Sex Crime Convict Brock Turner Serves 3 Months, Released

SAN FRANCISCO (AP/KMJ) – A former Stanford University swimmer whose six-month sentence for sexually assaulting an unconscious woman sparked national outcry has been released from jail after serving half his term.

Brock Turner walked out the main entrance of the Santa Clara County jail Friday and plans to head to his native Ohio to live with his parents. The 21-year-old must register as a sex offender for life and faces three years of supervised probation.

Turner’s case exploded into the spotlight when a statement from the victim swept across social media and critics decried the sentence as too lenient.  The judge, Aaron Persky, has since stepped away from trying criminal cases.

Why Brock Turner spent three months in jail Judge Aaron Persky (CNN)

He was convicted of assaulting the young woman near a trash bin after they drank heavily at a fraternity party in January 2015. Turner plans to appeal.

Turner’s case burst into the national spotlight when a statement from the 23 year old victim went viral on social media – even catching the attention of Vice President Joe Biden.

The controversial case has sparked a new law in California that would mandate prison sentences for such convictions.  The legislation is now on Governor Brown’s desk.

California jail inmates with good behavior typically serve half their sentences.

WHY ONLY 3 MONTHS?

(CNN) – Former Stanford University swimmer Brock Turner left Santa Clara County Jail on Friday — three months shy of his six-month sentence for sexually assaulting an unconscious woman.

Here’s why: Because of the Criminal Justice Realignment Act of 2011, offenders in California sentenced to time in county jail are eligible to cut their sentences in half at an accelerated rate, as long as they behave. For every two days of actual time served, the defendant receives two days of actual time credit and two days of conduct credit — for a total of four days of credit, or essentially half-time credit.

Still confused? In a nutshell: Serve two, get two — as long as there aren’t any incidents.

So in Brock Turner’s case, he could get out in three months.

The provisions apply to inmates serving a misdemeanor sentence or felons, like Turner, sentenced to county jail as part of their probation.

Most states grant good conduct credit, and anyone who works in or passes through the system likely knows about it.

When the judge in Turner’s case announced he was inclined to sentence him to six months, Deputy District Attorney Alaleh Kianerci urged him to reconsider, noting that six months “really means three months in county jail.”

California’s formula has changed several times over the years. In 2011, it went to the current ratio and eliminated provisions that excluded inmates convicted of serious felonies, those required to register as sex offenders, or inmates with prior serious or violent felonies.

The change was intended to help alleviate overcrowding in California’s jails and prisons, a problem that persists today.