It depends on whether they are a violent felon or not. You make it sound like ANY felon should NEVER be released. Would you keep EVERY felon in jail for the rest of their lives?
Violent crime is skyrocketing now that felons are being released before their sentence is finished.
Only a moron couldn't connect the dots.
I would argue violent crime is flat like your brain.
Let me break into your home, tie up your family, threaten to rape your 5 year old if you don't stop crying. Then steal what I want.
Nonviolent felon, I never used a weapon nor touched any of you.
No dimwit, a violent offender is classified also by intent. Just because someone got caught doing something that most of do but never got arrested for doesn't make him or her violent. You want to turn a mole hill into a mountain.
Now you just make up stuff.
Leopoldo Arellano, 39, was in and out of custody at least 18 times from 2012 to 2014 for violating parole, criminal threats and at least four incidents of domestic battery, according to Los Angeles County jail logs.
San Diego County let parolee Demetrius Roberts go early 12 times; mostly for removing or tampering with his GPS tracker, which he was required to wear as a convicted sex offender.
In Stockton last year, a furor erupted over the repeated releases of Sidney DeAvila, another convicted sex offender. He had been brought to the San Joaquin County jail 11 times in 2012 and 2013 for disarming his GPS tracker, drug use and other parole violations.
He was freed nearly every time within 24 hours, even when he was brought to the jail by the state's Fugitive Apprehension Team.
Days after being let out early in February 2013, DeAvila went to his grandmother's house, raped and killed the 76-year-old woman, then chopped her body into pieces. He was found later that day with the woman's jewelry around his neck.
Early jail releases have surged since California's prison realignment