Chapter 9 Flashcards citation citation a legal document roughly equivalent to a traffic ticket commutation of sentence commutation of sentence action by the executive branch of government; legally means exchanging one punishment for another less severe one consolidated parole boards consolidated parole boards autonomous panels within the government department responsible for administering correctional institutions or community corrections discretionary release discretionary release initiated by correctional authorities when they believe an inmate is ready for life on the outside expiration release expiration release an unconditional release from prison when the offender’s sentence, minus any good time credits, ends false negatives false negatives inmate who would have made a success of their parole, but is denied parole false positives false positives parolees who looked to be good risks, but later committed a crime good-time laws good-time laws passed in 1817 allowed prison officials to shorten an inmate’s prison term in exchange for good behavior guardians guardians citizen volunteers who supervised parolees in New York State during the 1800s hearing officer hearing officer typically a supervisory-level or senior member of the parole agency staff who conducts the preliminary parole hearing independent parole boards independent parole boards parole board model free from any other state agency’s control and generally reports directly to the governor inspector of released prisoners inspector of released prisoners the first parole officer institutional model institutional model a model of the composition of the consolidated parole board that typically employs full-time corrections professionals Irish ticket-of-leave system Irish ticket-of-leave system created by Crofton in 1854 as a way of releasing ex-convicts into the community iron law of imprisonment iron law of imprisonment except for those that die in prison, the rest eventually return to free society iron law of prison populations iron law of prison populations prison populations are determined by the number of people sent to prison and by the amount of time the prisoners reside in them mandatory release mandatory release today many inmates serve a statutorily defined minimum length of time and their release is automatic pardon pardon executive clemency or mercy; a unique and rare event parole parole a conditional release from prison parole agents parole agents parole officers; state-level civil service employees parole agreement parole agreement standard conditions of parole parole eligibility date parole eligibility date the earliest point at which the inmate can leave prison parole officers parole officers parole agents who are state-level civil service employees prisoner reentry prisoner reentry release from prison and adjustment into the free society summary arrest summary arrest when a parole officer observes a violation of parole in person, they can immediately take the parolee into custody supervised release supervised release largely indistinguishable from parole with supervision of ex-inmates by US probation officers