Sunday, September 18, 2011

https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/184253.pdf

When prisoners return to the community: political, economical, and social issues

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Recidivisim

Recidivism of Prisoners Released in 1994
Patrick A. Langan, Ph.D., David J. Levin, Ph.D.
June 2, 2002    NCJ 193427
Reports on the rearrest, reconviction, and reincarceration of former inmates who were tracked for 3 years after their release from prisons in 15 States in 1994. The former inmates represent two-thirds of all prisoners released in the United States that year. The report includes prisoner demographic characteristics (gender, race, Hispanic origin, and age), criminal record, types of offenses for which they were imprisoned, the effects of length of stay in prison on likelihood of rearrest, and comparisons with a study of prisoners released in 1983.

Highlights include the following:
  • Released prisoners with the highest rearrest rates were robbers (70.2%), burglars (74.0%), larcenists (74.6%), motor vehicle thieves (78.8%), those in prison for possessing or selling stolen property (77.4%), and those in prison for possessing, using, or selling illegal weapons (70.2%).
  • Within 3 years, 2.5% of released rapists were arrested for another rape, and 1.2% of those who had served time for homicide were arrested for homicide.
  • The 272,111 offenders discharged in 1994 had accumulated 4.1 million arrest charges before their most recent imprisonment and another 744,000 charges within 3 years of release.
Part of the Recidivism of Prisoners Released Series
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National Recidivism Study of Released Prisoners
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Newt' Gingrich-Prison reform

Prison reform: A smart way for states to save money and lives

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By Newt Gingrich and Pat Nolan
Friday, January 7, 2011
With nearly all 50 states facing budget deficits, it's time to end business as usual in state capitols and for legislators to think and act with courage and creativity.
We urge conservative legislators to lead the way in addressing an issue often considered off-limits to reform: prisons. Several states have recently shown that they can save on costs without compromising public safety by intelligently reducing their prison populations.
We joined with other conservative leaders last month to announce the Right on Crime Campaign, a national movement urging states to make sensible and proven reforms to our criminal justice system - policies that will cut prison costs while keeping the public safe. Among the prominent signatories are Reagan administration attorney general Ed Meese, former drug czar Asa Hutchinson, David Keene of the American Conservative Union, John Dilulio of the University of Pennsylvania, Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform and Richard Viguerie of ConservativeHQ.com. We all agree that we can keep the public safe while spending fewer tax dollars if we spend them more effectively.
The Right on Crime Campaign represents a seismic shift in the legislative landscape. And it opens the way for a common-sense left-right agreement on an issue that has kept the parties apart for decades.
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There is an urgent need to address the astronomical growth in the prison population, with its huge costs in dollars and lost human potential. We spent $68 billion in 2010 on corrections - 300 percent more than 25 years ago. The prison population is growing 13 times faster than the general population. These facts should trouble every American.
Our prisons might be worth the current cost if the recidivism rate were not so high, but, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, half of the prisoners released this year are expected to be back in prison within three years. If our prison policies are failing half of the time, and we know that there are more humane, effective alternatives, it is time to fundamentally rethink how we treat and rehabilitate our prisoners.
We can no longer afford business as usual with prisons. The criminal justice system is broken, and conservatives must lead the way in fixing it.
Several states have shown that it is possible to cut costs while keeping the public safe. Consider events in Texas, which is known to be tough on crime. Conservative Republicans joined with Democrats in adopting incentive-based funding to strengthen the state's probation system in 2005. Then in 2007, they decided against building more prisons and instead opted to enhance proven community corrections approaches such as drug courts. The reforms are forecast to save $2 billion in prison costs over five years.
The Lone Star State has already redirected much of the money saved into community treatment for the mentally ill and low-level drug addicts. Not only have these reforms reduced Texas's prison population - helping to close the state budget gap - but for the first time there is no waiting list for drug treatment in the state. And crime has dropped 10 percent from 2004, the year before the reforms, through 2009, according to the latest figures available, reaching its lowest annual rate since 1973.
Last year we both endorsed corrections reforms in South Carolina that will reserve costly prison beds for dangerous criminals while punishing low-risk offenders through lower-cost community supervision. The legislation was a bipartisan effort with strong support from liberals, conservatives, law enforcement, the judges and reform advocates. The state is expected to save $175 million in prison construction this year and $60 million in operating costs over the next several years.
Some people attribute the nation's recent drop in crime to more people being locked up. But the facts show otherwise. While crime fell in nearly every state over the past seven years, some of those with the largest reductions in crime have also lowered their prison population. Compare Florida and New York. Over the past seven years, Florida's incarceration rate has increased 16 percent, while New York's decreased 16 percent. Yet the crime rate in New York has fallen twice as much as Florida's. Put another way, although New York spent less on its prisons, it delivered better public safety.
Americans need to know that we can reform our prison systems to cost less and keep the public safe. We hope conservative leaders across the country will join with us in getting it right on crime.
Newt Gingrich was speaker of the House from 1995 to 1999 and is the founder of American Solutions. Pat Nolan was Republican leader of the California State Assembly from 1984 to 1988 and is a vice president of Prison Fellowship, a Christian ministry to prisoners, ex-prisoners and their families that also works on justice reform.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

prisoner reformation

Did you know that the United States has the highest reported incarceration rate in the world? It has also been found that on average, two out of every three released prisoners will be rearrested, and one in two will return to prison within three years of release.  These are some very startling statistics that have made many people question our current American criminal justice system.
In a recent article in the Los Angeles Times, reporter Harry Wexler discusses a Senate bill that could make some changes for the better. Senator James Webb has proposed a bill that would involve reevaluating the American criminal justice system, documenting which policies and programs work and which need to be reformed. Most researchers would agree that the current system fails in two main areas.
  1. The incarceration of nonviolent offenders (mainly drug users) limits the space for violent criminals which are a threat to public safety.
  2. The current system lacks meaningful rehabilitation programs that could keep released offenders out of prison in the future.
The Los Angeles Times article highlights that in order to preserve public safety we need to reconsider who goes to prison and provide effective rehabilitation for those who do.
http://www.criminaljusticeschoolguide.com/uncategorized/flaws-in-the-american-criminal-justice-system-are-opportunities-for-reform/What’s your opinion?


http://faithandfamily.com/article/prisoner-reformation/    statistics of the # of people in prison and the amount that return

Prisoner Reformation

by: Dwayne Hastings - Sep 1, 2006 - comments: 1
There are over 2.1 million prisoners in U.S. jails and prisons. And, if trends continue, of the nearly 750,000 inmates who are released each year, two-thirds of them will be arrested again within three years and approximately half of these individuals will spend more time behind bars.
A June 2006 report from the National Prison Commission states “what happens inside jails and prisons does not stay inside jails and prisons.” The commission notes “disturbing evidence of individual assaults and patterns of violence” that spill out of those institutions when inmates more dangerous than when they were first imprisoned are released into communities.
These reports not only paint a dismal picture for lawbreakers, but naturally alarm the general public.
A June 7, 2006 ABC News online story quoted a prisoner, a repeat offender housed in Ellsworth Correctional Facility in Kansas, as saying, “I know prison is for punishment, but would you put a pit bull in a cage and poke him with a stick and let him out in a classroom full of kids? That’s the same thing you’re doing to inmates.”
Americans by and large are in favor of “rehabilitative services for [non-violent] prisoners as opposed to a punishment only system,” reports an April 2006 Zogby poll. Americans acknowledge that the penal system, as it exists today, is failing both prisoners and society as it creates more victims every year.
“Americans have looked at the 30-year experiment on getting tough with offenders and decided that it is no longer working,” said Barry Krisberg of the National Council on Crime and Delinquency in the news report. He said “offenders are returned home each year with few skills or support to keep them from going back to lives of crime.” In fact, inmates awaiting release from prison are more likely acquiring anti-social attitudes and skills than preparing to reengage society in a productive manner.
Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, Louisiana, once was known as the bloodiest prison in the South. But today, the maximum-security prison, reportedly the biggest in the country, is a different place. Under the direction of warden Burl Cain, Angola is now a model for other corrections officials.
Cain, a Southern Baptist, has instituted a “model moral rehabilitation philosophy” in the prison. He says moral rehabilitation is really the only rehabilitation there is. The prison is even sending missionaries, graduates of the facility’s in-house Bible college overseen by New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, to other prisons in Louisiana.
There is more than anecdotal evidence that faith-programs reduce the likelihood that an inmate will return to prison. A 2003 University of Pennsylvania study demonstrated that prisoners who participated in a faith-based program developed by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and Prison Fellowship ministries were “significantly less likely” to be re-arrested or incarcerated.
Yet such programs have earned the ire of strict church-state separatists who allege the government is dabbling in the forbidden business of promoting one religion over another when it allows even a voluntary faith-based initiative a place in prison life.
A federal court judge ruled recently that a faith-based program in a Midwest prison was unconstitutional, calling it nothing more than “intensive religious indoctrination.”
There is no question that a sincere belief in a transcendent power who exercises authority over you and bears Truth with a capital “T” changes one’s life—for good. Rehabilitation programs that are based on this reality are bound to effect dramatic, long-lasting changes in the lives of inmates, especially when compared to traditional rehab programs that offer only short-term results.
While the experts struggle with the notion of prison reform, it is no surprise the most effective way to deal with the dismal state of American prisons is actually prisoner reformation.