Title 18 › Part PART II— - CRIMINAL PROCEDURE › Chapter CHAPTER 229— - POSTSENTENCE ADMINISTRATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER D— - RISK AND NEEDS ASSESSMENT SYSTEM › § 3632
The Attorney General must create and publish a risk-and-needs system within 210 days. The system will rate each prisoner as minimum, low, medium, or high risk of reoffending and try to spot risk of violent or serious misconduct. It will match prisoners to evidence-based programs and productive activities based on their specific needs, check progress regularly, move prisoners into different programs or housing as needed, decide when to offer rewards, help decide readiness for prerelease or supervised release, and consider using audio materials for people with dyslexia. The system will tell the Bureau of Prisons what kinds and how much programming prisoners need and how to group housing by similar risk when safe. Incentives for successful participation include phone or video up to 30 minutes per day and up to 510 minutes per month, more visiting time as the warden allows, consideration for transfer closer to release (if beds, security level, and warden recommendation allow), and other rewards the Director designs (including at least two options like higher commissary limits, more email access, or preferred housing). Prisoners earn 10 days of time credits for every 30 days of successful participation, and prisoners at minimum or low risk who do not worsen over two assessments earn an extra 5 days per 30 days. Credits do not apply to programs finished before the law’s enactment or before a sentence officially starts. Credits can be used for prerelease custody or supervised release, but many specified serious federal offenses and some noncitizens with final removal orders make a prisoner ineligible. The Attorney General must set rules for cutting or restoring rewards for rule violations (notice required, only already-earned credits can be lost, and a process to restore credits), train staff (initial and ongoing training with biannual competence checks), and audit the Bureau’s use of the system yearly. The system must include dyslexia screening at intake and reassessments and include dyslexia treatment programs (and may include other learning-disability programs).
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Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
18 U.S.C. § 3632
Title 18 — Crimes and Criminal Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73