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ARIZONA INMATE RECIDIVISM STUDY

Summary of Findings

May 2004 Update

 

54,660 Arizona inmates released over the period 1990-1999 were followed for return to ADC custody.

42.4% returned to custody within 3 years of release (return to custody rate).

24.5% returned to custody with a new felony conviction within 3 years of release (recommitment rate).

7.9% returned to custody with a new felony conviction for a violent crime within 3 years of release.

Approximately 80% of inmates who return to custody (ever) will do so in the first three years.

Approximately 50% of inmates who will be recommitted for a new offense (ever) will be recommitted in the first three years.

Among males, the return to custody rate was 43.2% and the recommitment rate was 25.6%.

Among females, the return to custody rate was 35.9% and the recommitment rate was 16.0%.

Rehabilitation program involvement was found to reduce recidivism by 25% after two years of release.

2,171 fewer inmates were recommitted within two years of release as a result of rehabilitation programming.

Recidivism rate reductions were the highest (34.0%) for prison industry programs.

Lesser reductions occurred for substance abuse programs (28.0%), non-industry in-prison work programs (27.9%), vocational education (27.7%), and academic education (17.2%).

A higher level of inmate program involvement correlates with a greater reduction in recidivism. High program involvement will reduce recidivism by 35% or more.

The effectiveness of academic education increases with the level of education attained, i.e., college and other post secondary education is more effective than GED programming, which, in turn, is more effective than adult basic education.

For the treatment of drug abuse, therapeutic community programming is more effective than is less intensive substance abuse education.

Rehabilitation program effectiveness is hampered by a lack of time in prison, i.e., under one year served.

The greatest reductions in recidivism occur for those who program and serve ten years or more.

Successful completion of the Sex Offender Treatment Program (SOTP) was found to dramatically reduce recidivism among sex offenders.

Inmates released to supervision record significantly lower recidivism rates than do comparable inmates released without supervision.

Inmates sentenced under Truth-in-Sentencing laws have higher recidivism rates than do old code inmates.

Other factors found to correlate with recidivism include:

Prison/street gang affiliation (validated Security Threat Group members have the highest recidivism rates).

Offender age at admission and release (younger offenders have the highest recidivism rates).

Narcotics use history and educational attainment.

The nature of the committing offense (property crimes and robbery show the highest recidivism rates).

Prior criminal record (inmates with 3 or more prior committing offenses show the highest recidivism rates).

Prior institutional violence correlates with violent recidivism.


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