Maynor moved for compassionate release, arguing that the combination of his age, hypertension, previous infections, lung disease, and sleep apnea increased his vulnerability to COVID-19. Among these conditions, only hypertension is a CDC risk category, but the court found that the combination of all factors created an "extraordinary and compelling" justification for his release, allowing him to serve out the rest of his sentence under home incarceration at his parents' residence. While Maynor did have a significant criminal history, the court concluded that early release would not increase his chances of recidivism since he had already served approximately 80% of his term.
United States v. Maynor, No. 10-30015, 2021 WL 1224901 (C.D. Ill. Mar. 31, 2021)
DETAILS
Decision
Date
03/31/2021
Practice Area
Criminal (Federal Charges)
Relief Requested
Release
Type of Court
Federal District Court
Location
Illinois
Type of Case
Individual
Case Characteristics
Post-Conviction Detention [jail or prison], Pre-Existing Health Conditions, Significant Criminal History
Release Granted
Yes
Compassionate Release Case
Yes
Compassionate Release Specific Characteristics
Has a disciplinary history, Has a significant criminal history
Nine months in home confinement with the first 14 days in self-quarantine; telephonic monitoring
Convictions
Manufacture of a substance containing methamphetamine; criminal history of "battery, violation of an order of protection, animal cruelty, and multiple drug offenses"
Case Status
Decision Made
Pre-Existing Health Conditions
Age, Hypertension (high blood pressure), Lung Disease, Other, Sleep apnea; recently diagnosed with MRSA and staphylococcus; back surgeries
COVID-19 Positive or Symptomatic
Not Discussed
COVID-19 in Jail Prison or Detention Center
Not Discussed
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.