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Convicted Former New York Assembly Speaker Released To Home Confinement Following COVID Fears

Former New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver is surrounded by media as he leaves court in New York where in 2016 he was sentenced to 12 years in prison on corruption charges.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig
Former New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver is surrounded by media as he leaves court in New York where in 2016 he was sentenced to 12 years in prison on corruption charges.

Former New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver has been released from a federal prison on furlough while he awaits potential placement to home confinement.

In August, the 77-year-old Democrat began serving his more than six-year sentence at a prison in Otisville, after years of fending off going behind bars in a corruption case.

He was the Assembly’s leader for more than two decades before his abrupt ouster in 2015 after the corruption allegations emerged.

The federal Bureau of Prisons is able to release inmates on furlough and home confinement to prevent the spread of coronavirus behind bars.

A spokesperson for the U.S. attorney’s office that prosecuted Silver said they sent an email in opposition to his furlough on Monday.

Several other prisoners at Otisville, including former President Donald Trump’s onetime lawyer Michael Cohen, have been serving their sentences at home because of the pandemic.

In a statement, the Bureau of Prisons noted it can transfer inmates to their home on furlough for periods of time while they are being considered for home confinement or placement in a halfway house.

Silver, a Manhattan Democrat, was ultimately convicted in a scheme that involved a type of illegal back-scratching that has long plagued Albany. He supported legislation that benefited real estate developers he knew. In return, they referred tax business to a law firm that employed Silver, which then paid him fees.

Appeals kept Silver out of prison for years. His initial 2015 conviction was overturned on appeal before he was convicted again in 2018. Part of that conviction was then tossed out on another appeal, leading to yet another sentencing in July.

At his sentencing, Silver’s lawyers had begged the court to allow him to serve his sentence under home confinement, rather than at a prison, because of the danger of contracting a fatal case of COVID-19. A judge turned him down.

More than 7,000 federal inmates remain on home confinement, according to Bureau of Prisons statistics. The agency had released nearly 25,000 prisoners to their homes since last March amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Under the bureau’s guidelines, priority for home confinement is supposed to be given to those inmates who have served half of their sentence or inmates with 18 months or less left and who served at least 25% of their time. But the bureau has discretion about who can be released.

In January, the Justice Department issued a memo that said the Bureau of Prisons may have to return some inmates serving extended terms of home confinement to prison once the coronavirus emergency period that was established by Congress expires.

Silver’s lawyers had been arguing that their client should be placed on home confinement because he was considered high risk for coronavirus because of his age and preexisting medical conditions.

Silver, who was elected to the Assembly in 1977 and became speaker in 1994, has a projected release date from federal custody in 2026.

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