Title 18 › Part PART II— - CRIMINAL PROCEDURE › Chapter CHAPTER 229— - POSTSENTENCE ADMINISTRATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER C— - IMPRISONMENT › § 3626
Sets strict rules about what courts can order to fix prison problems. Court-ordered fixes (anything other than money) must only do what is needed to correct a specific person’s federal right. The order must be narrow and the least intrusive way to fix the problem. Courts must consider any bad effects on public safety or the criminal justice system. Courts may not force officials to break state or local law unless federal law requires it, the order is needed to fix the federal right, and no other order will work. Courts cannot order the building of prisons or raising taxes. Short-term emergency orders are allowed, but they must be narrow and they automatically end 90 days after they start unless the court makes the full findings required to make them permanent. A court can order that prisoners be released only after less-intrusive orders have failed, the defendant had a reasonable time to comply, and (in federal court) a three-judge court finds by clear and convincing evidence that crowding is the main cause and nothing else will fix it. State or local officials who control prison money or custody can join to oppose or end such release orders. Prospective court orders can be reviewed for end or change after set times: they can be moved to end 2 years after they start, 1 year after a denial of termination, or 2 years after the Prison Litigation Reform Act’s enactment for older orders. A court must immediately end any order if it never made the required narrowness findings. Parties can ask to change or end orders sooner. Motions to change or end relief must be decided quickly; a stay usually kicks in 30 days after filing (or 180 days if the motion is made under another law) and ends when the court rules, though the court may delay that stay up to 60 more days for good cause. A court may appoint a neutral special master for complex remedy work; each side gives up to 5 names, may remove up to 3 from the other side’s list, and pay is limited to the hourly rate under section 3006A and covered by Judiciary funds. The court must review the master every 6 months and end the appointment when the relief ends. Definitions used: consent decree — court-ordered relief based partly on agreement; civil action with respect to prison conditions — federal cases about confinement conditions (not habeas); prisoner — anyone confined or facing confinement; prisoner release order — any order that reduces or limits the prison population; prison — any facility that detains juveniles or adults; private settlement agreement — an agreement that courts won’t enforce except by reopening the case; prospective relief — non-money court-ordered fixes; special master — a court-appointed overseer; relief — any court-ordered or approved remedy (but not private settlements).
Full Legal Text
Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
18 U.S.C. § 3626
Title 18 — Crimes and Criminal Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73