US Federal 2025-2026 Regular Session

US Federal Senate Bill SB1295

Introduced
4/3/25  

Caption

BOP SCAN Mail Act Bureau Of Prisons Security Check and Action against Narcotics in Mail Act

Impact

The implementation of SB1295 is expected to fundamentally change operational methodologies within correctional facilities. The bill requires the Director to evaluate the current capabilities of synthetic drug interdiction technologies and propose a comprehensive strategy to ensure that all Federal correctional facilities achieve 100 percent mail scanning capacity. By digitally scanning incoming mail and preserving the privacy of legal communications, the bill aims to reduce the risk of drug overdoses and enhance the overall safety of inmates and staff. Moreover, the plan is designed to relieve existing staffing burdens associated with mail processing, offering potential budgetary relief.

Summary

SB1295, also known as the Bureau Of Prisons Security Check and Action against Narcotics in Mail Act, mandates the Director of the Bureau of Prisons to develop and implement a strategy aimed at intercepting fentanyl and other synthetic drugs that are smuggled through the mail into federal correctional facilities. This bill highlights the alarming rise in drug overdoses within prisons, attributed to the influx of dangerous contraband through inmate mail, indicating the urgent necessity for enhanced security measures to protect both inmates and prison employees.

Contention

Notably, there remains contention around the efficacy and feasibility of achieving the proposed goals within the outlined timeframe. Critics may argue about the potential costs associated with the implementation of comprehensive mail scanning technologies and the ongoing challenge of ensuring that measures uphold inmates' rights to receive legal correspondence while simultaneously enforcing safety protocols. If successful, the strategy proposed in SB1295 could serve as a critical model for addressing transnational drug smuggling issues within the prison system and could stimulate future legislative actions aimed at improving correctional facility safety.

Congress_id

119-S-1295

Introduced_date

2025-04-03

Companion Bills

US HB1046

Related Marc Fischer Memorial Act Marc Fischer Memorial Interdiction of Fentanyl in Postal Mail at Federal Prisons Act

Previously Filed As

US HB1046

Marc Fischer Memorial Act Marc Fischer Memorial Interdiction of Fentanyl in Postal Mail at Federal Prisons Act

US SB1641

CD CORR-DOC SCAN PRISONER MAIL

US HB5742

BOPEN Act of 2025 Bureau of Prisons Earnings Now Act of 2025

US HB5974

Bureau of Prisons Pay Protection Act

US HB2024

Joint Task Force to Counter Illicit Synthetic Narcotics Act of 2025

US SB938

Joint Task Force to Counter Illicit Synthetic Narcotics Act of 2025

US HB2698

Bolstering Security Against Ghost Guns Act

US SB2292

Agricultural & Livestock Theft Bureau; authorize to relocate to vacated Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics facilities.

US HB3344

Sovereign States Bureau of Prisons Restructuring Act of 2025

US HR959

Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that illicit fentanyl-related substances are a weapon of mass destruction and should be classified as such, and recognizing President Trump's efforts to mitigate illicit narcotics from entering the United States through such actions as signing an Executive Order "Designating Fentanyl as a Weapon of Mass Destruction" and declaring the crisis caused by the rise of fentanyl a national health emergency.

Similar Bills

No similar bills found.