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April 8, 2026 at 3:14 am #11821
Kris Marker
KeymasterWe post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.
NOTE TO GOVERNMENT LAWYER – DON’T TAKE THE BOP’S WORD FOR ANYTHING
You may remember the awful case of Frederick Bardell, the Federal Bureau of Prisons inmate whose colon cancer was ignored by the BOP until it was too late, and then, when the court ordered compassionate release, dumped him on the sidewalk in front of DFW Airport, expecting the wheelchair-bound man to board and change planes to get home.Mr. Bardell made it only through the kindness of strangers. When his parents met at the Jacksonville airport, they took him straight to the hospital. Mr. Bardell died there a week later.
Senior US District Judge Roy Dalton was furious, holding the FCI Seagoville warden in contempt and asking the Dept of Justice Inspector General to look into it. The IG issued a Report a few months ago concluding that the BOP’s delayed scheduling of urgent medical appointments led to Mr. Bardell’s “death by treatable cancer.” Contributing to the debacle, the IG found, was the “DOJ’s reliance on the BOP’s representations without further Inquiry.”
The BOP’s inferior healthcare has reared up to bite another inmate, but unfortunately for the Bureau, the inmate had been sentenced by Judge Dalton. Justina Holland sought compassionate release for an untreated medical problem, with the Government predictably denying that there was any emergency. The Court told the BOP he would grant Justina’s compassionate release if the agency didn’t get her to a breast surgeon within a month. The BOP sent her to the wrong specialist, and when an appointment with the right one was made, so much time had elapsed that she wouldn’t get in until May. When the Judge ordered the government to produce Justina’s complete medical file (including an urgent referral to a specialist from the first week in January), he got Epstein-file treatment: a lot of pages, but the critical pages, the smoking guns – such as the doctor’s urgent referral – were missing.
Last week, Judge Dalton granted Justina’s compassionate release motion. He did not mince words:
The failure to provide inmates with urgent medical care is now a well-documented problem with the BOP. See OIG Report at 50–51. Three months ago, with lumps in both breasts and bleeding from the nipples, Ms. Holland received an urgent referral for a doctor’s appointment to check for cancer. She still has not seen a doctor. The BOP’s repeated failures—to timely provide Ms. Holland with an appointment, to get her to the right doctor, even to collect her complete medical records—self-evidently show that Ms. Holland has an extraordinary and compelling medical circumstance qualifying her for compassionate release.
The Judge blasted BOP healthcare: “Nothing seems to move the nation’s federal prison system operators to improve their response to the urgent medical needs of the federal prison population,” he wrote. “Court orders go unread or ignored. OIG reports are dismissed, recommendations unheeded. Sanctions brook no change. Outside medical referrals are like Solzhenitsyn’s sick bay in the Soviet Gulag: a coveted but nearly inaccessible refuge for which only prisoners near death qualify for admission.”He was equally blunt about the BOP’s reputation for truthfulness: Department of DOJ attorneys must be mindful in dealing with the BOP to ensure they comply with their duty of candor to the Court. A client who repeatedly fails to comply with court orders and OIG recommendations falls into the ‘trust but verify’ category of governmental agencies. There can be no presumption of regularity. The BOP will emerge unscathed, while the Government’s lawyer—and most importantly, the inmate—will carry the scars of its misfeasance.”
The BOP’s habits of misrepresenting inmate healthcare is hardly new. But the agency should probably avoid trying its prevarications and half-truths on the same judge more than once. This attempt did not end well for the agency (but Justina was granted compassionate release, and is presumably getting timely healthcare once again).So there’s one winner here…
Order (Doc 207), United States v. Holland, Case No. 6:20-cr-86 (MD Fla, March 31, 2026)
NOTUS, A Federal Judge Compared the U.S. Prison System to a ‘Soviet Gulag’ Over Inmate Health Concerns (April 3, 2026)
~ Thomas L. Root
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