Thursday, April 27, 2006

Recidivism

How likely are released Texas inmates to commit new crimes? The vast majority don't.

Of Texans on parole, just 11% of releasees each year are revoked, reported the Texas Department of Criminal Justice in its
self-evaluation (pdf, p. 7-8) for the Sunset Advisory Committee. TDCJ's three-year recidivism rate is 28.3%, said the report.

5 comments:

  1. I wonder if this includes the local city and county jails in it's numbers? I somehow doubt it.

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  2. Re: City and county jails. Revocations of parolees can occur for any level of violation including low-level misdemeanors at the various discretion of the parole officer, DA, judge, etc. So that 11% revoked figure would include many who committed only misdemeanor (county jail-level) offenses, dirty UAs, etc.

    By contrast, the three-year number appears to refer only to those re-entering TDCJ's custody, so basically revocations and new felonies. So if someone a) did their full time and wasn't on parole, and b) committed a new misdemeanor, not a felony, they wouldn't be included in that number.

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  3. Harvard Law Review Article
    "A matter of life and death: the effect of life-without-parole statutes on capital punishment."

    Reports that life-without-parole statutes result in minimal reductions in executions and greatly extended sentence lengths for noncapital offenders. References Texas' life-without-parole legislation (SB60,79th Legislature, R.S.)
    Article at: http://www.harvardlawreview.org/issues/119/april06/notes/capital_punishment.pdf

    Harvard Law Review

    ReplyDelete
  4. Take a look at the Eagle Companies 96 bed facilities. Gaurd to inmate rationis 48-1 safely.

    They also lease these packages www.jailcells.com

    Tim Tobin

    ReplyDelete