Why no followup question of Biden statement about no prison for nonviolent criminal conduct?

Becket Adams:
Former Vice President Joe Biden went big Thursday evening at the Democratic primary debate in Houston, declaring that nonviolent criminals should not be in jail.

The moment occurred after the 2020 front-runner was asked specifically to explain his plan to release “nonviolent drug offenders from prison." Biden was asked also to respond to critics who say his plan is not “ambitious enough.”

"The fact of the matter is that what's happened is that we're in a situation now where there are so many people who are in jail who shouldn't be in jail," he said, adding [emphasis added], "Nobody should be in jail for a nonviolent crime.”

Biden obviously needs to refine that a bit. Because the way it stands now, he just advocated for the release of all nonviolent criminals, including Ponzi scammer Bernie Madoff, FBI-agent-turned-Russian-spy Robert Hanssen, and, of course, President Trump’s one-time campaign chairman and all-around sleazebag Paul Manafort.

Surely Biden is not running on a platform that calls for the release of Manafort, of all people. Imagine trying to win over the Democratic base with that message.
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Did the moderators or other candidates challenge him on this statement?   Even if he was trying to limit this to nonviolent drug offenders, it is certainly inconsistent with the laws he sponsored as a Senator.

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