One thought on “Federal Supervised Release Restrictions for Florida

  • July 1, 2024 at 12:04 pm
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    After spending more than a decade on federal supervised release, I can say that most of the information in the “source” section is correct. However, special conditions for sex offenders vary wildly. It all depends on the location of the sentencing court, mitigating factors, a plea deal versus trial, the attitude of the sentencing judge, and more.

    For example, my sentencing judge (who presided over my CP trial and who favored the government by allowing false testimony from a federal agent to stand on the record without correction) originally sentenced me to prison and supervised release for LIFE on the basis that I maintain my innocence.

    I fought for early termination of my lifetime supervised release on many occasions, bringing forth multiple risk assessments showing that I am no danger to the public, with more than 20 clean polygraphs including specific issue test for innocence, and finally the recommendation from the US Probation Office. Only when the probation officer made the request did the judge grant it. But, he sealed the record so the public can’t see his order. It appears the judge did not realize that the probation officer gave me a copy of the order. So, sealing it was useless. But it does help to show how corrupt this case was from the beginning. If you get a bad judge in federal court, there is almost nothing you can do about it. They don’t have to recuse themselves if you ask. And they can destroy your life without any accountability because they maintain lifetime appointments.

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