WHAT IS RECIDIVISM?
- Public safety failure rate
- New crime by convicted felony inmates and
probationers
- Measured by rates of rearrest, reconviction,
and reincarceration
WHAT IS RATE OF RECIDIVISM?
- 70% of inmates and 58% of probationers
rearrested within three years
- Less than one-quarter of each group returned
to prison for a new crime
HOW DO RATES VARY AMONG GROUPS?
- Inmates more likely to be rearrested
- Inmates committed more crimes per offender
than probationers
- Inmates, in general, committed more serious
crimes
HOW DO RATES VARY AMONG CATEGORIES
OF OFFENDERS?
- Males had significantly higher rates of
recidivism
- Young, minority offenders rearrested more
often
- Property offenders commit more new crime,
more frequently, and more likely to "specialize"
- Community supervision lowered rate of
rearrest among inmates
WHAT TYPES OF NEW CRIMES ARE
COMMITTED?
- Inmates and probationers did not
"specialize" in certain type of crime
- Most new crime was nonviolent, less serious
felonies and misdemeanors
- Property and drug crimes are linked
- Property and drug offenders more likely to
recommit same crime
- Violent offenders least likely to recommit
another violent crime
IS RECIDIVISM RELATED TO OFFENDER
CHARACTERISTICS?
- Age, race, and gender significant predictors
of rearrest
- Serious drug problem indicator of rearrest
but not new drug crime
- Primary offense and sentence length affect
recidivism rate among inmates
- Not a strong relationship between program
participation and rearrest
- Young, male, minority, property offenders
most likely to recidivate
STAFF RECOMMENDATION
1. The Division of State Police, within the
Department of Public Safety, shall begin to track and analyze the rates of
rearrest, reconviction, and reincarceration of felony and misdemeanor offenders
on a yearly basis. The division shall:
· analyze criminal history data currently
stored in its Bureau of Identification repository and the statewide
offender-based tracking data repository to examine and report on the patterns
and trends among offenders who repeatedly commit new crimes;
· define recidivism, for the purposes of
the analysis, as new criminal activity by a person after a prior criminal
conviction that resulted in either imprisonment or another sanction, and shall
include both inmates and probationers;
· use multiple measure of recidivism --
rearrest, reconviction, and reincarceration -- in conducting the analysis; and
· beginning in 2003, include the
recidivism analysis and findings in the annual Crime in Connecticut
report, which shall be submitted to the General Assembly, all executive and
judicial branch criminal justice agencies, and the Prison and Jail
Overcrowding Commission.
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