is usually restricted to living and traveling within his home state, absent permission to do otherwise.

Ex-cops aren't the only people who serve time under the interstate compact. A child molester or rapist might also be included, as offenders like this are at the bottom of the inmate pecking order.


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