“All other crimes — murders, assaults, rape, all those kinds of things — the sentence you get has a maximum and a minimum, there’s no possibility of parole,” said Keith Acree, spokesperson of the N.C. Department of Public Safety. “You have to serve 100 percent of that minimum.”
This meant that in 2015, six inmates were awarded parole by the end of September.
Parole eligibility was almost entirely eliminated under the Structured Sentencing Act, which was implemented in 1994 and replaced the Fair Sentencing Act, Acree said.
He said the percentage of inmates left in the system who are still parole eligible for crimes other than drunken driving is small because of the length of time since 1994.
“It’s about between 3,000 and 4,000 inmates of a population of about 37,000,” Acree said.
He said the difficulty of obtaining parole is due to the diminishing pool of inmates who were convicted before 1994.
“The people that are left in prison who are parole eligible are (for) very, very egregious crimes — the crime was just so heinous, so serious,” he said. “As that pool of people shrinks every year, it gets harder and harder to find people in there that the commission are comfortable paroling.”
He said under the Fair Sentencing Act, most inmates would serve a fraction of their sentence.