ST. LOUIS — Former St. Louis Alderman Jeffrey Boyd, who pleaded guilty to taking bribes from a local businessman, has been released from federal prison.
A federal inmate tracker says Boyd is in the custody of the St. Louis Residential Reentry Management field office, which supervises people who have been released from prison and are serving time on home confinement or in halfway houses.
Officials with the U.S. Bureau of Prisons did not respond to a request for information about where, exactly, Boyd is staying.
Boyd was sentenced alongside former Aldermanic President Lewis Reed and ex-Alderman John Collins-Muhammad in December 2022 for taking bribes from the co-owner of several gas stations in north St. Louis and St. Louis County.
Boyd was sentenced to three years in prison, and Reed and Collins-Muhammad were sentenced to three years and nine months.
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All three men have requested that a judge reduce their sentences, citing new guidelines a federal commission that calculates sentencing ranges based on factors such as the nature of the crime and a person’s criminal history.
µþ´Ç²â»å’s reduction was denied, and federal prosecutors filed to oppose Reed and Collins-Muhammad’s requests. A judge will make a decision on their sentences at a later date.
Currently, Reed and Collins-Muhammad are projected to complete their sentences in late October 2025, according to Bureau of Prison records.
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