Pre-Sentence Interview (PSI): How to Prepare & Protect Your Future
Possibly the most important interview of your life. The PSI drives the Pre-Sentence Report (PSR) the judge will rely on to determine your sentence—and it can influence BOP placement and RDAP eligibility. Go in prepared.
Why the PSI Matters So Much
- Shapes the PSR: The probation officer’s write-up becomes the court’s primary reference at sentencing.
- Impacts guideline calculations: Offense conduct, role, loss/drug amounts, acceptance, and criminal history flow from information gathered here.
- Affects BOP outcomes: Health history, substance-use history, education, employment, and program needs recorded in the PSR can influence designation, programming, and RDAP eligibility.
What to Expect in a Federal PSI
Topic | Examples of What You’ll Be Asked |
---|---|
Personal background | Family, education, employment, finances, military, housing. |
Physical & mental health | Diagnoses, medications, treatment history, current needs. |
Substance-use history | Alcohol/drug use timeline, treatment—key for RDAP screening. |
Offense conduct | Your version of events, role, relevant conduct, victims, restitution. |
Criminal history | Priors, probation/parole, pending matters. |
After the interview, probation drafts the PSR. You and your counsel can review and submit written objections/corrections before it’s finalized.
Top Preparation Steps (What We Do with Clients)
- Mock interview & messaging: Practice accurate, consistent answers that address responsibility without creating new exposure.
- Document pack: Medical records, prescriptions, treatment proof, education/work history, certificates—ready to hand probation.
- RDAP readiness: Carefully document qualifying substance-use history (when appropriate) so PSR language aligns with eligibility criteria.
- Loss/role & guideline issues: Align your statement with defense positions; avoid casual statements that inflate loss, role, or relevant conduct.
- Mitigation narrative: Family responsibilities, community service, rehabilitation steps, and support letters to inform the PSR.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Going in cold: Inconsistent or unsupported statements become hard-to-undo PSR entries.
- Minimizing health or treatment needs: Undercuts medical care and programming access later.
- Guessing on numbers/dates: “Off-the-cuff” loss figures or timelines can increase guideline ranges.
- Volunteering uncharged conduct: May expand relevant conduct; coordinate with counsel.
PSI → PSR → Sentencing: The Timeline
- Interview scheduled: Probation sets date/location (in person or virtual).
- Draft PSR issued: Defense reviews; objections and supporting exhibits are submitted on deadline.
- Final PSR & addendum: Judge receives the final report; unresolved objections are addressed at sentencing.
Accurate records and timely objections are essential—errors in the PSR can follow you into BOP custody.
How Prison Law Firm Helps
- One-on-one PSI prep and mock interviews.
- Curated document packet for probation and the court.
- RDAP-oriented drafting of medical/substance-use history where appropriate.
- Targeted PSR objections and sentencing mitigation support.
Schedule a PSI Prep Consultation
This page provides general information, not legal advice. Your situation may differ.