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58 Fed. Probation 45 (1994)
An Analysis of Home Confinement as a Sanction

handle is hein.journals/fedpro58 and id is 47 raw text is: An Analysis of Home Confinement as a
Sanction
By STEPHEN J RACKMILL
Chief United States Probation Officer, Eastern District of New York

N 1988, in Addison County, Vermont, the Honor
able Frances McCaffrey stunned an already
cynical public when he imposed an innovative
but controversial sentencing sanction on a convicted
cocaine peddler who stood before him for punish-
ment. The defendant, at 26, had been a student at
Middlebury College and was known on campus as
the pharmacist in view of his drug dispensing capa-
bilities. What made this defendant unique was that
John Zaccaro, Jr., was the son of the 1984 Demo-
cratic Vice Presidential candidate, Geraldine A. Fer
raro, and the product of an affluent, influential
background. With his defense lawyers at his side,
defendant Zaccaro was sentenced to serve 4 months
of a one-to-five-year suspended prison term under
house arrest rather than behind bars.
Within a short time, the media discovered that Zac
caro was serving his period of house arrest in a $1,500-
a-month luxury apartment in Burlington, Vermont,
which included cable television, maid services, and
privileges at the neighboring YMCA. When inter
viewed, the prosecutor, John Quinn, stated that house
arrest is ajoke and concluded that Zaccaro was, for the
most part, not being punished but grounded for 90
days. Expressing the view that Zaccaro's incarceration
under an experimental program was making a mock
ery of the jail sentence, a spokesperson for Vermont's
then Governor, Madeline M. Kunin, stated, We will
take a look and maybe we will make some changes.'
In spite of the protestations, Zaccaro successfully com-
pleted the program without incident.
In a recent, celebrated case, arms dealer Adnan
Khashoggi was released under house arrest after post-
ing $10 million bail following an indictment on charges
of mail fraud and obstruction of justice for allegedly
helping Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos plunder the
Philippine Treasury. The decision to release
Khashoggi under house arrest caused substantial con-
troversy
In July, Mr. Khashoggi traded a 75 sq. ft. cell at the Metropolitan
Correctional Center in Manhattan for his 30,000 sq. ft. luxury
Fifth Avenue apartment overlooking the spires of St. Patrick's
Cathedral-complete with  swimming pool. The Saudi arms
dealer wears the band on his right ankle according to officials in
the U.S. Marshal's Office. The 54-year-old defendant was origi-
nally restricted to the court's jurisdiction-New York City and
surrounding northern suburbs-which apparently affords him
access to many of the city's posh watering holes. His hours are
loosely restricted, too. He must remain home from 1:00 a.m. to
8:00 a.m. He received the court's permission to make holiday trips
to Aspen, Colorado and his family home in Ft. Lauderdale,

Florida, one of the twelve residences he owns throughout the
globe.2
In this era of increasing public outrage concerning a
growing crime problem-and a Presidential commit-
ment to wage a war on drugs-were the court's contro-
versial dispositions in these two cases merely
anomalies or were they balanced attempts to find
suitable alternatives to incarceration? In sentencing
jurisdictions throughout the country, judges are being
faced with balancing such competing objectives as
public safety, humaneness, and the assurance of of-
fender accountability, while confronting accelerating
increases in prison overcrowding and a political com-
mitment to incapacitation and retributive justice.
The Probation and Pretrial Services Division of the
Administrative Office of the United States Courts
points out that the use of house arrest and electronic
monitoring equipment is increasing as an alternative
to pretrial detention. During 1989, 185 defendants
were placed on electronic monitoring in the Federal
system. Judicial officers are beginning to use house
arrest and curfew as mechanisms to release offenders
who otherwise may be confined to local jails.3
In discussing the rationale for home confinement for
pretrial defendants, the Administrative Office of the
United States Courts makes the following declaration:
The purpose of home confinement is to provide, in concert with
pretrial services supervision, an alternative to detention for those
persons whose non-appearance or danger to community safety
cannot be controlled by less restrictive release conditions. Pun-
ishment is not appropriate for persons presumed innocent; there-
fore, home confinement is not used to punish, only to assure
appearance and community safety.4
In addition to providing cost-effective alternatives to
incarceration at the pretrial and sentencing stages of
the process, home confinement programs are being
used at the Federal level as a method to release inmates
from custody before their scheduled parole release
date. On March 3, 1986, the United States Parole
Commission implemented an experimental program
to provide an alternative to community correction
center residence during the 60-day period before the
parole release date. This Curfew Parole Program
is designed for prisoners who would otherwise qualify for
community treatment center residence, but who have acceptable
release plans and do not require the support services provided by
the community treatment center. Under this program, qualified
and approved prisoners have their release date advanced for up
to 60 days on the condition that they remain at their place of
residence between the hours of 9 p.m. and 5 a.m. every night
Vol. 58, No. I

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