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SB0614 • 2026

Parole for Long-term Prisoners

Parole for Long-term Prisoners

Crime Education
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Smith
Last action
2026-03-13
Official status
Senate - Died in Criminal Justice
Effective date
2026-07-01

Plain English Breakdown

The bill did not pass into law as it died in committee.

Parole for Long-term Prisoners

This bill allows certain long-term prisoners to become eligible for parole under specific conditions and requires them to follow strict rules after release.

What This Bill Does

  • Makes prisoners who have served more than 10 years (or 20 years if the crime resulted in death) eligible for parole, unless they are sexual predators.
  • Requires these prisoners to meet several criteria before being considered for parole, such as having a high school diploma or GED and completing various rehabilitation programs.
  • Sets conditions that must be followed by released prisoners, including living under community control, participating in transition homes, adhering to curfews, reporting monthly to officers, attending support meetings, working at least 20 hours per week, paying restitution if ordered, volunteering, and avoiding contact with victims without permission.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Long-term prisoners who have served more than 10 years (or 20 years if their crime resulted in death) and are not sexual predators.
  • The Florida Commission on Offender Review which will handle parole applications.
  • Victims of crimes committed by these long-term prisoners.

Terms To Know

Parole
A system that allows certain prisoners to be released early from prison under supervision and conditions set by a parole board.
Rehabilitation
The process of helping someone change their behavior or attitudes, often used in the context of criminal justice to help offenders become better members of society.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This bill did not pass into law as it died in committee.
  • It is unclear how many prisoners will be eligible for parole under these new rules.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-13 Senate

    • Died in Criminal Justice

  2. 2026-01-13 Senate

    • Introduced

  3. 2025-12-09 Senate

    • Referred to Criminal Justice; Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice; Fiscal Policy

  4. 2025-11-20 Senate

    • Filed

Official Summary Text

Parole for Long-term Prisoners; Providing that certain offenders serving long-term prison sentences are parole eligible under certain circumstances; providing conditions of parole for such persons; providing for disposition of savings produced by such a program of parole, etc.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
Florida Senate
-
2026

SB 614

By
Senator Smith

17-00431-26 2026614__
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to parole for long-term prisoners;
3 creating s. 947.161, F.S.; providing that certain
4 offenders serving long-term prison sentences are
5 parole eligible under certain circumstances; providing
6 for retroactive application; specifying eligibility
7 requirements; providing conditions of parole for such
8 persons; providing for disposition of savings produced
9 by such a program of parole; providing an effective
10 date.
11
12 WHEREAS, according to a report by the Florida Commission on
13 Offender Review, “97.5 percent of parolees have successfully
14 completed their parole supervision without revocation within the
15 first 3 years of release,” signifying that parole is effective,
16 and
17 WHEREAS, long-term incarceration disproportionately impacts
18 poor communities and communities of color, and
19 WHEREAS, the costs of long-term incarceration are social,
20 cultural, and economic and cause additional harm to society over
21 and above the costs of the crime committed, and
22 WHEREAS, the annual financial cost to incarcerate an
23 individual in this state averages more than $28,000 per inmate
24 per year, and
25 WHEREAS, a 25-year study found that people who commit
26 violent crimes may be less likely to commit another serious
27 offense, and
28 WHEREAS, of persons convicted of violent crimes, only 4
29 percent who are released between ages 45 and 54 reoffend, and
30 that number drops even further to 1 percent at age 55 and above,
31 and among people previously convicted of murder, those rates
32 fall to 1.5 percent and 0.4 percent, respectively, indicating
33 that recidivism rates decline dramatically as people age, and
34 WHEREAS, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 174 people were
35 resentenced and released after having been sentenced to life
36 without parole for homicides committed as children, and after
37 they had been in the community for an average of 21 months, only
38 2 persons (1.1 percent) had been reconvicted of any offense, and
39 WHEREAS, in Maryland, 188 people serving life without
40 parole, mostly for murder or rape, were released after serving
41 30 or more years after a court ruled that jury instructions in
42 their cases had been unconstitutional, and 6 years later, only 5
43 persons (2.7 percent) had returned to prison either for
44 violating parole or for committing a new crime, and
45 WHEREAS, it is the intent of the Legislature to advance
46 public safety through punishment, rehabilitation, and
47 restorative practices, and when a sentence includes
48 incarceration, these purposes are best served by terms that are
49 proportionate to the seriousness of the offense and that provide
50 uniformity in the sentences of offenders committing the same
51 offense under similar circumstances, and
52 WHEREAS, by providing a means to reevaluate a sentence
53 after a certain period of time has passed, the Legislature
54 intends to provide the tools to ensure these purposes are
55 achieved if it is determined that the original sentence no
56 longer advances the interests of justice and the offender is no
57 longer a public safety risk, NOW, THEREFORE,
58
59 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
60
61 Section 1. Section 947.161, Florida Statutes, is created to
62 read:
63
947.161

Parole for long-term prisoners.—

64
(1)

Notwithstanding any other law and excluding death

65
sentences, a sentence of incarceration that exceeds 10 years for

66
an offense that did not result in death, or 20 years if the

67
offense resulted in death and for which the offender was not

68
designated a sexual predator, shall become a parole-eligible

69
sentence and the offender referred to the commission due to the

70
valuable rehabilitative incentive provided by parole-eligible

71
sentences and the success of parolees as compared to the lack

72
thereof with regard to parole-ineligible sentences and releases

73
notwithstanding any other provision of law, including any

74
applicable mandatory minimum term of imprisonment, prison

75
releasee reoffender, life sentence, or life-like sentence. This

76
section applies to any offender, including those sentenced on or

77
before the effective date of this section.

78
(2)

The offender may apply to the commission for parole

79
consideration under this section only if he or she satisfies all

80
of the following requirements:

81
(a)

Has no disciplinary offenses in the 7 years before the

82
review and the overall number of offenses declined while he or

83
she was incarcerated.

84
(b)

Possesses a high school diploma or GED.

85
(c)

Has successfully completed a faith- and character-based

86
program within the department.

87
(d)

Has successfully completed victim impact education.

88
(e)

Has successfully completed anger management education.

89
(f)

Has completed alcohol and substance abuse programming

90
at least once if he or she has no drug or alcohol abuse history,

91
or, if there is a history of drug or alcohol abuse in the last

92
10 years, is currently enrolled in alcohol and substance abuse

93
programming.

94
(g)

Has taken rehabilitation classes, as demonstrated

95
through certificates of completion.

96
(h)

Has participated in the department’s Incentivized

97
Prison Program.

98
(i)

Has a written release plan.

99
(j)

Is 50 years of age or older.

100
(3)

An offender released under this section must do all of

101
the following:

102
(a)

Submit to community control conditions for a period of

103
1 year if the offense the offender committed did not result in a

104
death or 3 years if the offense resulted in a death.

105
(b)

Participate in a transition home for a period of 1

106
year.

107
(c)

Adhere to a curfew from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.

108
(d)

Report monthly to his or her supervising officer.

109
(e)

Appear in person at all parole hearings.

110
(f)

Attend Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous for

111
a minimum period of 1 year if he or she has no substance abuse

112
history and 3 years if he or she has a substance abuse history.

113
(g)

Work a minimum of 20 hours per week, unless he or she

114
receives social security retirement benefits or social security

115
disability benefits.

116
(h)

Pay restitution, if ordered.

117
(i)

Volunteer at least 4 hours a month at a correctional

118
institution in this state.

119
(j)

Not leave his or her county of residence without

120
permission.

121
(k)

Have no contact with any of his or her victims or any

122
of their family members unless approved in writing by the

123
commission.

124
(4)

Subject to legislative appropriation, of the savings

125
realized by the department as a result of this section:

126
(a)

Fifty percent must be designated to fund law

127
enforcement programs designed to counter recidivism through

128
programs, education, and restorative justice practices.

129
(b)

Twenty-five percent must be designated to fund prison

130
and community-based programs designed to counter recidivism

131
through education, therapeutic intervention, maintenance of

132
family and social networks, restorative practices, and

133
successful post-custodial reentry to society.

134
(c)

Twenty-five percent must be designated to fund the

135
staffing of dedicated personnel in the offices of the

136
commission.

137 Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2026.