What they're not telling you: # New York Parole Bills Could Free Some Of The State's Most Notorious Killers Two parole reform bills advancing through New York could allow some of the state's most notorious murderers—including David Berkowitz and Mark David Chapman—to walk free. The Elder Parole bill would permit inmates to request parole hearings at age 55 after serving at least 15 years, a threshold that extends eligibility to those serving life sentences. A second measure, Fair and Timely Parole, would fundamentally reorient how the state's parole board evaluates prisoners, shifting emphasis away from the severity of the original crime toward current risk assessment.
What the Documents Show
Under this framework, inmates could be released if board members determine they no longer pose an immediate threat to public safety, regardless of what they did decades earlier. Supporters frame these measures as overdue criminal justice reform. Release Aging People in Prison argues that elderly inmates who demonstrate rehabilitation represent an expensive burden with minimal public safety value. Olivia Murphy of the organization stated: "The evidence is clear that forcing completely rehabilitated elders to spend their final years in prison costs a fortune and delivers zero public safety benefit." Advocates highlight that older prisoners commit crimes at dramatically lower rates than younger cohorts and that aging inmates consume disproportionate state resources through medical care. The framing—rehabilitation, cost-benefit analysis, evidence-based policy—dominates mainstream discussions of these bills.
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What receives less attention is the specificity of who could actually be released. Berkowitz, the "Son of Sam" serial killer who murdered six people and wounded seven others in the 1970s, and Chapman, who assassinated John Lennon in 1980, both committed crimes serious enough to warrant life sentences. Under Fair and Timely Parole, their release eligibility would hinge not on the violence they inflicted but on psychiatric evaluations of current dangerousness—a standard that skeptics argue is subjective and potentially malleable. Critics like Raphael Mangual of the Manhattan Institute argue the bills ignore a fundamental principle: that severe punishment should reflect the gravity of severe crimes. "It really shouldn't matter how well somebody behaves in prison. You should have behaved before you got there," Mangual said.
What Else We Know
Victims' families have also voiced opposition, though their specific concerns remain underreported in coverage that emphasizes the rehabilitative potential of long-incarcerated offenders. The broader implication for ordinary New Yorkers is substantial. These bills represent a systematic recalibration of how the state weighs victim impact against prisoner rehabilitation potential. If passed, they signal that life sentences may function not as permanent consequences but as provisional punishments—reviewable decades later when public attention has faded and victims have aged or died. For families of murder victims, the bills create the possibility of additional trauma through parole hearings. For the state, they shift resources toward elderly prisoner care and parole review processes.
Primary Sources
- Source: ZeroHedge
- Category: Government Secrets
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