Justice Policy Institute - Defining Violence, 2016
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DEFINING VIOLENCE: Reducing Incarceration by Rethinking America’s Approach to Violence Justice Policy Institute │ August 2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction.……………………………………………………………..1 Part I: A moment in time: the offense reflects singular events, not a person’s capacity to change…….……………………….…..…..6 Homicide: Low recidivism rates……………………………..6 Justice Policy Institute (JPI) is dedicated to reducing the use of incarceration and the justice system by promoting fair and effective policies. JPI envisions a society with safe, equitable and healthy communities; just and effective solutions to social problems; and the use of incarceration as a last report 1012 14th Street, NW Suite 600 Washington, DC 20005 Tell (202) 558-7974 Part II: How violent offenses are categorized differs from place-toplace………………………………………………..……………...…...….9 Assault……………………...……………………..….……........9 Burglary………………………………………………………..12 Part III: Context matters in the way a violent or nonviolent offense is treated by the justice system…………….……...............................14 Sex Offense: Context matters around penalties, but less around evidence of effectiveness……………………….….14 Weapons: Penalties vary based on co-occurring behavior………………………………………………………..16 Part IV: The cost of incarcerating people for violent offenses is large, but an even bigger reinvestment is needed in communities where violence is a challenge….…...........…….….………….…..….20 Part V: Efforts to develop justice approaches that can have an impact on people convicted of violent offense……………..…...…23 Conclusion: Strategies to reduce the use of incarceration that are less focused on the offense…………………………………………...30 WWW. JUSTICEPOLICY.ORG 1 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE INTRODUCTION “Can we, in fact, significantly reduce the prison population if we’re only focusing on non-violent offenses where part of the reason that in some countries — in Europe, for example — they have a lower incarceration rate because they also don’t sentence violent offenders for such long periods of time. I think it’s smart for us to start the debate around non-violent drug offenders. You are right that that’s not going to suddenly halve our incarceration rate, but if we get that — if we do that right … then that becomes the foundation upon which the public has confidence in potentially taking a future step and looking at sentencing changes down the road.” —President Barack Obama.1 “I want to go some place that is not safe ground yet because it is not commonly talked about. Every piece of legislation we have mentioned, [the] REDEEM act is all about nonviolent crimes, the mandatory minimums, everything nonviolent, nonviolent. I just want to go here to just give you a foreshadow of the future of what we must do as a society. We have labeled so many things violent crimes in such a huge way that we have got to start having an honest conversation about what really we want to be as a society… I am just saying that we have to reexamine the system as a whole.” —Senator Jersey), Criminal Cory Booker (D-New Bipartisan Summit on Justice Reform, in Conversation with Newt Gingrich, Moderated by Donna Brazile, March 2, 2015. When President Barack Obama made his Whether this focus has helped reduce the use of historic visit to a federal prison last year, he incarceration remains in question. underlined the growing policy consensus that the nation incarceration. needs to reduce the use of But whether it was at an advocacy summit in Washington around a pledge to cut prison and jail populations by 50 percent, raised by a coalition of conservative and liberal organizations focusing on criminal justice reform, or echoed by the candidates for president, the justice reform discourse has been framed as reducing the incarceration of people convicted of nonviolent offenses rather than addressing the full spectrum of the prison population. Has the focus on people convicted of nonviolent offenses helped reduce the use of incarceration? DEFINING VIOLENCE 2 The latest survey of prison populations showed people in jail, either as pretrial defendants or that the nation experienced the second-largest people sentenced to jail, rose by 1.8 percent.5 The decline in prison populations in 35 years, with United States still has the highest incarceration about half the states and the Federal Bureau of rate in the world as well as the largest prison Prisons showing reductions in the number of and jail populations in the world. people in prison. As was underscored by The Marshall Project last But this decline needs to be put into context: Of year, and echoed by academics and thought these 23 jurisdictions, including the federal leaders,6 “simple math shows why violent system, 14 states and the Federal Bureau of offenders would have to be part of any serious Prisons saw their prison population decline by 2 attempt to halve the number of prisoners.”7 Out percent,2 or less, with the overall number of people of the 1.35 million people in state prisons, the held in a correctional facility dropping by only 1 Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that 718,000 percent (15,400 people out of a total incarcerated people were serving time for a violent offense.8 population of 1,561,500 people under the custody of a Accordingly, about half the people in state prison system) prisons would not be covered under current 3 strategies that are tailored to exclude people Underlining the reform challenge playing out in with convictions for violent offenses. corrections where a modest reduction in prison populations has occurred simultaneously with multi-billion dollar jail expansion4 proposals, the latest national surveys show that the number of Between 2013 and 2014, the number of people in prison fell by -1.0%, and the number of people in jail rose 1.8% Nearly two thirds of the places with a prisoner population decline had a reduction of 2 percent or less. Source: Prisoners in 2014 (2015); Jail Inmates at Midyear 2014 (2015). Bureau of Justice Statistics. Source: Prisoners in 2014 (2015); Jail Inmates at Midyear 2014 (2015). Bureau of Justice Statistics. 3 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE There is no consensus on what the opposite of “mass incarceration” would look like. To answer the question of how many fewer people would need to be locked up to see significant change and to lower its incarceration rate to what European nations currently experience, the To reach the European standard, 1.2 million fewer people would be incarcerated – a figure that far exceeds the number of people incarcerated for nonviolent offenses nationally. U.S. would have to reduce its incarcerated population by 80 percent,9 or about 1.2 million In Defining violence: fewer people in prison and jails. It has been rethinking America’s approach to violence, the nearly 60 years since the U.S. has experienced Justice Policy Institute (JPI) explores how comparable incarceration rates to Europe and something is defined as a violent or nonviolent although we have witnessed a dramatic increase crime, how that classification affects how the in our prison population, it has not made us justice system treats a person, and how all that safer.11 relates to the use of incarceration. The report 10 Statutes abstractly categorize behavior as violent or nonviolent. How might these categorizations, along with the workings of the justice system, reducing incarceration by summarizes the relationship of offenses to the use of incarceration and how that varies by: combine to limit reform efforts designed to How violent offenses are categorized from place to place: reduce our reliance on incarceration? Does An act may be defined as a violent crime in one place statistical reporting obscure critical facts that and as a nonviolent crime somewhere change agents, policymakers, and the public else. The law in a particular jurisdiction need to consider when designing policies to may define something as a nonviolent significantly reduce the use of incarceration? crime, but a corrections department may define the same behavior differently. For example, although burglary rarely Incarceration Rates in the United States and Europe, per 100,000 people involves person-to-person behavior, it is defined as a violent crime in some places and can lead to a long prison 700 sentence; 600 500 400 300 How context matters in the way a violent or nonviolent offense is treated 623 by the justice system: Sometimes a behavior that would not normally be a 200 100 defined as a 150 result in a long prison term can mean a 0 United States much longer term of imprisonment when a gun is involved; and Europe Source: How to cut the prison population by 50 percent. The Marshall Project (2015) “crime of violence” or The disconnection between the evidence of what works to make us safer and our current policies: People DEFINING VIOLENCE convicted of some of the most serious if there was a hint that someone convicted of a offenses – such as homicide or sex violent crime might benefit from the change. offenses lowest When someone has been the victim of a violent recidivism rates, but still end up serving long prison terms. crime, they may want to see that person locked – can have the These three factors overlap with each other in a way that brings into sharp relief the fact that the nation will fail to make meaningful reductions in the use of incarceration unless we revamp our approach to violent crime and how the justice system treats people convicted of a violent crime. How a behavior is treated by the courts can occur in isolation from the research that demonstrates someone’s ability to change, and brings 4 competing values around what is proportionate and just response to behavior. This is a complicated political and systems reform issue. When politicians support bills that focus solely on nonviolent crimes, they can point to polling and voter-enacted ballot initiatives that show that the public supports their agenda. In some places, policymakers have vocally rejected justice reform bills and ballot initiatives up. Scholars have noted that if the U.S. wants to treat the root causes of violence in the communities most affected by serious crime, it will require a significant investment of public resources – more than what we could currently “reinvest” from downsizing and closing prisons and jail. To help unpack some of the complicated issues at play, the Justice Policy Institute (JPI) analyzes how behaviors are categorized under sometimes-arbitrary offense categories, explores the larger context that exists when something is classified as a violent or nonviolent offense, and shows the consequences for the justice system and the use of incarceration. This report also looks at how the debate over justice approaches to violent crime, nonviolent crime, and incarceration is playing out in legislatures and how justice reform proposals are debated.12 How many people are incarcerated for violent offenses? Since most people in prison in America are under the jurisdiction of the states, this analysis focuses more attention on people in state prison, and in a few select cases, federal prison. There are approximately 718,000 people in state prisons whose most serious offense is a violent offense: For national corrections reporting programs, the crimes that are included in violent crime are, homicide, rape (including sexual assault), robbery and aggravated assault (including simple assault), and other violent offenses if they lead to someone’s custody for more than one year. In 2014, people convicted of robbery, rape or sexual assault, murder, and aggravated/simple assault accounted for approximately one out of two people in state prison (185,000, 169,000, 169,000, 135,000 respectively). There are also the 15,000 people in federal prison whose most serious offense is a violent offense, and 140,000-plus people are who are awaiting trial in jail—people who are legally presumed innocent—who were charged with a violent crime. There are also 42,000-plus people who were convicted of a violent offense. Source: How many people are locked up in the United States?. (Northampton, MA: Prison Policy Initiative (2016). Unless otherwise noted with a citation, all statistics that relate to the number of people incarcerated by offense were sourced to the Prison Policy Initiative 5 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE New York and California: What do violent offenses, violent felony offenses, and “nonviolent, nonserious, and nonsexual” offenses mean in the context of justice reform? Not all violent offenses are classified as felonies and not all felonies are violent crimes. Each state has the ability to determine what is and is not violent crime, and whether it will be classified as a felony, a misdemeanor offense, and the consequences a conviction for these offenses will carry. When this statebased reality is parsed into a national discussion about justice reform, the local subtleties can get ‘lost in translation.’ In New York—as is the case in other states—some violent crimes are considered misdemeanors. New York also delineates between violent and nonviolent felonies. In New York, a person is not charged with a violent felony13 per se. Each of New York’s five felony classes are broken down into violent and nonviolent offenses.14 One can be charged with a Class B felony, like assault in the first degree, which is considered a violent felony. There are also a series of Class A and Class B misdemeanors that include behaviors like assault or sexual abuse. In California, how something is defined as violent or nonviolent runs into statutory categories like “violent felony offenses:” This category includes homicide, rape, any robbery, assault with the intent to commit a specified felony, and a series of 19 other behaviors. 15 An entirely different narrative around how the system should treat various behaviors advanced around Governor Brown’s Public Safety Realignment—the state’s response to federal court orders to reduce prison overcrowding— expanded the debate around what some people think should be considered serious or violent crime as opposed to what is a violent crime. Realignment changed California sentencing laws by shifting thousands of people from serving their sentences in state prisons to serving them in county jails: To make this politically palatable, Governor Brown promised that only people convicted of nonviolent offenses, and a larger group of people colloquially called “non, non, nons” could be sentenced to jail, instead of prisons: “Non, non, nons” refers to people whose current conviction was for neither a violent felony offense, 16 serious felony,17 or sex offense.18 An additional 60 offenses—many of which would not be defined as a violent offense in another place – were ultimately excluded from the realignment framework.19 Under California Governor Jerry Brown’s Public Safety and Rehabilitation Act of 2016 – a ballot initiative being voted on in California in November – changes are being considered that would seek to reduce the justice involvement of some people convicted of violent crimes. If enacted by voters in November, the ballot initiative would change the state’s juvenile transfer laws, so that a judge (not a prosecutor) would ultimately make the decision about whether a youth would end up in the adult system regardless of their offense. The ballot initiative would also memorialize the state’s response to federal court orders to reduce prison overcrowding by allowing people convicted of violent crimes to earn time off their sentence when they participate in education and rehabilitative programs. DEFINING VIOLENCE 6 Part I: A MOMENT IN TIME: THE OFFENSE REFLECTS A SINGULAR EVENT, NOT A PERSON’S CAPACITY TO CHANGE Statistics cited by the media, policymakers, and state laws, and other information learned from the public on who is in prison for what offense correctional authorities. reflect the most serious offense that led to someone’s current incarceration at a moment in What this federal accounting of correctional time. Alone, these figures do not tell much about statistics does not tell anyone—not the public, a person’s ability to change or likelihood of not policymakers, not the media—is whether recidivism. someone will engage in the same behavior, or another destructive behavior, in the future. The leading national repository that generates information on incarcerated populations is the U.S. Justice Department’s Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS). In 2014, of the 1.5 million people Homicide: Low Recidivism Rates incarcerated in prisons, there were about 718,100 people whose most serious current conviction People whose most serious crime was a was a violent offense, as reported to BJS by a homicide can face the longest sentences, but state corrections department.20 For BJS, the ironically they show the lowest recidivism rates. crimes that are included in violent crime are New information has emerged over the past few homicide, assault), years that underscores that even among the robbery, aggravated assault (including simple 169,000 people in state prison for homicide, the assault), and other violent offenses if they lead offense to someone’s custody for more than one year. designated to be the most serious offense—is not People convicted of robbery, rape or sexual the primary determinant of whether someone assault, murder, and aggravated/simple assault will face challenges when returning to the accounted for approximately one out of two community. rape (including sexual people in state prison. When BJS reports the offense of a person who is incarcerated, the only thing that is reported is the most serious offense that person was convicted of leading to their incarceration in that instance, under the jurisdiction of a state or federal authority, for more than one year of custody. BJS updates how it defines offenses as “violent” or “nonviolent” based on changes in of conviction—the instant offense Maryland: nine out of 10 people released for homicide did not return to prison. Due to a flaw in jury instructions, the Maryland Court of Appeals in Unger v. State ruled that people convicted in those criminal cases were entitled to new trials. Because of the challenges of bringing new trials based on offenses that occurred decades ago, the cases—most of which involve 7 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE people age 60 or older and most of whom were convicted for homicide— were settled in a way that resulted in the release of most of the people affected by the Unger decision. A private foundation provides resources to support enhanced reentry services for people leaving prison under the Unger decision, with a special focus on addressing their housing needs. As of March 2016, of the more than 100 people who have been released under the Unger decision, none has been convicted of a new felony offense.21 Michigan: nine out of 10 people paroled for homicide did not return to prison. Michigan increased the capacity of the parole board so that a larger pool of people who had been denied parole could have their cases reviewed. Of all the people once convicted of homicide who were paroled from 2007 through the first quarter of 2010, more than 99 percent did not return to prison within three years with a new sentence for a similar offense.22 New York: nine out of 10 people released for homicide did not return to prison. According to the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision Board of Parole, there were 987 people convicted of A-I violent felony offenses who were granted parole between 2009 and 2012 (most of whom were serving a homicide related offense). Of those who were granted parole, only two—or less than one percent—were re-imprisoned for a new felony conviction.23 Over a longer timeline, of the 871 A-1 violent felony offenders who were conditionally released from their life sentences in 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2011, only five were returned on new felony 24 convictions. Recidivism rates are important, but even they have their limitations particularly as they relate to how to help people who face challenges after justice system involvement, regardless of whether they were convicted of violent or nonviolent offenses. Are people leaving prison less likely to return to prison than has been suggested? In a paper published in Crime & Delinquency in 2014, researchers who routinely study data collected by BJS suggested that the national discourse around recidivism as it relates to offenses may obscure the success most people have when they leave prison because it is solely focused on a moment in time—the event—that is studied. In contrast to recidivism figures that show that half of people who leave prison will return within three years on a new offense or for a violation of their supervision, the researchers show that roughly two out of every three people who enter and exit prison will never return to prison.25 The principal difference in the way the two figures are represented is the lack of individualized attention to the person’s risk to reoffend that comes with a more in-depth study of the person’s individual strengths or challenges. The way recidivism is reported does not necessarily account for someone’s assessed risk to engage in new behavior—something that can change over time, change with someone’s age, or change based on whether we provide someone with appropriate support. People convicted of drug offenses can face more challenges with recidivism than people convicted of violent offenses. People catalogued by justice system agencies as being convicted for nonviolent offenses may have much higher rates of recidivism than people convicted of violent offenses. DEFINING VIOLENCE If a person convicted of a drug offense 26 or a property offense engages in behavior because of an addiction, they may have a higher recidivism rate because of relapse and continued activity in pursuit of sustaining drug use than someone convicted of a violent crime.27 While only 2 to 3 percent of released prisoners in New York State who had been incarcerated for violent offenses were returned to prison for committing a new felony offense, a drug offense, or a technical parole violation—not a new violent crime—was the main reason these people were returned to prison.28 In summary, policymakers and the public need to interpret corrections and law enforcement statistics on offenses with caution; these figures only tell someone what happened at a point in time, and they do not explain much about someone’s capacity to change. 8 9 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE Part II: HOW VIOLENT OFFENSES ARE CATEGORIZED DIFFERS FROM PLACE TO PLACE An act may be defined as a violent crime in one place and as a nonviolent crime somewhere else. The law may define something as a nonviolent crime, but a corrections department may define the same behavior differently. Maryland: 2nd Degree Assault Many states have three or four categories of assault so that the justice system can choose from multiple options when reacting to a particular event. Assault In New York, for example, Assault in the 3rd Degree is a Class A misdemeanor. The Bureau of Justice Statistics includes both aggravated assault and simple assault in its Maryland has two categories of assault—first accounting of violent crimes. and In 2014, there were 135,000 people in state prisons in for assault. degree. Because Maryland recognizes common-law crimes, no statute defines their elements. But Maryland case law fully Assault second can be defined by articulates them. As recognized in correctional Maryland common law, an assault is an authorities as a crime of violence, and as with a attempted battery or an intentional placing of a variety of crimes, assault is defined differently victim from one state to another. Some states define imminent battery. assault as the intentional use of force or violence “unlawful beating of another,” and includes against another, such as punching a person or “any unlawful force used against a person of striking the victim with an object. In other states, another, no matter how slight.”30 The common assault need not involve actual physical contact law offense of battery thus embraces a wide and is defined as an attempt to commit a range of conduct, including “kissing without physical attack or as intentional acts that cause a consent, touching or tapping, jostling, and person to feel afraid of impending violence. In throwing water upon another.”31 in reasonable 29 apprehension of an A battery is defined as the some places, domestic violence offenses are prosecuted under simple assault, which can As part of a review of what is driving growth in carry a lesser penalty than aggravated assault Maryland’s but is defined as a violent crime. Reinvestment prison population, the Justice Council (JRCC) showed that, in 2014, Assault in the 2 Degree Coordinating nd Sometimes it does not matter whether an assault was the second most common offense that is “simple” or “aggravated” or whether it is a resulted in someone being returned to prison for felony or a misdemeanor to result in significant a new offense while on parole. The data also consequences when the behavior occurs. showed that people convicted of 2nd degree DEFINING VIOLENCE 10 assault were less likely to be released close to APO statute extends to probation and parole their parole date than people convicted of 1 st staff. degree assault (the more serious crime). 32 The APO statute covers a wide range of In 2015, Maryland’s JRCC contemplated adding behaviors and has been critiqued because of 3rd and 4th degree categories of assault that how, in the context of an interaction with law would have carried different penalties. The enforcement, administrative parole process that the JRCC needlessly escalate and result in someone’s enacted deeper justice system involvement. – something that allows people something that occurs can approaching their parole date to automatically be processed, and not necessarily have to face The Washington, D.C., APO statute on the books automatic parole hearings—excluded people in 2015 was very broad, including in its convicted of 2 language “whoever without justifiable and nd Degree assault. The proposed inclusion of Assault in the 2nd Degree under a excusable cause, assaults, resists, opposes, reformed administrative parole process was impedes, intimidates, or interferes with a law criticized by the Maryland Crime Victims enforcement officer…” while the officer is Resource Center for carving out an avenue for performing their duties.36 This translates into release of people engaged in violent behaviors.33 behaviors being charged as APO that have included wiggling in handcuffs, yelling at a As the Maryland Justice Reinvestment Act was police officer, or removing an officer’s hand being debated in the spring of 2016, the issue of from one’s person when they are not being what constitutes a violent or nonviolent crime arrested can result in a charge. In contrast, in became a significant point of contention; some another state—in another context—a person can legislators argued that someone selling drugs only be charged with APO if they cause serious really cannot be considered ‘nonviolent’ because physical injury to a police officer with the intent of the drug trade’s impact on the community.34 to disrupt their duties.37 Washington, D.C.: Assaulting a police officer The application of the APO statute to minor incidents has broad implications. A five-month investigation by WAMU 88.5 and American In Washington, D.C., Assaulting a Police Officer University looked at nearly 2,000 cases of APO (APO) is an offense that can be a misdemeanor between 2012 and 2014 and found that the cases or a felony. The offense can result in a sentence clog up the courts, rarely result in injuries to of six months in jail, but if it co-occurs with officers and residents, can result in arrest another offense or causes significant bodily records and convictions that carry lifelong injury to a law enforcement official, it can result consequences, and disproportionately affect the in a 10-year penalty.35 Similar to the Assault in city’s African American residents.38 the 2 nd Degree statute in Maryland, the District’s 11 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE Key findings from the investigation included: About one in four people charged with APO needed medical attention, while one in five police officers involved in these situations needed medical attention; Compared with cities of comparable size, Washington, D.C., uses the APO charge three times more often; Prosecutors declined to press charges in more than 40 percent of the arrests for assaulting an officer; 90 percent of those charged with APO were African American even though only 50 percent of the city’s population is black; 90% of persons arrested for APO are Black, even though only 50% of the city's population is Black 10% Black Other 90% Source: Center for Investigative Reporting (2015). Nearly two thirds of the people charged with APO were not charged with any other offense.39 Nearly two thirds of the people charged with APO are not charged with anything else APO Charge Only 34% 66% APO Charge and Additional Charge(s) Source: Center for Investigative Reporting (2015). DEFINING VIOLENCE 12 Washington, D.C.’s Chief of Police, Cathy Lanier, has said that the APO statute is too broad and should be revised, as it caused “tensions between police and residents.” 40 In 2016, the D.C. Council passed legislation that created two separate offenses for “assault on a police officer” and “resisting arrest”: the change narrowly tailored the charge of APO, and created a charge that can be filed when an individual intentionally resists a lawful arrest. Both charges can result in a jury trial. The change to D.C.’s APO law will become law in September, 2016.41 Burglary Source: Is Burglary a Crime of Violence (New York City: John “Simple burglaries very seldom involve violence, and Jay College of Criminal Justice, 2015). when violence does indeed occur, separate criminal charges for those acts are added onto the burglary Recent research using data collected by the charges” Federal Bureau of Investigations Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) and the National Criminalization – Richard F. Culp et al., Is Victims Survey (NCVS) shows that, overall, Burglary a Crime of Violence? burglaries do not include person-to-person An Analysis of National Data contact. The NCVS shows that 7.6 percent of all 1998-2007 (New York John Jay burglaries between 1998 and 2007 involved College burglary and a violent crime.43 Of the burglaries of Criminal Justice, reported to NCVS during this time, only 2.7 2015). percent resulted in actual physical injury. The People who are incarcerated for burglary are National Incident Based Reporting System, reported by national correctional authorities as which provides supplemental expanded data to being in prison for a nonviolent property offense; the UCR, found that 0.9 percent of all burglaries about 142,000 people are in state prisons for co-occurred with a violent crime.44 burglary. While correctional statistics report burglary as a nonviolent offense, most federal and state statutes define burglary as a violent offense in some contexts, whether as California’s Three Strikes Law and burglary a standalone offense or when it occurs with other The changes to California’s Three Strikes Law– behaviors. Forty-seven states and the federal synonymous with America’s embrace of “tough government use an array of methods to on crime” sounding laws—demonstrate the determine if a burglary is catalogued as violent challenge of navigating how offenses are or nonviolent. characterized and treated from place to place. 42 13 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE To get around the challenges of having to garner person convicted of an offense listed in the a two-thirds majority vote in the California Virginia code face [sic] major impediments to legislature, modify incarceration, and they often result in serving California’s Three Strikes Law through a voter much longer prison terms. Being categorized as ballot initiative enacted in 2012. reformers moved to The change a “violent offender” creates significant barriers meant that the third offense that could lead to rehabilitative, self-improvement and reentry someone programs.”49 to serve 45 25-years-to-life-in-prison could only be what is defined in California as “serious or violent.” As of March 10, 2016, 2,188 As the Virginia legislative session drew to a people who had been sentenced under Three close in 2016, no changes to the statute Strikes, and whose third strike was not serious governing burglary were enacted. As a result, or violent, had been released. The Stanford barriers remain in place that prevent people Law Three Strikes Project reported that, as of convicted of violent crimes from participating in November 2014, among the 1,613 people who drug court and other alternative interventions. 46 had been released under the changes to the law resulting from the ballot, the recidivism rate was 1.3 percent. 47 United States Sentencing Commission recommends amendments to burglary as a “crime of violence.” The ballot initiative changing California’s Three Strikes Law was an important step forward, but In 2016, the U.S. Sentencing Commission offered in an California, burglary of an unoccupied amendment that would treated by that can lead someone to serve a 25-to-life amendment deletes burglary of a dwelling from sentence. Another ballot initiative was offered the list of enumerated offenses under “crimes of in 2015 to remove burglary of an unoccupied violence”: “In implementing this change, the dwelling from having a role under the Three Commission Strikes Law, but it failed to garner financial offenses rarely result in physical violence, (2) support or enough signatures to be placed on “burglary of a dwelling” is rarely the instant the 2016 ballot. offense of conviction or the determinative considered federal that (1) law. how burglary 48 is redefine dwelling can count toward one of the strikes The burglary predicate for purposes of triggering higher Virginia’s recommended review of burglary’s classification. penalties under the career offender guideline, and (3) historically, career offenders have rarely been rearrested for a burglary offense after The Commonwealth’s Commission on Parole release.”50 Review recommended in 2015 that the state reevaluate whether burglary should be classified Unless the Congress rejects the change, the U.S. as a violent crime under the statute, including if Sentencing Commission’s amendment will take it occurs in association with another offense: effect November 1st, 2016. “The Commission reviewed evidence that a DEFINING VIOLENCE 14 Part III: CONTEXT MATTERS IN THE WAY A VIOLENT OR NONVIOLENT OFFENSE IS TREATED BY THE JUSTICE SYSTEM When a weapon is involved in violent crime, the person who engaged in the behavior can face a much longer prison term. But such sentencing enhancements are divorced from the larger context that the U.S. is a country with more guns than people. Because of the charges usually brought in reaction to these behaviors, people often plead guilty and receive long sentences (because of mandatory minimum or sentencing enhancements), thus, placing a great deal of power in the hands of prosecutors. For example, there are gradients of behavior that fall under the category of “sex offenses.” But the approach to incarceration and community control of people convicted of sex offenses are detached from whether registries work, and whether they cause more harm than good. In 2014, there were 169,000 people in state prisons for sex offenses, which include rape and sexual assault, and they were categorized as violent offenses.52 Because the larger context of discourse around what works in curbing sex offending behavior is divorced from the science, the behavior carries significant consequences that extend beyond an actual prison sentence. Policymaking around how to respond to sex offenses has been obscured by public perception. According to a study published in the Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, “it was found that community members believe Sex offenses: context matters around penalties, but less around evidence of effectiveness that sex offenders have very high recidivism “Studies have indicated that sex offenders have among the lowest recidivism rates… Additionally, some of the most dangerous sexual crimes, those involving rape and murder, account for less than three percent of sexual offenses perpetrated in the United States.” offenses, with 73 percent saying they would —Kate Hynes, “The Cost of Fear: An Analysis of Sex Offender Registration, Community Notification, and Civil Commitment Laws in the United States and the United Kingdom.”51 offense compared with people convicted of rates, view sex offenders as a homogeneous group with regard to risk, and are skeptical about the benefits of sex offender treatment.”53 One research study done in Florida showed that 67 percent of respondents said they thought prison was an effective strategy to reduce sexual “support these policies even if there is no scientific evidence showing that they reduce sexual abuse.”54 People leaving prison for sex offenses are considerably less likely to be re-arrested for any other offenses, and their re-arrest rate within the first three years of discharge is still relatively low at 5.3 percent.55 Data from Michigan show that 99 percent of people released from prison 15 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE through parole for a sex offesnse did not return to prison for a sex offense within three years.56 employment and residence, physical assaults, A sex offense can carry significant consequences While registries and community notifications that may compromise community safety. Many carry significant consequences for people placed of these consequences extend beyond an actual on them, it isn’t clear that these policies work to prison sentence. change behavior. A 2008 National Institute of and, in a few cases, death by vigilantes. 59 Justice study examined recidivism among sex After someone convicted of a sex offense offenders before and after the law requiring completes their prison term, they can end up community notification and concluded that being on a sex offense registry, and have that “Megan’s Law showed no demonstrable effect information publicized through a community in reducing sexual re-offenses.”60 According to notification process. Recent figures suggest that the study, there is little evidence to date that about 850,000 people convicted of sexual supports the claim that Megan’s Law61 (and offenses were registered across the United other registration and notification laws) are States. When someone is listed on a registry, it effective in reducing new first-time sex offenses can take decades to be removed from it. The or sexual reoffenses,62 except for a slight proliferation of registries and notification laws reduction in reoffending by sex offenders who has proven to be a barrier to re-entry for persons were acquainted with their victims. Evidence is convicted of a sexual offense. Most notable are mixed as to whether community notification cases reduces recidivism.63 57 phone of 58 harassment including threatening calls, property damage, loss of Violent and Sex Offenses Still on the Books Some state statutes contain offenses that are outdated or unnecessary. When it comes to violent offenses, a few states outlaw dueling, an act considered antiquated and not relevant to today’s times. For sex offenses, many states consider adultery, fornication, and other sexual acts to be illegal. DUELING Massachusetts, Mississippi, Nevada, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina ADULTERY Florida, Idaho, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, New York, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Utah, Virginia, Wisconsin FORNICATION Idaho, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, South Carolina, Utah Virginia DEFINING VIOLENCE Weapons: penalties vary based on co-occurring behavior 16 According to a study by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, among prisoners carrying a firearm during their crime, 40 percent of State inmates and 56 percent of Federal inmates received a sentence enhancement because of a firearm.68 The Bureau of Justice Statistics says that if one’s most serious offense at commitment is simply a weapons offense, that person is serving time on a nonviolent public order offense. There were Federal sentencing reform bills stoke a debate over what is violent and in what context. approximately 52,000 people in state prisons whose most serious offense was something In 2016, there were nearly a half-dozen relating to a weapon. bipartisan reform federal sentencing bills moving through Congress that sought to reduce The federal prison system had 33,000 people in sentence lengths for people convicted of certain prison for weapons, explosives, and arson in types of crimes. The same debates playing out 2015.64 There are more people in prison for in statehouses over what constitutes a violent weapons offense than are in prison for all crime and in what context are also echoing offenses in all but 13 states. through the halls of Congress. 65 Weapons statutes can sometimes be vague. Most Changes to one federal bill, The Sentencing states do not have “deadly weapon” statutes Reform and Corrections Act (2015), were that identify what a deadly weapon is; instead, prompted when a group of senators laid out states employ a broad definition of deadly their critique of the legislation for benefiting weapon.66 “violent offenders” associated with the federal mandatory minimums. The issue that has been While a weapons offense in one context may be raised is whether someone whose current defined as a nonviolent offense, if the behavior offense is a federal drug offense but who has a occurs along with something else, it may carry crime of violence conviction in their past would much more severe penalties regardless of how benefit from the bill. the offense is defined. If someone has prior AR) countered, “these sentencing reductions convictions or is convicted of behavior that will apply not to first-time offenders but to occurs in a particular location (for example, near repeat offenders – felons who have made the a school), the penalties may be enhanced, and conscious choice to commit crimes over and under state or federal law, weapons offenses can over again. And they will not apply just to so- lead to longer prison terms. Particularly when called “nonviolent offenders,” but thousands of someone has a weapon, the context in which violent felons and armed career criminals who charges are brought, how sentencing laws work, have used firearms in the course of their drug or the adversarial court process can determine felonies or crimes of violence.”69 whether something that is defined as a nonviolent or violent crime carries a long penalty. Senator Tom Cotton (R- The critique led the sponsor of The Sentencing 67 Reform and Corrections Act (2015) to amend the legislation to allow fewer people convicted of 17 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE violent crimes to be eligible to apply for release. incarcerated or to face a longer sentence than As the lead sponsor of the legislation, Senator would be associated with the underlying felony. Charles Grassley (R-IA), explained: "The authors In 2016, the Michigan House Criminal Justice fine-tuned some provisions to ensure violent Committee passed a bill that would have criminals do not benefit from reduced sentence eliminated the mandatory flat sentence and opportunities established by the bill. It now given judge’s discretion to set an indeterminate expressly excludes offenders convicted of any term. The legislation is still under consideration. serious violent felony from retroactive early Context matters for penalties, but not for gun availability. release.”70 The Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act is still being debated. While context matters around whether carrying a weapon affects someone’s penalty, gun Michigan’s felony firearm law availability is not part of the larger context around sentencing and imprisonment. In Michigan, possessing a weapon is not a violent crime, and it is not categorized by the Four out of 10 people in state prison, and more Michigan Department of Corrections as violent than half the people in federal prison, received a if the only crime someone is in prison for is the possession of a weapon. sentencing enhancement because a firearm was associated with the weapons playing instant offense. a significant With role in But under Michigan’s felony firearm law, if you lengthening someone’s prison term and also possess a firearm while committing another playing a role in lethal violence, how does the felony, you can be subject to a mandatory two- larger context of gun availability figure into the year minimum prison sentence, even if the other picture? felony would only result in probation. By way of example, if you had a rifle in the back of your The last decade saw a sizeable increase in the truck while you engaged in another felony that number of guns produced in America: in the fall carried mandatory of 2015, the U.S. Department of Justice’s Bureau minimum prison term would apply. In 2013, of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms reported that there were 1,275 prisoners whose longest 7.5 million more guns were produced in the minimum sentence was for a felony firearm conviction. United States in 2013 (10,884,792) than in 2003 The felony firearm law has been critiqued for a Not including guns that are sold illegally, the number of reasons: Judges have raised concerns Congressional Research Service estimates that that it ties their hands: if they believe that there are more than 300 million guns in the something less than a mandatory two-year United States.72 Including estimates that include consecutive sentence is called for, they cannot guns impose such a sentence. The law also has been approximately 357 million guns in the U.S. as of critiqued for giving prosecutors undue leverage 2013, which would mean that America is a in plea negotiations and for causing people who country with more guns than residents. no prison term, the would not otherwise be prison-bound to be (3,308,404)—a growth of nearly 230 percent.71 possessed illegally, there are DEFINING VIOLENCE 18 As organizations that focus on the gun industry they normally would not commit if guns were have not available.”74 highlighted, firearms escaped safety regulation in the 1970s when the U.S. Congress created the major product safety agencies—a Youth behavioral surveys show that some kind unique exemption that means that when a of assaultive behavior or forcible theft can company makes a teddy bear, it is subject to happen more often than might be perceived consumer and health standards that do not through adolescence, raising questions about apply to gun manufacturers. how assault should be treated.75 Access to a gun 73 can mean a shift from something that can be The question of whether the mass availability of resolved without confinement to a prison term guns plays a role in enhancing safety or for robbery and aggravated assault. About 35 reducing crime has become part of the polarized percent of people serving time for robbery in debate over gun control in the U.S. state prisons and 40 percent in the federal prison New system had a gun at the time of the offense.76 international studies shed some light on the U.S. exceptionalism. A look at the relationship between gun availability and crime in cross- The enforcement of laws that cover offenses can national samples of cities showed that gun have implications for all communities, but it availability influenced rates of assault, gun particularly affects communities of color in the assaults, robbery, and gun robberies – a set of context behaviors enhancements. that are widely subject to of sentencing and sentencing enhancements and long prison terms, and that are all categorized as violent crimes. The author Despite the fact that most gun owners in of the study notes that “for the cities sampled American are white, most people serving time here, increasing gun availability provides an for incentive for city residents to commit crime that American or Hispanic, particularly in the federal weapon related offenses are African system. 41% of of households thatthat havehave a firearm are white 41 percent households firearms are white 50 40 30 20 41% 10 20% 19% Hispanic African American 0 White Source: Pew Research Center, “The Demographics and Politics of Gun-owning Households,” July 2014. According to Pew Research Center, 41% of households that have a firearm are non-Hispanic white, 19% are African American, and 20% are Hispanic, http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/07/15/the-demographics-and-politics-of-gun-owning-households/. United States Sentencing Commission, “Incarceration in the Federal Bureau of Prisons,” Sourcebook 2014, http://www.ussc.gov/research-and-publications/annual-reports-sourcebooks/2014/sourcebook-2014. According to the United States Sentencing Commission, 26.9% of persons incarcerated for a firearms offence are white, 23% are Hispanic, and 48.6% are African American. 19 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE Households in America where a gun is owned 90000 Total households of Households number of Total Number 80000 70000 60000 50000 Total number of households 40000 Total number of gun-owning households 30000 20000 10000 0 White Hispanic African American Percent of People Imprisoned by Race for of people imprisoned by race for Percent Offenses Firearm offenses firearm Race of households Federal prison population for firearm offenses by race and ethnicity 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 White Hispanic and African American Race of Respondents Source: United States Sentencing Commission, “Incarceration in the Federal Bureau of Prisons,” Sourcebook 2014, http://www.ussc.gov/research-and-publications/annual-reports-sourcebooks/2014/sourcebook-2014. Figures on incarceration relating to gun offenses in state prison show that about half (48% or 24,400 prisoners) of the people in prison for gun offenses were African American, with state prisons holding an additional 13,900 Hispanic and 11,200 white prisoners sentenced for weapons crimes (Prisoners in 2014). DEFINING VIOLENCE 20 PART IV: THE COST OF INCARCERATING PEOPLE FOR VIOLENT OFFENSES IS LARGE, BUT AN EVEN BIGGER REINVESTMENT IS NEEDED IN COMMUNITIES WHERE VIOLENCE IS A CHALLENGE The unfolding justice reform discourse has Conference focused on the fact that taxpayers spend reported of upwards of $80 billion a year to imprison and approximately $24 billion incarcerating people jail more than 2 million people and keep another convicted of something other than a nonviolent 5 million people under some form of parole or offense.78 that State in Legislatures 2013 (NCSL) taxpayers spent probation supervision.77 A significant focus of the debate has been on strategies to reduce the NCSL’s take on what taxpayers pay to costs associated with incarcerating people for incarcerate people for violent crimes represents nonviolent offenses and reserving prison space just a small portion of what our current justice for others. system policies may cost us.79 This country already spends billions of dollars Other collateral costs exist that researchers are incarcerating people for violent offenses. only beginning to quantify and that speak to the need to advance a broader approach to justice Excluding county and city spending on jails and reform than simply looking at the offense. the federal corrections budget—the National The 10 states that spend the most incarcerating people convicted of a violent offense spend $12 billion. Texas $2,639,568,534.00 California $2,265,075,114.00 Florida $1,712,188,922.00 Georgia $873,567,692.00 New York $872,128,536.00 Ohio $857,486,688.00 Pennsylvania $839,246,950.00 Illinois $803,549,624.00 Michigan $721,674,162.00 Arizona $668,675,678.00 Source: National Conference of State Legislation (2014) 21 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE Cost to expending tax dollars with limited public safety outcomes: In cases of incarceration for a homicide or a sex offense, data show that there are people in these offense categories who could have some of the lowest recidivism rates. Taxpayers are spending money to imprison hundreds of thousands of people included in various offense categories that is not improving public safety or helping engage someone in behavior change. Cost of lifetime lost revenue for government and communities: There is a growing literature—particularly focusing on young people and juveniles—that has attempted to quantify what the larger, long-term cost is to a community and a society when the community relies on incarceration. In Sticker Shock: Calculating the Full Price Tag For Youth Incarceration, JPI estimated that the nation loses $8 to $21 billion dollars every year incarcerating young people when you include lost future earnings of confined youth, lost future government tax revenue, additional Medicare and Medicaid spending that could have been avoided if someone was able to access the job market, and other costs due solely to the incarceration of youth. In 2016, the Brennan Center for Justice is launching a project to better quantify the longer term costs of adult incarceration. Cost to children and communities when parents are incarcerated: As more and more information has emerged on the impact of incarceration, it has helped fuel pressure to challenge laws, policies, and practices that have led to 2.3 million people being incarcerated and has shown the much larger costs our current policies have on communities. Over 5 million children have had a parent incarcerated at some point in their lives.80 When a child has a parent in prison, it has lifelong consequences for them and for the entire community: A recent study shows that the traumatic experience of having a parent in prison has the same magnitude as abuse, domestic violence and divorce. When fathers are incarcerated, family income can drop 22 percent, a parent in prison when they were children experienced a 22 percent drop in family income, and 65 percent of families with a parent in prison could not meet their basic needs (e.g. food, utilities, rent).81 Concentrated costs to communities of color: People of color are disproportionately incarcerated; they are also disproportionately incarcerated for violent and nonviolent offenses alike. In 2014, whites accounted for 31 percent of people in prison for violent offenses, whereas 40 percent were African American, and 23 percent were Hispanic.82 While there is some evidence that in some crime categories violent behaviors come to the attention of law enforcement more frequently in communities of color than among other groups, these studies do not control for the impact of higher unemployment, lower incomes, and the collateral impact of higher levels of justice involvement that also could contribute to people of color being more likely to engage in some behaviors and be arrested, convicted, and imprisoned.83 Simply reallocating funds from the criminal justice system to meet human needs before crime occurs gives short shrift to the scale of the investment needed to truly address what drives people’s engagement in crime, including violent crime. DEFINING VIOLENCE Scholars, including those from the consensus report of the National Academy of Sciences, The Growth of Incarceration in the United States, have said that the kind of investment needed by the communities most incarceration to affected address by mass longstanding disinvestment in the jobs, schooling, and treatment infrastructures that drive violent crime exceeds what is currently being spent on corrections. As Marie Gottschalk, a member of the National Academy of Sciences Task Force on Mass Incarceration wrote, “if the United States is serious about engineering deep and sustained reductions in urban violence, then addressing the country’s high levels of inequality and concentrated poverty must become a top priority, not a public policy afterthought.”84 The need to invest in the communities most affected by violence and crime with something larger than a $24 or $80 billion correctional price tag speaks to the need to expand the definition of “reinvestment” being offered by various justice reform agents. 22 23 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE PART V: EFFORTS TO DEVELOP JUSTICE REFROM APPROACHES THAT CAN HAVE AN IMPACT ON PEOPLE CONVICTED OF VIOLENT OFFENSES Justice reform approaches that move beyond the person on a negative trajectory, including one offense are being offered, but the challenges that that could lead to a violent offense. proponents of such changes are having in mounting policy reform proposals underline While prison and jail populations have been on how much work will need to happen to see the rise, the number of young people confined significant and placed out of the home fell by about 50 and sustained reductions in incarceration. percent between 1999 and 2013. During that time, the number of young people confined or JPI offers a review of how policymakers are placed out of the home for a violent offense also seeking change declined by 43 percent. As juvenile confinement proposals that rely less on how behavior is fell, so did juvenile crime rates, showing that the categorized. reduction in the use of confinement has not to broaden justice policy adversely affected public safety. Reductions in juvenile confinement transcend offense categories. The juvenile justice system functions differently and under different presumptions so that when a young person is convicted of a violent offense and remains under juvenile court jurisdiction, Total number of youth confined or placed out of the home for a violent offense 120000 100000 80000 the system has more tools to serve that young person in the community. The juvenile system 69, 334 60000 Total number of youth confined or placed-out-of-home is more likely to give the corrections department the ability to decide where a young person is 40000 34,226 best served, regardless of the offense, and it grants corrections administrators more authority to manage a young person’s length of stay. The juvenile system also emphasizes diversion more 20000 34,885 19,922 Total number of youth convicted of committing a violent crime 0 2001 Year 2013 than the adult system does, which offers the opportunity for the courts to keep young people Source: Census of Residential Placement, Office of Juvenile out of the justice system entirely and to avoid Justice and Delinquency Prevention, 2001 and 2013 (2016). the system exposure that can put a young DEFINING VIOLENCE 24 The changes in the juvenile justice system are the chance to get a new sentence with the good news for young people, but the trend possibility of parole. Under Senate Bill 260, should not signal that the problem of youth people who received extremely long sentences incarceration has been fully addressed. Much before age 18—sentenced consecutively to terms more needs to be done in juvenile justice policy that would lead to their incarceration for reform. decades—have an opportunity for a parole hearing, and the parole board has to consider Some laws on the books still require the their youthfulness at the time of the offense, that confinement of young people even when the the person may have been less responsible for data might show that they could be safely their actions than adults, and the person’s served in the community. While many laws that propensity to change through maturity. Under transfer young people to the adult court have Senate Bill 261, Senate Bill 260 was extended to been changed, and fewer young people are people whose offense occurred before age 23. being transferred to the adult system overall, in many states a young person convicted of a There are some people who, by the nature of violent crime can still end up in an adult jail or their offense, will not benefit under Senate Bills prison. 9,85 260,86 and 261. The juvenile “deincarceration trend” This reflects legislators’ also has been lopsided by offense: the decline attempts to navigate the way California has has largely been driven by fewer young people layered being confined and placed out of the home for mandatory minimums through voter-enacted nonviolent offenses, making up 70 percent of the ballot initiatives, and the high threshold that decline in young people removed from their two-thirds87 of the legislature must support homes and locked up since 2001. changes to voter-initiated laws. sentencing enhancements and The change does mean that people convicted of a crime that Juvenile life without parole case law expands offenses considered for release. relates to a homicide, robbery, or an offense with a gun enhancement have an opportunity for a parole hearing at the fifteenth, twentieth, or twenty-fifth year of their sentence. These three Since 2005, Supreme Court rulings that have laws created pathways for people to show that banned the use of capital punishment for they should be paroled, and as a result, people juveniles—and retroactively banned the use of convicted of serious and violent offenses have mandatory life without parole—have catalyzed been paroled. changes aimed at reducing incarceration for released under the Youth Offender Parole, most young people convicted of violent crimes. On a of them people who were convicted of a violent state-by-state basis, these rulings have created offense, and as many as 16,000 more remain pathways for lawmakers, attorneys, and young eligible.88 people to reduce the sentence length for people who have been convicted of a violent crime. Under HB 4210, which passed in 2014, the state About 300 people have been of West Virginia eliminated life without parole California’s Senate Bill 9 allows a person who sentences for young people prospectively (going was under 18 years old at the time of a crime forward) and retroactively (youth convicted and sentenced to life without parole to submit a prior to the law change). Under the law, request to have a new sentencing hearing and everyone who was sentenced in adult criminal 25 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE court for any crime committed as a young make person must become eligible for release on someone’s capacity to change and less reliant on parole after no more than 15 years. The effect of the offense that led them to be incarcerated. this change consecutive neutralizes sentencing, as the well impact as parole decisions more reliant on of harsh In New York, members of the Assembly and mandatory minimums for young people. During Senate introduced legislation that has been the parole hearing, the board must also now offered in previous years and dubbed by some consider how young people are different from as the “SAFER Act.” New York has seen low adult offenders, their diminished culpability, parole approval rates in recent years, with the and other age-related mitigating factors. The law only justification for parole denial recorded as also requires judges on the “front-end” to “the nature of the crime,” which excludes a consider these differences before sentencing a variety of other factors that could reasonably be young person who has been transferred to adult considered in the decision about someone’s court. propensity to change or the likelihood that they might reoffend upon release. Assembly Bill Under AB 267, which passed in 2015, the state of 02930 (and Senate Bill 01728) would add a series Nevada eliminated life without parole sentences of systemic changes to the parole process and for all children prospectively, and nearly all revised criteria that would “provide for the children retroactively. Under the new law, release of inmates who meet release criteria” in children convicted of non-homicide offenses ways must receive parole eligibility after no more consideration beyond the “nature of the crime.” than 15 years; children convicted of offenses Governor Cuomo indicated a need for parole where a person was killed receive parole reform in his State of the State this year.89 that provide other avenues for eligibility after no more than 20 years. Similar to West Virginia, the effect of the new law in In California, pressure to reduce the prison Nevada has been to neutralize the impact of population under a court order forced the state stacked and consecutive sentencing, sentencing to establish an Elderly Parole Program. Under enhancements, and harsh mandatory minimums the existing program, people over age 60 who for children convicted of serious offenses. have been incarcerated for 25 years can be referred to Board of Parole Hearings, with Seventeen states now ban life without parole for certain sentencing limitations.90 As of February all young people convicted of offenses, and an 2016, the Board had held 1,187 hearings additional five states ban it for nearly all young resulting in 317 grants of parole, 781 denials, people. and 89 stipulations of unsuitability.91 Senate Bill 1310, Changes offered to parole laws and practices can transcend the offense. introduced in 2016, would have established the Elderly Parole Program as a matter of law and would have expanded the universe of people who might benefit from it A number of legislative proposals were being (while still excluding some categories of offenses debated in the first half of 2016 that would seek from consideration).92 SB 1310 was withdrawn to change the parole process so that more people from legislative consideration when the entire who might have had a violent crime in their Elderly Parole Program was put under the distant past would be eligible for release, and to DEFINING VIOLENCE microscope as the result of crime victims raising concerns about the process.93 26 to all people in prison who qualify “regardless of offense.”97 In Michigan, substantial bipartisan support Both presumptive parole and the medical parole (including from the Republican governor ) has bills passed the Michigan House and are been building in 2015 and 2016 for changes to pending for consideration in the Michigan Senate. 94 the state’s parole process. HB 4138, introduced by a Republican legislator and supported by the Republican governor, establishes a presumption of parole for people who score a high probability of parole on the parole guidelines Changes to sentencing enhancements and mandatory minimums chip away at offenses. and limits the parole system’s denials to a set of criteria that focuses the process more on a In 2016, legislatures considered proposals to person’s risk of future violence and less on the change laws, policies, and practices that would offense. Presumptive parole will not apply to provide some relief for people who received parole-eligible lifers but that is based on the sentencing enhancements, long sentences due to sentence type, not the crime. The changes would the consecutive nature of multiple convictions, seek to ease the challenge of thousands of or mandatory minimums. people being incarcerated beyond their first changes marked the first repeal of mandatory parole eligibility date, despite scoring a high minimums that some states had seen. probability of parole on the In some cases, the Michigan Department of Corrections’ parole guidelines, Florida policymakers have faced challenges an indicator that someone presents a very low enacting any kind of meaningful sentencing risk to public safety. reform, regardless of whether the primary focus people who have There are about 1,900 minimum has been on people whose most serious offense sentences and have been denied release despite served their at conviction was a violent crime or a nonviolent having high probability of parole scores. crime, and thus leading the prison population to 95 The Michigan Department of Corrections estimates keep ticking upwards. that a shift towards presumptive parole would incarceration in Florida is the state’s 10-20-Lifer save 3,200 prison beds and save $75 million over a five year period.96 statute. Under the law, someone who uses a A primary driver of firearm while committing a forcible felony can be sentenced to the law's maximum, and the Also in Michigan, the parole board had a prior mandatory authority to grant medical parole to people who consecutive to any additional sentence a person were physically or mentally incapacitated, but must serve. the sentencing” mandatory minimum prison sentence under the legislation that requires every person to serve 10-20-Lifer Law for aggravated assault with a every day of his or her minimum sentence in a firearm. In 2016, there were 235 people serving secure facility ended the practice. Under a a prison term under the 10-20-Lifer Law whose medical parole package (5078-81) that passed primary offense was aggravated assault, or 2.3 the Michigan House Appropriations Committee percent of the 10-20-Lifer population in Florida in February 2016, new provisions would apply prisons. Building on previous changes made to enactment of “truth in sentences must be imposed This statute included a 3-year the law in earlier legislative sessions, SB 228 27 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE deletes aggravated assault from the list of convictions that carry a minimum term of imprisonment. The legislation was approved Policy approaches seek to address the root causes of violence or reduce the harm of violence. by Florida’s Republican Senate and signed by Governor Rick Scott in February 2016, and it A U.S. Justice Department study showed that, marked the first mandatory minimum that while young men of all races between the ages Florida had repealed in 20 years. Various other of 16 and 24 experience higher rates of violence violent offenses98 are still subject to the 10-20- than other age groups (including assault and Lifer Law, and the breadth of support for the robbery), over an 11-year study period, young change among law enforcement and gun rights African American men were more likely to be organizations was around the impact of the law robbed and more likely to be victimized by for people who display or fire a gun in self violence. defense.99 overrepresented among homicide victims.100 In 2015, Colorado, through the passage of HB15- What is true nationally is also true locally. In 1303, legislators amended their state statutes to Washington, D.C., where just under half the remove a five-year mandatory minimum for residents are African American, more than eight someone convicted of second degree assault on out of 10 homicide victims in the city were a African American and a third of those were peace officer, firefighter, or emergency management team member when committed Young men of color are also between the ages of 18 and 24.101 with the intent of prevention of a lawful duty. Under the new law, the mandatory minimum no The choices that policymakers can make around longer applies unless serious bodily injury dealing with violent crime were brought into occurs. The change aligned the offense with sharp relief this year in Washington, D.C., and other classes for felonies, allowing a judge to neighboring cities. An analysis by the Brennan take into consideration the circumstances of the Center for Justice showed the homicide rate case. from nationally in 2015 was projected to be about 15 Colorado prosecutors and law enforcement, the percent higher than last year in the 30 largest changes to second degree assault became the cities, first mandatory minimum repealed in Colorado. Washington, D.C.—accounted for almost 50 Despite significant opposition but just two cities—Baltimore and percent of the national increase in homicides. In 2016, the Colorado Governor signed into law legislation that removed the requirement that Digging even deeper, incidents of lethal violence consecutive sentences be imposed if someone is in just three police districts accounted for most convicted of two or more separate crimes of of the growth in homicides in Washington D.C., violence arising from the same incident and one and they occurred in parts of the city where a of such crimes is aggravated robbery, second larger proportion of residents are African degree assault, or escape. SB 16-051 returned American, where unemployment is higher, and discretion to the court to impose either a where concurrent employment, or consecutive sentence. Amendments to the bill limited the crimes where the courts could impose either a concurrent or consecutive sentence. greater challenges school residents’ income. success, exist and around raising DEFINING VIOLENCE 28 In the wake of the first significant increase in annual trainings to help police avoid bias-based homicides seen in a decade, local policymakers profiling. in Washington D.C. were offered two starkly different approaches to violence prevention. Along with the unanimous passage of the NEAR Act in Washington, D.C., neighboring Baltimore, One legislative proposal offered by Washington Maryland, is also seeking to build on its public D.C.’s Mayor in 2016 would have expanded the health approach to violence prevention. authority of officers to conduct warrantless searches in homes where people on parole, When someone in Baltimore has been shot, probation, and supervised release lived, and it stabbed, or severely beaten, they can be brought would have lengthened sentences or increased to a designated city hospital that has a Shock the ability to detain people pretrial. While the Trauma Center; there a violence intervention increase in lethal violence was not associated counselor assesses the person’s needs and with the public transportation system or parks, challenges, identifies other options besides the proposal would have enhanced penalties for retaliation several dozen offenses if committed against a individuals, and steers affected individuals public transit passenger or worker, or against toward services. to resolve conflicts between any person while located in or near a public park. What is common to Baltimore’s Shock Trauma Center and what is being imagined in the While the more punitive legislative proposal did Washington, D.C., NEAR Act is having someone not move forward, the Washington D.C. City facilitate preventing an escalation of conflict by Council in the spring unanimously endorsed a working in the community (or hospital) to help public health approach to violence prevention the parties stop the cycle of retaliation, to that was focused on responses outside the mediate conflicts, and to connect people to justice system. The Neighborhood Engagement resources to address the harm of the violence Achieves Results Amendment Act of 2016 (The outside the justice system. NEAR Act) would establish offices that will coordinate city agencies’ responses to violent Along with the public health approach being crime, and places clinicians in emergency rooms offered in these cities, other approaches also to respond to the needs of victims and to help exist to address violent crime that do not rely on prevent the escalation of violence. The NEAR incarceration and seek to address harm. Act also calls on the city to identify teenagers and young adults at the highest risk for In New York City, Common Justice (a project of committing or being a victim of violent crime to the Vera Institute of Justice) approaches violent participate in a stipend-based program to assist crime in a manner that transforms the lives of them in life planning, provide trauma-informed victims and fosters racial equity without relying therapy when appropriate, and offer mentorship on incarceration. Common Justice serves as the services. The NEAR Act also provides law first alternative-to-incarceration and enforcement with community-policing training, service program in the United States that focuses requires the collection of data around “stop and on violent felonies in the adult court, almost frisk” and police use of force, and provides exclusively serving young adults of color. If— victim- and only if—the harmed parties consent, 29 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE Common Justice diverts cases such as assault and robbery into a dialogue process designed to recognize the harm done, identify the needs and interests of those harmed, and develop appropriate responses to hold the responsible party accountable. Under the Common Justice approach, program staff rigorously monitor responsible parties’ compliance with agreements—which may include restitution, community service, and commitments to attend school and work—and supervise their completion of the 15-month intensive violence intervention program.102 In 2015, Common Justice staff launched a national learning collaborative to support people working with young men of color harmed by crime nationally. DEFINING VIOLENCE 30 CONCLUSION: STRATEGIES TO REDUCE THE USE OF INCARCERATION THAT ARE LESS FOCUSED ON THE OFFENSE While this is a complicated issue, the data show resource other than prison or jail when that the only way to bring down prison and jail serious public safety challenges arise. The populations to a level that looks like the challenge for policymakers is not to end up opposite of “mass incarceration” will involve in the position of offering multi-pronged changes to laws, policies, and practices that approaches where only one of the prongs is change how society responds to violent crime. resourced. As the field has learned from Such by efforts to reduce gang crime, efforts to acknowledging how people convicted of violent prevent, intervene, and suppress gang and nonviolent offenses alike are treated by the activity have seen a lopsided investment in system. suppression.103 If prison and jails are to be policy changes must begin downsized, prevention, intervention, and As a first step, JPI recommends scrutinizing all public laws, policies, and practices that affect the prevention need to be resourced at scale, length of time that someone is in prison or jail along the lines of a “Marshall Plan” for based conviction. America’s distressed communities. In other A person’s propensity for change, an assessment words, we need more than a simple of their risk to engage in other behavior (and an reallocation of the approximately $80 billion assessment of what they would need to change that the nation spends on corrections. As their behavior), and the most effective ways to dollars are targeted to these approaches, address the harm caused by crime need to be they should be targeted to the communities elevated as issues in the discourse. that face the biggest crime and incarceration solely on the person’s health approaches to violence challenges, should support approaches that Specifically, JPI offers the following approaches largely occur outside the formal justice to help the country develop sounder justice system, and should be stable from year to reform proposals that may more meaningfully year. A revamped approach to prevention, reduce the use of incarceration across offense intervention, and public health approaches categories. to violence prevention also will target more dollars to communities of color, where crime 1) Increase prevention, intervention, and public health responses to violence. Local and incarceration occur in higher approaches without proportions. responses to the spike in violent crime in Washington, D.C., Baltimore, and other 2) Expand diversion cities have shown support for efforts that stringent offense prohibitions. There has address the root causes of violent crime, de- been escalate conflict, and focus on providing a attention towards approaches that divert a significant increase in policy 31 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE someone from the justice system before they include a broader range of behaviors, end up being arrested, convicted, and including those defined in some contexts imprisoned. By way of example, Law (statutory or correctional) as being a violent Enforcement Diversion—where crime. When changing the classification of police officers have the option of diverting an offense, caution should be taken so that someone they would otherwise arrest and the approach also seeks to reduce the book, to a case manager that lines them up number of people sentenced to local jails, with various services—have been pioneered and to reduce the chances that reductions in in some jurisdictions. These programs create state prison populations would lead to more opportunities to reduce the number of people being sentenced to jail. Assisted people formally processed by the justice system. Right diversion 4) Reduce the number of offenses that result approaches are only targeted to individuals in criminal and delinquency proceedings. whom For decades, American legislators have law now, many enforcement identifies as 104 engaging solely in nonviolent crimes. simply layered their statutes with more and Approaches that divert someone from the more offenses, some of which can lead justice system before they end up being directly to imprisonment or to deeper arrested, convicted, and imprisoned should penetration into the justice system through be expanded, and offense restrictions to an arrest. these approaches should be scrutinized. for an end to “overcriminalization”—the Some conservatives have called trend to use the criminal law rather than the 3) Reduce the number of offenses that can civil law to solve every problem, to punish result in incarceration. There has been every mistake, and to compel compliance significant movement to reclassify certain with regulatory objectives,”105 a frame that behaviors so that they are no longer eligible seeks to reduce the role of the justice system for prison and create opportunities for a on individuals and corporations. In Ohio, person the to be re-sentenced. When Criminal Justice Recodification Californians passed Proposition 47, the Committee was instituted and tasked with voter-initiated law changed a series of reviewing the criminal code to “recommend felony offenses to misdemeanors, which a plan for a simplified criminal code” and permitted people previously sentenced for reviewing how offenses—including violent these crimes to petition for re-sentencing. crimes—are As of January 6, 2016, approximately 4,532 Legislators throughout the country should people under start reducing the number of behaviors that Proposition 47, but like many changes in result in a criminal or civil offense and help justice policy in California, the crafting of ratchet down the reach of the justice system. have been released treated under the statute. Proposition 47 landed squarely in the debate around what constitutes a violent offense. 5) Reduce the number of people on While the uniqueness of California’s statute community supervision. While 2.3 million and the polarized justice reform discourse people in the country are incarcerated, an affect who can benefit from recent reforms, additional these changes represent a base to build community supervision, with 4 million of from. those on probation. In alignment with best Offense reclassification should 5 million people are on DEFINING VIOLENCE 32 practices, probation, parole, and pretrial their age, progress in completing treatment agencies are being asked to ratchet down or a service, or the demonstration that the supervision based on a person’s assessed person has a capacity to change. All laws, needs; remove fees, fines, or housing policies, and practices that lengthen the restrictions that someone’s serve success; as connect barriers to amount of time someone is incarcerated people to need to be put under the microscope, across services; and shorten supervision terms or offense categories. create incentives for people to earn their need to be looking at mandatory minimums, way off supervision. This best-practice sentencing approach also calls on supervision agencies sentencing laws, statutes that make certain to change their approach from something offenses ineligible for parole, and practices colloquially described as “nail them and jail that restrict people from earning time off them”—a manner of supervision solely their reliant on monitoring behavior—to an programing and services. Legislators and approach justice system professionals need to increase where a supervision agent Justice system leaders enhancements, sentence for for truth-in- participation an in engages the person they are working with in opportunities individualized positive behavioral change. The hallmark of approach to assessing whether the use of this approach is an objective assessment of incarceration is just, both for the person what a person needs to change their incarcerated and the harmed party, and for behavior, a less subjective assessment of the community. their risk to reoffend, and a tailored approach to meet the needs of each person. 7) Increase restorative justice and trauma- If these approaches were adopted at scale, informed approaches to reduce violence. they would include changes that would Under remove from intensive supervision people approaches to meet the needs of crime assessed to be at low risk of reoffending and victims and promote restorative justice with few needs, reduce the number of practices, the line between who is the people on supervision, reduce the time harmed party and the person causing the people are on supervision, and reduce the harm—and what they both need—stretches number of people revoked and sent to beyond the offense. As one federal agency prison community notes, “the majority of people who have All of these approaches are behavioral health issues and are involved less reliant on the instant offense that leads with the justice system have significant to someone’s justice system involvement.107 histories of trauma and exposure to personal or supervision. 106 jail from some of the more thoughtful and community violence. Involvement with 6) Change laws, policies, and practices that the justice system can further exacerbate affect length of stay. Significant numbers of trauma for these individuals.”108 people in prison face mandatory terms of strength of trauma-informed, public health, The incarceration and parole restrictions that are and restorative justice approaches is that based on the crime that occurred in they address root causes of crime and make someone’s distant past and that limit the restoring the harm caused by behavior more integration of other factors such as a central than simply punishing a person person’s assessed risk to reoffend due to based on the offense. These approaches also 33 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE help focus resources in the right direction, they have seen little change in their overall largely away from the justice system and use of incarceration. Initiatives have been toward addressing the harm. Surveys of offered to cut the prison and jail population crime victims show that there is more by 50 percent or to reduce a particular state support prison population by a certain amount. for using alternatives-to- incarceration, restitution, and providing a Jurisdictions service to a crime victim than simply relying reform proposals the idea that the metric of on long prison or jail sentences. success should include a reduction in the 109 could start building into overall number of prisons and jails. Making 8) Use risk assessment tools in decision- reductions in the number of prisons and jails making. Risk assessments are being used part of justice reform proposals will give throughout the criminal justice system to policymakers a tool to move beyond offense help make better decisions, particularly categories in how they redesign public around whether someone can be released safety systems. pretrial or paroled. These tools need to be scrutinized for any factors that might 10) Reduce gun availability. gun availability The role that needlessly ratchet up someone’s offense mass history (such as increased law enforcement incarceration is something that needs to be a presence in one community over another). broader area of focus in justice reform While risk assessments hold promise to help proposals. With America becoming a place move the discussion from a sole focus on the with about as many guns as people, and offense to help justice system professionals with guns playing such a significant role in manage the system, these tools are just that, increasing tools. Risk assessments are only as good as disparities, the relationship between guns what they were designed to do, how they and incarceration needs to be part of the are used, who is using them, and to what overall end. Risk assessments do not eliminate the Reducing gun access, need for a trained justice professional to production, and reexamining the role that make an individualized judgment around guns play in sentencing need to be part of a what a person might need to help change broader approach to reducing the use of their behavior, or replace the value that a incarceration. justice system needs to act proportionately violence that focus on restrictions on who and justly. All assessment tools need to be can have a gun (versus reducing the supply carefully validated and reviewed to know of guns) need to be balanced to get to the that they are assessing risk accurately and heart of reducing the use of incarceration, that they are not perpetuating racial and and enhancing public safety. sentence dialogue plays lengths in in mass and justice racial reform. availability, and Efforts to reduce gun ethnic bias. By expanding the use of prevention, diversion, 9) Make prison and jail closures part of justice reform proposals. states have already A number of gone and revamping community supervision; making better use of trauma-informed approaches; through identifying and removing barriers to length of stakeholder-driven processes to recommend stay; and making prison closures part of justice strategies to right size their systems, and reform proposals, fewer people will be locked DEFINING VIOLENCE up. result Taken together, these strategies would in a reduction of justice system involvement overall and would guard against having a population of people needlessly moved from prisons to jails or from locked custody to less-effective forms of supervision. 34 35 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE Is studying the problem the same as solving the problem? As the issue of the overuse of incarceration has become part of the mainstream justice debate, various task forces, commissions, and study groups have been convened to study the problem and recommend policy changes. While it is important in the hyperpolarized justice policy field for stakeholders to have an opportunity for meaningful dialogue around sound policy proposals, studying the problem of mass incarceration isn’t the same as solving the problem. Ohio, Virginia, and Illinois offer cautionary tales about the need to balance a process of studying the problem with tangible progress in addressing the problem. In Ohio, the Criminal Justice Recodification Committee work is not yet complete, and recommendations for changes to how offenses are catalogued have not yet been offered to legislators. As noted by the ACLU in Ohio, the need to study the statute to potentially reduce the number of offenses did not stop the Ohio General Assembly from introducing 54 new bills—11 percent of the total number introduced in both chambers—that increased the number of offenses or penalties that could result in a prison or jail term. 110 In Virginia, Governor McAuliffe (D) instituted a Commission on Parole to assess the impact of the Commonwealth’s abolition of parole, truth-in-sentencing, and correctional policies. While two dozen recommendations were offered to legislators—including redefining what constitutes a violent crime and changes to sentencing and statutes that would have meant people convicted of violent crime might have had opportunities to leave prison sooner—none of the recommendations offered was enacted in the 2016 legislative session. Illinois, the State Commission on Criminal Justice and Sentencing Reform was charged with developing policy proposals that would review the “current criminal justice and sentencing structure, sentencing practices, community supervision, and the use of alternatives to incarceration” and to “make recommendations for amendments to state law that will reduce the State’s current prison population by 25% by 2025.” In March 2016, three bills that stemmed from recommendations in the report were offered to legislators: bills that would issue state identification cards to people leaving prison, a requirement that a judge review pre-sentencing reports and explain why incarceration (rather than probation) is appropriate, and legislation to expand the use of electronic monitoring for people sent to state custody for less than a year. Thus far, these approaches have been focused on finding ways to reduce the incarceration of people convicted of nonviolent offenses. Illinois Governor Rauner (R) noted when these legislative proposals were introduced that “this is not the end of anything. This is the very beginning of a process that will go on for years to improve our criminal justice system.” 111 DEFINING VIOLENCE 1Daniel 36 Denvir, “‘Non-serious, non-violent, non-sexual’: Fixing our mass incarceration problem means getting past the easy steps,” Salon, October 26, 2015, http://www.salon.com/2015/10/26/non_serious_non_violent_non_sexual_fixing_our_mass_incarceration_problem_means_getting_p ast_the_easy_steps/ 2Sixteen states out of twenty four saw declines in their prison population saw declines of two percent or less, and the federal prison population declined by 2 percent. See E. Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2014 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2015). 3E. Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2014 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2015). 4By way of example, in California, between 2007-2015, the state spent $2.2 billion on building new jails, and the most recently enacted state budget added another $270 million to that figure. Personal correspondence, Steve Steven Meinrath, ACLU of California, Center for Advocacy and Policy, June 23, 2016. 5 Todd D. Minton and Zhen Zeng, Jail Inmates at Midyear 2014 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2015). “Twenty-eight counties are leveraging $1.7 billion in state grants to build and expand 35 jails. These projects, in various stages of design and construction, will initially add about 12,000 jail beds in the state, according to the Public Policy Institute of California. But many of the new jails are designed to accommodate future expansions that could significantly increase their capacity.” See Anat Rubin, “California’s Jail-building Boom: What comes after mass incarceration? Local incarceration,” The Marshall Project, July 2, 2015, https://www.themarshallproject.org/2015/07/02/california-s-jail-buildingboom#.Rjr3eRYek 6 Marie Gottschalk, “Are We There Yet? The Promise, Perils and Politics of Penal Reform,” Prison Legal News, January 1, 2016, www.prisonlegalnews.org/news/2016/jan/1/are-we-there-yet-promise-perils-and-politics-penal-reform/ 7Dana Goldstein, “How to Cut the Prison Population by 50 Percent. No, freeing potheads and shoplifters is not enough,” The Marshall Project, March 4, 2015, www.themarshallproject.org/2015/03/04/how-to-cut-the-prison-population-by-50percent#.sPHgvXGF5 8 “Mass Incarceration: The whole pie. ” (Northampton, MA: Prison Policy Initiative, 2016). http://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/pie2016.html 9 Dana Goldstein, “How to Cut the Prison Population by 50 Percent,” The Marshall Project, March 4, 2015,www.themarshallproject.org/2015/03/04/how-to-cut-the-prison-population-by-50-percent 10 Jason Ziedenberg, “The Punishing Decade: Prison and Jail Estimates at the Millennium (Washington, DC: Justice Policy Institute, 2000) http://www.justicepolicy.org/images/upload/00-05_rep_punishingdecade_ac.pdf 11 A study analyzed crime rates between the United States and other developed European countries. It found that the United States’ average homicide rate from 1950 – 1960, per 100,000 residents is 5.27. Conversely, Europe’s homicide rate, which included Great Britain, Netherlands, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden and Poland, in the same time frame, was .88 per 100,000 residents. During this time period, the United States’ incarceration population was comparable to the current conditions in Europe. Furthermore, in 2000 the United States’ homicide rate per 100,000 was 6.1 compared to Europe’s 1.225; Any Kiersz, “The U.S. has had the Western World’s Worst Rate of Homicide for at least 60 Years,” Business Insider, November 2014. http://www.businessinsider.com/us-vs-western-homicide-rates-2014-11 12 A statutory analysis was conducted for select states and the District of Columbia to highlight how helpful broad offense categories might be in understanding how to reduce prison and jail populations. A literature review supplements the statutory analysis, and additional information was reviewed to put certain behaviors in their proper social and community context. 13 In New York, violent felonies include aggravated murder, crime of terrorism, assault in the first degree, burglary in the first degree, robbery in the first degree, and rape in the first degree. http://yonkerspd.com/penal.law/bviolent_felonies.htm 14 In New York, nonviolent felonies include grand larceny in the first degree, insurance fraud in the first degree, compelling prostitution, bribery in the first degree, enterprise corruption, and aggravated vehicular homicide. See, http://yonkerspd.com/penal.law/b_felonies.htm 15 Division of Adult Parole Operations Non-Revocable Parole. California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. http://www.cdcr.ca.gov/parole/non_revocable_parole/non-revocable_parole_faqs.html 16 Defined in Penal Code section 667.5(c). 17 Defined in Penal Code section 1192.7(c). 18 Defined a registerable offense under Penal Code section 290. 19 “While, as of October 1, 2011, local communities will begin taking custody of offenders who meet the criteria of being non-violent, non-serious, and non-sex offenders, there are some exceptions to this rule. There are a number of crimes that are categorized as being non-violent, non-serious, and non-sex offenses but nonetheless, under the California Penal Code, will still require that offenders serve their sentences in State prisons. These crimes are also known as the Exclusions, and there are a total of 59. Their exclusion status is due to their enactment as majority-vote bills wherein voters decided that tougher and longer sentences were required for certain kinds of offenses. Thus, any offender convicted of any one of these 59 exclusions will serve their sentences with the State.” 37 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE E. Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2014 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2015),Appendix Table 4 and 5, http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/p14.pdf 21Personal Communication, Elizabeth Smith, University of Maryland's Carey School of Law, February 26, 2016. Also see “From A Life Term To Life On The Outside: When Aging Felons Are Freed,” National Public Radio, February 18, 2016, http://www.npr.org/2016/02/18/467057603/from-a-life-term-to-life-on-the-outside-when-aging-felons-are-freed 22Of 820 people who had been serving for murder or manslaughter, two (0.2 percent) returned to prison for a new homicide. About 6 percent of this group did return to prison for other crimes over the three year period. Barbara Levine, 10,000 Fewer Michigan Prisoners: Strategies To Reach the Goal, (Lansing, Michigan: Citizens Alliance on Prisoners and Public Spending, June 2015). 23 Freedom of Information Law appeal, email message from Terrence Tracy, April 19, 2013 24 Prison Returns for A-1 Violent Offenders. How do Violent Offenders preform in the community? 2012 Annual Report from the Parole Board to the New York State Legislature. 25“Recent studies suggest that 50 percent of offenders released from state prisons return to prison within 3 to 5 years. In contrast, this article shows that roughly two of every three offenders who enter and exit prison will never return to prison. Using data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics’ newly revised National Corrections Reporting Program, we examine prison admissions and releases over a 13-year period in 17 states and over shorter periods in other states to determine the rate at which individual offenders return to prison. We distinguish between the traditional event-based sampling methods for studying recidivism and our alternative offender-based method, explaining how each is useful but how the two approaches answer different policy questions.” William Rhodes, Gerald Gaes, Jeremy Luallen, Ryan Kling, Tom Rich, and Michael Shively. “Following Incarceration, Most Released Offenders Never Return to Prison,” Crime & Delinquency (2014): 1-23. 26 As of 2014, 3 percent of people in state prison were there for drug possession offenses, 12 percent were people incarcerated whose most serious drug offense was “other” – a category designed to exclude individuals convicted of trafficking and other drug offenses. In total, there were about 50,000 people in state prison in 2013 whose most serious offense was drug possession, among the 208,000 people in state prisons for drug offenses. In the federal system, there were 86,080 on December 26, 2015 whose most serious offense was a drug offense. 27 Doug McVay, Vincent Schiraldi, and Jason Ziedenberg. Treatment or Incarceration: National and State Findings on the Efficacy and Cost Savings of Drug Treatment Versus Imprisonment (Washington, D.C.: Justice Policy Institute, 2004). 28Carla Marquez et al., “How Much Punishment is Enough? Designing Participatory Research on Parole Policies for Persons Convicted of a Violent Crime,” paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, Montreal, Canada, November 16-20, 2010: 10. 29 See Lamb v. State, 93 Md.App. 422, 441, 613 A.2d 402 (Md.Ct.Spec.App.1992). 30 State v. Duckett, 306 Md. 503, 510, 510 A.2d 253 (1986). 31 Epps v. State, 333 Md. 121, 127, 634 A.2d 20 (1993). 32Proposals that were offered to the Maryland JRCC around assault included: adding a category of Assault in the 3rd degree and 4th degree, new offenses that would have carried penalties between 3 and 5 years, in contrast to the 10 year sentence that a judge can apply under Maryland’s 2nd Degree Assault law. Sentencing Worksheet, Maryland Justice Reinvestment Coordinating Council, November 3, 2015. 33 “Important to understanding the scope of the Justice Reinvestment Initiative recommendations is to understand the definition of “violent crime” as currently defined and used…..The scope of that definition does not include crimes that many individuals would deem to be violent and it would also include crimes that many individuals would not deem to be violent. Justice will be denied if crimes that are equally or more serious than existing “violent crime” and “crime of violence” are not similarly situated. The crimes in Appendix B should not obtain day for day (30 days a month) of diminution credits and they should not be released on administrative parole without a parole hearing. These are violent crimes and they should not be treated as nonviolent in nature.” Testimony of Roberta Roper, Debra Tall, and Russell P. Buttler in Support of the Justice Reinvestment Act, Maryland Crime Victims Resource Center, March 3, 2016. 34"Pushing heroin and other opioids isn't nonviolent. Shooting a person is violent; quietly poisoning them may not draw blood, but the result is the same. Reducing jail time for heroin pushers, during an opioid epidemic, does not send the message heroin pushers need to hear." Del. Herb McMillan, Republican (Anne Arundel). “Maryland House Approves Criminal Justice Overhaul,” The Baltimore Sun, April 4, 2016, http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-justice-house-20160404-story.html 35The D.C. statute reads as follows: (1) 22-405(b) – is 180-days under current law and it makes it a crime to assault, resist, oppose, impede, etc. a law enforcement officer engaged in his/her official duties.(2) 22-405 (c) – is a 10-year offense and it makes it a crime to commit subsection (b) AND cause or create a grave risk of causing “significant bodily injury” to the officer. See Code of the District of Columbia 22–405, Assault on member of police force, campus or university special police, or fire department. 36Id. 37 Law Offices of Stephen Bilkis & Associates, “N.Y. Pen. Law § 120.08 New York Assault on a Police Officer,” http://criminaldefense.1800nynylaw.com/new-york-assault-on-a-police-officer.html 38 Christina Davidson and Patrick Madden, “In DC, Wiggling while Handcuffed Counts as Assaulting an Officer.” Center for Investigative Reporting Reveal News, May 9, 2015, www.revealnews.org/article/dcs-assaulting-an-officer-charge-could-hide-policeabuse-critics-say/ 20 DEFINING VIOLENCE 38 Christina Davidson and Patrick Madden, “In DC, Wiggling while Handcuffed Counts as Assaulting an Officer.” Center for Investigative Reporting Reveal News, May 9, 2015, www.revealnews.org/article/dcs-assaulting-an-officer-charge-could-hide-policeabuse-critics-say/ 40 Christina Davidson and Patrick Madden, “In DC, Wiggling while Handcuffed Counts as Assaulting an Officer.” Center for Investigative Reporting Reveal News, May 9, 2015, www.revealnews.org/article/dcs-assaulting-an-officer-charge-could-hide-policeabuse-critics-say/ 41See, Report on Bill 21-0360, the “Neighborhood Engagement Achieves Results Amendment Act of 2016,” January 27, 2016, http://dccouncil.us/files/user_uploads/event_testimony/B21-0360%20Committee%20Report%20without%20Attachments.pdf 42 Defined as aggravated (violent) or simple (nonviolent). Richard F. Culp et al., Is Burglary a Crime of Violence? An Analysis of National Data 1998-2007 (New York, NY: John Jay College of Criminal Justice, 2015), www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/248651.pdf 43 Richard F. Culp et al., Is Burglary a Crime of Violence? An Analysis of National Data 1998-2007, (New York, NY: John Jay College of Criminal Justice, 2015), www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/248651.pdf 44 Richard F. Culp et al., Is Burglary a Crime of Violence? An Analysis of National Data 1998-2007, (New York, NY: John Jay College of Criminal Justice, 2015), www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/248651.pdf 45 “Proposition 36, passed as part of a ballot initiative in California in 2012, revised the three strikes law to impose life sentence only when the new felony conviction is "serious or violent, authorized re-sentencing for offenders currently serving life sentences if their third strike conviction was not serious or violent and if the judge determines that the re-sentence does not pose unreasonable risk to public safety. The law change continues to impose a life sentence penalty if the third strike conviction was for "certain non-serious, non-violent sex or drug offenses or involved firearm possession,” and maintains the life sentence penalty for felons with “nonserious, non-violent third strike if prior convictions were for rape, murder, or child molestation.” See Ballotpedia, Proposition 36, www.ballotpedia.org/California_Proposition_36,_Changes_in_the_%22Three_Strikes%22_Law_(2012) 46 Update to the Three Judge Court (State of California, Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, March 15, 2016). 47 ‘The CDCR data shows that the recidivism rate of prisoners released under Proposition 36 is 1.3 percent. By comparison, the recidivism rate of all other inmates released from prison over the same period of time is over 30 percent.” See Proposition 36 Progress Report: Over 1,500 Prisoners Released Historically Low Recidivism Rate (Stanford, CA: The Stanford Law Three Strikes Project, 2014), http://law.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/default/files/child-page/595365/doc/slspublic/ThreeStrikesReport.pdf 48 Paige St. John, “Petition Drive To Scale Back California's Three Strikes Law Cleared for Circulation,” The Los Angeles Times, October 20, 2015. 49 Commonwealth of Virginia, The Commission on Parole Review, December 4, 2015. 39 U.S. Sentencing Commission, Amendment to the Sentencing Guidelines, January 21, 2016. www.ussc.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/amendment-process/reader-friendly-amendments/20160121_RF.pdf 50 Kate Hynes, “The Cost of Fear: An Analysis of Sex Offender Registration, Community Notification, and Civil Commitment Laws in the United States and the United Kingdom,” The Penn State Journal of Law & International Affairs. 2 (2013): 351-79. 52 “Sexual assault. A wide range of victimizations, separate from rape or attempted rape. These crimes include attacks or attempted attacks generally involving unwanted sexual contact between victim and offender. Sexual assaults may or may not involve force and include such things as grabbing or fondling. It also includes verbal threats. See “Rape and Sexual Assault, http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=tp&tid=317 51 53 Jill S. Levenson, Yolanda N. Brannon, Timothy Fortney, and Juanita Baker, “Public Perceptions About Sex Offenders and Community Protection Policies,” Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 7 (2007): 1-25. 54 Jill S. Levenson, Yolanda N. Brannon, Timothy Fortney, and Juanita Baker, “Public Perceptions About Sex Offenders and Community Protection Policies,” Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 7 (2007): 1-25. 55 “The rearrest rate for all crimes – not just sex offenses – was 43 percent for released sex offenders compared to 68 percent for released non-sex offenders, or about one third lower. The reconviction rate for sex offenders for all crimes was 25.” Patrick A. Langan, Erica L. Schmitt, and Matthew R. Durose, Recidivism of Sex Offenders Released from Prison in 1994 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Justice Department, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics). Certain subgroups of sex offenders do pose comparatively higher risk of offending, including same-sex child serious abusers and men who assault women. See Tracey Velazquez. The Pursuit of Safety: Sex Offender Policy in the United States (Vera Institute of Justice: New York City, 2008). 56 Of the 4,109 people once convicted of a sex offense who were paroled from 2007 through the first quarter of 2009, 32 (0.8 percent) returned to prison for a new sex offense. 57 Center on Youth Registration Reform. Understanding Youth Registration, May 2016, http://impactjustice.org/cyrr/ 58 For tier II sex offenders it is 25 years and tier III sex offenders appear on a registry for life. 59 Richard Tewksbury, “Collateral Consequences of Sex Offender Registration,” Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice Research 21 (2005): 75, table 2; Richard Tewksbury, “Exile at Home: The Unintended Collateral Consequences of Sex Offenders Residency Restrictions,” Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 42 (2007): 532-34 60Kristen Zgoba, Phillip Witt, Melissa Dalessandro, and Bonita Veysey, Megan’s Law: Assessing the Practical and Monetary Efficacy (Washington, DC: National Institute of Justice, 2008), https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/225370.pdf 39 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE Refers to both sex offender registration and community notification. There was a slight reduction in reoffending by sex offenders who were acquainted with their victims, which are a small part of the population of people on registries. Kristen Zgoba, Phillip Witt, Melissa Dalessandro, and Bonita Veysey, Megan’s Law: Assessing the Practical and Monetary Efficacy (Washington, DC: National Institute of Justice, 2008), https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/225370.pdf 63Offenses Statistics based on prior month's data, Last Updated Saturday, 26 December 2015. Federal Bureau of Prisons, accessed February 15, 2016, 64“Mass Incarceration: The whole pie. ” (Northampton, MA: Prison Policy Initiative, 2016). 61 62 65 The Sentencing Program, “The Facts: State-by-State Data,” (2014) http://www.sentencingproject.org/the-facts/#map 66During a 30-state statutory analysis, it was found that 20 states either do not define what a deadly weapon is or they say it is a firearm or anything else that can cause death. The other 10 states define what a deadly weapon is and give explicit examples of the weapon. 67Prosecutors are not legally allowed to charge individuals with crimes unless they feel they have a reasonable likelihood of a conviction. However, scholars have identified discernible differences in strategies employed by prosecutors that can affect how a criminal justice process ends under the plea process: vertical overcharging relies on charging a single offense at a higher level than the circumstances seem to warrant, and horizontal overcharging relies on multiplying the number of charges. In both cases, these are tools the criminal justice system assigns to prosecutors in the process: there is a possibility to acquire a conviction, and the threat of a greater sentence due to the augmented charges helps to secure a plea deal and avoid a time consuming trial. These processes are important because the vast majority of cases that result in someone being convicted of a particular offense are resolved through a plea deal: In 2013, 97 percent of federal criminal charges were resolved with a plea bargain while only 3 percent went to trial. Kyle Graham, Overcharging, www.moritzlaw.osu.edu/students/groups/osjcl/files/2014/06/10.-Graham.pdf; Instead of focusing on the principal offense, the prosecutor delves into and fragments said offense into numerous criminal transactions, Kyle Graham, Overcharging, www.moritzlaw.osu.edu/students/groups/osjcl/files/2014/06/10.-Graham.pdf; Jed S. Rakoff, “Why Innocent People Plead Guilty,” November 20, 2014, www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2014/nov/20/why-innocent-people-plead-guilty/ 68Caroline Wolf Harlow, Firearm Use by Offenders (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2001). 69Senator Tom Cotton, “Why I Oppose the Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act,” The Washington Times, February 12, 2016. 70 Dara Lind, “Criminal Justice Reform in Congress Has Officially Caved to a Dangerous Myth,” Vox, April 28, 2016, http://www.vox.com/2016/2/9/10949310/criminal-justice-reform-bill 71Firearms Commerce in the United States, Annual Statistical Update (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, 2015). 72William J. Krouse, Gun Control Legislation (Congressional Research Service, 2012), www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RL32842.pdf 73 Regulate Firearms Like Any Other Consumer Product (Washington, D.C.: The Violence Policy Center, 2016). 74 Irshad Altheimer, “An Exploratory Analysis of Guns and Violent Crime in a Cross-national Sample of Cities,” Southwest Journal of Criminal Justice, 6 (2010): 204-27. 75 National survey data show that African-American youth are often less likely to report committing serious offenses such as carrying weapons to school. According to the 2013 Youth Risk Behavior, 5.3 percent of African American male students reported carrying a weapon to school compared to 8.3 percent of white male students.; Laura Kann, Steve Kinchen, Shari L Shankin, et al., Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance —United States, 2013 (Atlanta: Center for Surveillance, Epidemiology, and Laboratory Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2014). 76 Caroline Wolf Harlow, Firearm Use by Offenders (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2001). 77 The total corrections and supervision expenditure of $39 billion does not include the nearly $26 billion spent by local governments or any money budgeted by the federal government for federal prisons. See Alison Lawrence, Managing Corrections Cost (Washington, D.C.: National Conference of State Legislatures, 2014), http://www.ncsl.org/documents/cj/managingcorrectionscosts.pdf. The Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that in 2010, the total state incarceration expenditure was roughly $48.5 billion. This report does not include any federal spending. See Tracey Kyckelhahn, State Corrections Expenditures, FY 1982-2010 (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2014), www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/scefy8210.pdf 78 See Tracey Kyckelhahn, State Corrections Expenditures, FY 1982-2010 (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2014), www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/scefy8210.pdf 79 See Tracey Kyckelhahn, State Corrections Expenditures, FY 1982-2010 (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2014), www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/scefy8210.pdf 80 A Shared Sentence: The Devastating Toll of Parental Incarceration on Kids, Families and Communities (Baltimore, Maryland: Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2016). 81 A Shared Sentence: The Devastating Toll of Parental Incarceration on Kids, Families and Communities (Baltimore, Maryland: Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2016). DEFINING VIOLENCE 82E. 40 Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2014 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Justice Department, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2015), Appendix Table 4 and 5. 83The National Academies notes that there are a couple of factors that drive disparities in who engages in select categories of crime. First, the overrepresentation of African Americans in prison for violent offenses persists in spite of the fact that the relative involvement of African Americans in violent crimes has steadily declined since the 1970s. Second, because policing strategies lead to law enforcement observing crime more often in communities of color, behavior that is common across races and ethnicities are more likely to result in people of color being arrested, convicted, and imprisoned. Stop and frisk and drug offenses were specifically cited as examples where the observed behavior of some communities lead to their higher levels of involvement in the justice system downstream. Third, the chronic concentration of negative justice system involvement matched with structural disadvantages that communities of color face in employment, income, and access to health represent structural and historical disparities that are not controlled for in any research around differential rates of offending. See The Growth of Incarceration in the United States: Exploring Causes and Consequences. Committee on Causes and Consequences of High Rates of Incarceration, J. Travis, B. Western, and S. Redburn, Editors. Committee on Law and Justice, Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education (Washington, DC: The National Academic Press, 2014). 84 Marie Gottschalk.,“Are We There Yet? The Promise, Perils and Politics of Penal Reform,” Prisoner Legal News, https://www.prisonlegalnews.org/news/2016/jan/1/are-we-there-yet-promise-perils-and-politics-penal-reform/ 85People who were sentenced to life without parole for a crime in which the person was convicted of torturing their victim, or were sentenced to life without parole for a crime in which the victim was a public safety official are excluded from the SB 9 framework. 86People who received a life sentence under the "One Strike" law for particular sex offenses and “Three Strikes" life sentence based on two or more prior serious or violent felonies are excluded from the SB 260 and 261 framework. 87In California, legislative changes to initiative statutes may require even more than the two-thirds majority, depending on the language of the initiative. For example, ‘Victim’s Bill of Rights’ enacted by voters in 2008 changed parole eligibility, and requires a four-fifths vote of the legislature to modify. 88Rob Kuznia, “An Unprecedented Experiment in Mass Forgiveness,” The Washington Post, February 8, 2016. Report to the Three Judge Court, California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, January 15, 2016, http://www.cdcr.ca.gov/News/docs/3JP-Jan2016/January-2016-Status-Report.pdf 89 “We have the most aggressive re-entry program in the country. We have a new conditional pardon program for youthful offenders. We are working to end warehousing in prisons and moving towards educating and rehabilitating as an operating mantra for our corrections system. We all agree that public safety is paramount.” See, Andrew Cuomo, 2016 State of the State and Budget Address, January 13th, 2016, www.governor.ny.gov/news/video-transcript-built-lead-governor-cuomos-2016-state-state-and-budgetaddress 90 People who are sentenced to death or life without the possibility of parole are not eligible to receive a hearing or to be granted parole under this program. Parole process for inmates 60 years of age or older having served at least 25 years. The Board continues to schedule eligible inmates for hearings who were not already in the Board’s hearing cycle, including inmates sentenced to determinate terms. From February 11, 2014 through December 31, 2015, the Board has held 1,080 hearings for inmates eligible for elderly parole, resulting in 288 grants, 710 denials, 82 stipulations to unsuitability, and there currently are no split votes that require further review by the full Board. See California State Senate, Senate Bill. No. 1310. An act to add Section 3055 to the Penal Code, relating to parole. 91 Update to the Three Judge Court, State of California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, March 15, 2016. 92 See California State Senate, No. 1310. An act to add Section 3055 to the Penal Code, relating to parole. 93 “In Sacramento, prosecutors and victims rights groups have been working to prevent this temporary program from becoming state law. They scored a small victory last week when, after a call from this newspaper, state Sen. Mark Leno, D-San Francisco, gutted Senate Bill 1310, which he introduced last month. The original bill would not only make the Elderly Parole Program state law, but it would also lower the eligibility age to 50 and the time in prison to 15 years. The withdrawal was unexpected and came with little explanation. Leno said in a statement Thursday that the bill would be used as a place holder for "other criminal justice reforms" and that "the bill will not deal with the issue of elder parole." See Julia Prodis Sulek, “California's Elderly Parole Program Forcing Victims to Face Attackers Decades Later,” The San Jose Mercury News, March 21, 2016, www.mercurynews.com/crimecourts/ci_29663124/californias-elderly-parole-program-forcing-victims-face-attackers 94 “The Legislature has considered a proposal that would have instituted presumptive parole at the earliest release date for inmates determined to have a high probability of success. This reform would result in significant savings without having a substantial negative impact on the rate of recidivism.” Governor Snyder (R ) Michigan, Special Criminal Justice Message, May 18, 2015, see https://medium.com/governor-rick-snyder-s-criminal-justice-special/governor-snyder-s-2015-criminal-justice-special-message456df83f064#.5eieaax8z 95“In fact, parole data shows that the board often denies release based on the nature of the offense, with assaultive and sex offenses far more likely to result in denial. Since the nature of the offense was already a major factor in setting the minimum sentence, the parole board is effectively engaging in resentencing, substituting its judgment of how long someone should serve for that of the court. However, prisoners can no longer appeal parole denials and the current parole guidelines cannot be enforced.” See 41 JUSTICE POLICY INSTITUTE “Evidenced-based Parole Reform Bill (HB 4138) Is an Important First Step,” Citizens Alliance on Prisons and Public Spending, January 2016, http://2015capps.capps-mi.org/2015/10/house-criminal-justice-committee-votes-8-1-for-presumptive-parole-reform/ 96 Personal Communications, Barbara Levine, Citizens Alliance on Prisons and Public Spending, June 20 th, 2016. 97“Medical Parole Package (5078-81) Passes House Appropriations Committee,” Citizens Alliance on Prisons and Public Spending, January 2016, http://2015capps.capps-mi.org/2016/02/medical-parole-package-5078-81-passes-house-appropriations-committee/ 98 Specified crimes still covered under the 10-20-Lifer Law include homicide, sexual battery, robbery, burglary, arson, aggravated assault, and aggravated battery. The Florida Senate, Bill Analysis and Fiscal Impact Statement, CS/SB 228, Mandatory Minimum Sentences, February 2016. 99“Bill to Reform Florida’s 10-20-Life Law filed by Aaron Bean, Niel Combee,” Floridapolitics.com, http://floridapolitics.com/archives/189701-bill-to-reform-floridas-10-20-life-law-filed-by-aaron-bean-and-neil-combee 100As cited by Danielle Sered, Young Men of Color and the Other Side of Harm: Addressing Disparities in our Responses to Violence (New York City: Vera Institute of Justice, 2015). Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), National Crime Victimization Survey, Table 10: Number of victimizations and victimization rates for persons age 12 and over, by race, gender, and age of victims and type of crime, 1996 2007, http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/sheets/cvsprshts.cfm (accessed August 13, 2014). When these numbers are broken down by crime type, there are types of crime, e.g., domestic violence, in which other groups are significantly more likely to be victims. K.F. Parker, Unequal Crime Decline: Theorizing Race, Urban Inequality, and Criminal Violence (New York: New York University Press, 2008). 101Safer, Stronger DC Advisory Committee Kick-Off Meeting (PowerPoint Presentation). (Washington, DC: Department of Health and Chief Office of the Medical Examiner, December 2016). 102 Vera Institute of Justice, “Common Justice,” March 11, 2016, http://www.vera.org/project/common-justice 103Judith Greene and Kevin Pranis, Gang Wars: The Failure of Enforcement Tactics and the Need for Effective Public Safety Strategies (Washington, D.C.: Justice Policy Institute, 2007).104Roy L. Austin, “LEAD-ing the Way to a More Efficient Criminal Justice System,” The White House Blog, July 2, 2015, accessed March 13, 2016, https://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2015/07/02/lead-ing-way-more-efficient-criminal-justice-system 105See “Legal Issues: Overcriminalization.” http://www.heritage.org/issues/legal/overcriminalization 106See Community Corrections Collaborative Network: Safe and Smart Ways To Solve America’s Correctional Challenges (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Prisons, National Institute of Corrections, 2014). 107 For example, if someone lives in a community where police are deployed more than somewhere else, they are more likely to be arrested for crimes that are fairly common. 108 “Trauma Training for Criminal Justice Professionals,” SAMHSA, August 19, 2015, http://www.samhsa.gov/gains-center/traumatraining-criminal-justice-professionals 109 When Iowa burglary victims were surveyed in the 1997 Iowa Crime Survey around what punishments they preferred, they voiced stronger support for approaches that rely less on incarceration, such as community service (75.7 %), regular probation (68.6%), treatment and rehabilitation (53.5%), and intensive probation (43.7%). Support among surveyed burglary victims for a short jail term (41.4%) and a prison sentence for more than a year (7.1%) garnered much less support. See Gene M. Lutz et al., The 1997 Iowa Adult Crime Victimization Survey (Des Moines, Iowa: Iowa Crime Research Initiative, 1998). One survey of California crime victims found that, when asked where the state should prioritize resources, seven in 10 victims supported directing resources to crime prevention versus towards incarceration (a five-to-one margin). California Crime Victims’ Voices. Findings from the First EverSurvey of California Crime Victims and Survivors (Californians for Safety and Justice, 2012). 110 American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio, Ohio’s Statehouse-to-Prison Pipeline (Columbus, Ohio: American Civil Liberties Union, 2015). 111 Kevin Hoffman, “Rauner, Bipartisan Group of Lawmakers Announce Illinois Criminal Justice Reform Package,” Reboot Illinois, March 2, 2016, http://www.rebootillinois.com/2016/03/02/editors-picks/kevin-hoffmanrebootillinois-com/rauner-bipartisan-groupof-lawmakers-announce-illinois-criminal-justice-reform-package/53855/ ABOUT THE ORGANIZATION Justice Policy Institute is a national nonprofit that is dedicate to reducing the use of incarceration and the justice system by promoting fair and effective policies. JPI staff includes Paul Ashton, Elizabeth Deal, Jeremy Kittredge, Olivia Martinez, Marc Schindler, Jamille White, Keith Wallington, and Jason Ziedenberg. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS JPI would like to acknowledge the researchers who collected information to help develop this report. Researchers. Melinda Miller provided much of the analysis of state statutes and data that constitute the core of the document. Other research interns who played a role in collecting and summarizing information on this report include, Margaret Christ, Luis Escoboza, Erika Feinman, Stefany Henriquez, Wendy Pacheco, and Sara Walenta. The organization acknowledges Dr. Marie Gottschalk’s seminal work The Prison State and the Lockdown of American Politics (2014) as a key source for the approach to this report. Reviewers. While all estimates, inferences, and the way information is characterized in the document are the sole responsibility of JPI, we would like to acknowledge the following reviewers for giving us feedback to improve the document: Christine Donner, Colorado Criminal Justice Coalition; James Dold, Advocacy Director, Campaign for the Fair Sentencing of Youth; Laura E. Hankins, Public Defender Services, Washington, D.C.; Christine Leonard, Director, Office of Legislative and Public Affairs United States Sentencing Commission; Alan Rosenthal, Counsel, Center for Community Alternatives; Laura Sager and Barbara Levine, Citizens Alliance on Prisons and Public Spending; Steven Meinrath and Margaret Dooley-Sammuli, ACLU of California; Bobby Vassar, former Chief Counsel to the Minority in the House Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security; Mary Denise Davis, Ricardo Flores and Brian Saccenti, Maryland Office of the Public Defender; Rob Poggenklass, formerly of the ACLU of Virginia. JPI would like to acknowledge Sarah E. Baker, editor, for her editorial review of the final draft of Defining Violence. This report would not have been possible without the generous support of the Open Society Foundation, and independent donors to JPI. Reducing the use of incarceration and the justice system and promoting policies that improve the well-being of all people and communities 1012 14th Street, NW Suite 600 Washington, DC. 20005 Telephone: (202) 558-7974 www.justicepolicy.org