Jenkins committed more crimes while in prison and still qualified for good time. Problem 1
And he lost good time for it, yes? (As a question, do you actually know what is required for an inmate to lose good time?) You can't lose the concept of good time---merely specific amounts of good time.
He did not get more time for prison crimes. Problem 2
Other than losing good time. Which is more prison time.
I'm curious, though---did any prosecutor decide that his "assaults" (not in quotes because I don't believe it, merely because we don't know exactly the circumstances) were worthy of prosecution further, instead of loss of good time?
He was threatening people in the justice system and was still let out. Problem 3
Did any of those threats move to the level required for prosecution?
We can't just "leave someone in prison" because they threatened someone. Unless, of course, it goes through a court system and they get convicted or "terroristic threats" or something similar. Did any of them? No?
So---what exactly was the department of corrections supposed to do? (Again---on their jam day, the DoC
has to let the inmate free. Otherwise, it is a remarkably painful lawsuit, which the state will lose.) What grounds did they have to extend the sentence?
They protected themselves but didn't tell anyone else. Problem 4
Which "they" is this? If I recall correctly, the department notified the police, who of course cannot monitor everyone 24 hours a day. Who else should have been notified? The public?
If so, you are in for a shock with respect to how many criminals are let go each and every day.
His record should disqualify him from good time benefits. Problem 5
Then you will need to completely change the way that the State of Nebraska runs its correctional system, which is set by the legislature. I look forward to seeing your election to the Unicameral.
Hopefully these issues will see some review.
I'm sure there will be a lot of politics, for little substantive change. It would be nice if the good-time laws were made more strict, and less "nice," that's true. But I'm not holding my breath for any change that does anything real.
After all---letting out violent criminals happens all the time. When the sentence is over, that's it.