Category: Prisons
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 / 8721 SEEN/ Florida Commission’s parole supervision can turn on personality, perceptionBy Deirdra Funcheon 
 JJIE.org
 While most Florida Commission on Offender Review decisions are made during hearings without the inmate present, parolees whose supervision terms are being reviewed sometimes do show up in person.
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 Florida Commission decides medical release for very sick inmates, but doesn’t meet themBy Deirdra Funcheon 
 FloridaBulldog.org
 Some inmates deemed “terminally ill” or “permanently incapacitated” and not a danger to themselves or others are referred by the Department of Corrections to have their cases heard by the Florida Commission on Offender Review (FCOR), a three-person panel, and be considered for conditional medical release (CMR).
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 Three on Florida commission decide parole for thousands of inmatesBy Deirdra Funchson 
 JJIE
 Whether or not to let certain inmates out of prison is a decision that falls to the Florida Commission on Offender Review (FCOR), consisting of three commissioners appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state Senate.
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Florida’s Longest-Serving Inmates: They Get Older, Sicker and More Well-behavedBy Dan Christensen 
 FloridaBulldog.org
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 Is Florida’s prison diet strictly kosher? Who knows? U.S. monitor has backed offBy Noreen Marcus 
 FloridaBulldog.org
 Court oversight of Florida’s kosher diet program, prison variety, appears to be dissolving like a sugar cube in hot tea.
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