Petitioner moved for compassionate release, arguing that her pre-existing health conditions (including anxiety, PTSD, diabetes, hypertension, and respiratory difficulties) put her at risk of serious illness should she contract COVID. Significantly, the facility had several COVID cases and deaths. The court rejected this motion because petitioner failed to exhaust administrative remedies; while petitioner sent a request to the warden, the request was for "home confinement" rather than compassionate release. The court continued to hold that on the merits, she failed to show extraordinary and compelling reasons for release because she had not provided medical documentation of her pre-existing health conditions.
United States v. Isidaehomen, No. 3:16-cr-0240-B-4, 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 179408 (N.D. Tex. Sept 30, 2020)
DETAILS
Decision
Date
09/29/2020
Practice Area
Criminal (Federal Charges)
Relief Requested
Release
Type of Court
Federal District Court
Location
Texas
Type of Case
Individual
Case Characteristics
Pre-Existing Health Conditions
Release Granted
No
Compassionate Release Case
Yes
Case Tracking Number
3:16-cr-00240-B
MORE CASE INFORMATION
Court Name
N.D. Tex.
Decision
Motion Denied
Place of Incarceration
Other
Name of Facility
Federal Medical Center Carswell
Legal Authority
First Step Act Exhaustion, First Step Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3582(c)(1)(A)
Convictions
Conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud. Release date of 09/17/2025.
In a subsequent case (United States v. Isidaehomen, No. 3:16-CR-0240-B-4, 2021 WL 243458 (N.D. Tex. Jan. 25, 2021)), petitioner managed to exhaust her administrative remedies. But the court denied her motion for compassionate release because she had received the COVID vaccine so her risk of COVID-related illness were dramatically lessened.
Litigation Database
Crowdsourced legal documents from around the country related to COVID-19 and incarceration, organized, collected, and summarized for public defenders, litigators, and other advocates. Created and managed by Bronx Defenders, Columbia Law School’s Center for Institutional and Social Change, UCLA Law COVID-19 Behind Bars Data Project, and Zealous. Mostly federal court opinions, but now expanding to states and legal filings, declarations, and exhibits.
This resource is designed to help lawyers, advocates, researchers, journalists, and others interested in challenging, remedying, or drawing attention to the grave risk that Covid-19 poses to individuals who are detained.