As of July 14, 2014, the Virginia Parole Board is required to automatically review all cases of persons who are incarcerated and eligible for geriatric conditional release. The aim of this study is to determine if this statute revision led to a significant increase in the number of people (1) being reviewed for parole, (2) being paroled under this statute. Publicly available data on parole decisions provided by the Virginia Parole Board website were used to conduct descriptive data analyses on geriatric conditional release decisions for the period under study. Data was available before and after the statute change allowing for a pre-test post-test quasi-experiment. Results indicated a rate of 9.7 geriatric persons granted parole per year pre-statute change and 30 persons paroled per year post- statute change. The percentage of people paroled annually remained stable. A Mann–Whitney U test was used to assess differences in proportions of groups of people who were reviewed, and a two-sample z test of proportions was conducted to determine if there were differences in pre- and post- statute approvals for geriatric conditional release. Results indicated there was no statistically significant difference in the before and after reviewed (z = 0.660, p = 0.5092) or approval groups (z = 0.7, p = 0.5063). There was a statistically significant increase in the geriatric population during this period (z = 12.4, p = 0.0001). Policy implications will be discussed. Further research should examine the factors affecting elder parole decisions, the continuing growth of the elder prison population, and the effects of elderly persons’ return to the community.