eight
Discussion Chapter 7: How do local politics affect jail administration? Should political influence be as extensive as it is? Does it help or hinder good correctional practices?
Discussion Chapter 9: Should intermediate sanctions be run by traditional pronation and prison systems or by new agencies seeking to serve as alternatives to them?
7)IN CALIFORNIA A PERSON DOING
JAIL TIME CAN PAY TO UPGRADE
TO A BETTER JAIL CELL. For between $75 and $127
per day, the buyer can get a better room with the right to bring in a computer or iPad,
sometimes even a cell phone—and perhaps best of all, the private cell offers separation
from the “economy class.”
Wanting an upgrade is understandable. Many California jails are noisy and dirty,
and some have reputations of being dangerous. People who can afford to pay can’t be
blamed for wanting to avoid the worst of the state’s jails. In addition to better facilities,
these “five-star jails,” as they are known, also allow daytime furloughs so people can go
to work.
What makes the upgrade possible is that the special accommodations, which have
limited space, are offered by private profit-making companies that contract for jail space.
The company locks the person up and then shares some of the fee with the government.
The customer gets a pretty good deal: One private jail’s website brags that it provides a
“less intimidating environment” for people to serve their time.
It seems unfair. Two people convicted of the same crime may end up experiencing
very different punishment, all because one can afford to rent a better jail cell. But cities like the extra revenue, almost $2 million per year, which they claim they can use to
improve services for everybody.1
Pay-to-stay jails are an example of one of many anomalies about the jail. It is a correctional facility typically run by an elected law enforcement official, not a correctional
specialist. Jails, then, often become a local political issue. Indeed, jails are a strange correctional hybrid: part detention center for people awaiting trial, part penal institution for
people sentenced on misdemeanor charges, part refuge for social misfits taken off the
streets. Jails hold men, women, and juveniles who have been accused of violating the
law. Jails are the traditional dumping ground not only for people involved in traditional
criminal activities but also for petty hustlers, derelicts, drug addicts, prostitutes, people
with mental illnesses, and disturbers of the peace, mainly from the poorer sections of
cities. Thus, the jail’s functions include those of the workhouse of the past.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After reading this chapter, you
should be able to . . .
1 Describe the history
of the jail and its
current function in
the criminal justice
system.
2 Describe who is in
jail and why they are
there.
3 Discuss the kinds of
jails in the United
States.
4 List the main issues
facing jails today.
5 Outline the problem
of bail and list the
main alternatives to
bail.
6 Explain the
problems of jail
administration.
7 Describe new
developments in jails
and jail programs.
8 Critically assess the
future of the jail.
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166 PART 2 Correctional Practices
Students interested in improving corrections during their future careers could find no
area that more obviously needs reform than U.S. jails. Among the institutions and programs
of the corrections system, jail is the one most neglected by scholars and officials and least
known to the public. Uniformly jam-packed and frequently brutalizing, jails almost never
enhance life. Many criminal justice researchers agree that of all correctional agencies, jails
are the oldest, most numerous, most criticized, and most stubbornly resistant to reform.
Jails are in such a state of decline that the estimated cost to bring them up to acceptable standards far exceeds what the nation can afford, at least in the foreseeable future.
Further, conditions in many jails are getting worse because people convicted of a felony
are held there while awaiting vacancies in overcrowded state prisons. Therefore, scholars,
administrators, policy makers, and elected officials agree that using jail as punishment
for breaking the law should be avoided whenever possible. Yet jail represents nearly all
Americans’ initial contact with corrections. For many people, this will be their only time in
a correctional institution, and the impression it leaves will greatly influence their views of
the criminal justice system.
With an estimated 10.9 million jail admissions per year, more people directly experience jails than experience prisons, mental hospitals, and halfway houses combined.2 Even
if we consider that some portion of this total is admitted more than once, probably at
least 7–8 million people are detained in a jail at some time during the year.
In this chapter we examine problems of operating jails and how some individuals avoid
pretrial detention. We also raise questions about the role of corrections in this type of facility, where too many people sit idle without access to treatment and rehabilitative programs.
The Contemporary Jail:
Entrance to the System
Jails are the entryway to corrections. They house both the people who are awaiting trial and
those who have been sentenced for a crime, usually serving one-year terms or less. People
appealing sentences are often held in jail as well, as are those awaiting transfer to other jurisdictions. Nationally, about 721,300 people
are under jail authority on any given day;
more than nine-tenths of them are behind
bars, with the remainder under some form
of community release.3
Some people argue that jails lie outside corrections. For one thing, they claim
that most of the nation’s 3,163 jails (operated in 2,872 jurisdictions)4 are really a
part of law enforcement because sheriffs
administer them. For another, they note
that people who have been sentenced make
up only about half of the jail population
and that people being held for trial, who
compose most of the other half, should
not fall within the scope of correctional
responsibility. Finally, they suggest that
because most jails have neither treatment
nor rehabilitative programs, they should be
excluded from corrections.
The jail experience can
be noisy, crowded, and
chaotic when compared
to prison life. ▼
ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images
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CHAPTER 7 Jails: Detention and Short-Term Incarceration 167
We believe that jails are an important part of corrections and demonstrate many complexities of the system. Administered by locally elected officials, jails are buffeted by the local politics
of taxation, party patronage, and law enforcement. Jail practices also affect probation, parole,
and prison policies.
Jails are perhaps the most frustrating component of corrections for people who want to provide treatment programs to people who have committed crimes. Of the enormous numbers of
people in jail, many need a helping hand. But the unceasing human flow usually does not allow
time for such help—nor are the resources available in most instances.
Origins and Evolution
Jails in the United States descend directly from feudal practices in twelfth-century England. At
that time, an officer of the crown, the reeve, was appointed in each shire (what we call a county)
to collect taxes, keep the peace, and operate the gaol (jail). The shire reeve (from which the word
sheriff evolved), among other duties, caught and held in custody people accused of breaking the
king’s law until a formal court hearing determined guilt or innocence. With the development of
the workhouse in the sixteenth century, the sheriff took on added responsibilities for vagrants
and the unemployed who were sent there. The sheriff made a living by collecting per diem fees
and by hiring out prison labor.
English settlers brought these traditions and institutions with them to the American colonies. After the Revolution, the local community elected law enforcement officials—particularly
sheriffs and constables—but the functions of the jail remained unchanged. Jails were used to
detain accused persons awaiting trial, as well as to shelter misfits who could not be taken care of
by their families, churches, or other groups.
The jails were often in the sheriffs’ homes and run like the sheriffs’ households. Residents
were free to dress as they wished and to contribute their own food and necessities: “So long as
they did not cost the town money, inmates could make living arrangements as pleasant and
homelike as they wished.” 5
Local revenues paid room and board for those who could not make
independent contributions.
In the 1800s the jail began to change in response to the penitentiary movement. Jails
retained their pretrial detention function but also became facilities for people serving short
terms, as well as housing vagrants, debtors, beggars, prostitutes, and those with mental illnesses. Although the fee system survived, other changes took place. The juvenile reformatory
movement and the creation of hospitals for the criminally insane during the latter part of the
nineteenth century siphoned off some former jail inhabitants. The development of probation
reduced reliance on jail, as did adult reformatories and state farms. However, even with these
innovations, most accused and convicted people were held in jail. This pattern has continued
into contemporary times.
Population Characteristics
Not until 1978 did the Bureau of the Census conduct a complete nationwide census of jails for
the Bureau of Justice Statistics. Repeated every five years by local officials, this census contains
information on jail population counts beyond arraignment (that is, usually more than 48 hours).
Excluded from the count are people in federal and state facilities. An annual survey of the top
one-third largest jails, which hold about 75 percent of imprisoned people, supplements these
five-year nationwide counts.
The most recent National Jail Census shows that about 85 percent are men, nearly twothirds are under 35 years old, almost half are white, and most have little education and a very
low income.6 The demographic characteristics of the jail population differ from those of the
national population in many ways: People in jail are younger and disproportionately African
American, and most are unmarried (see Figure 7.1).
As with prisons, jail populations vary from region to region and from state to state. The
proportion of a state’s population in jail, known as the jail rate, is high in the West and South
(see Figure 7.2). In many states where prisons are filled to capacity, people sentenced for felonies
sit in jails, awaiting transfer.
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168 PART 2 Correctional Practices
Status Sex
Age Education
Race/Ethnicity
Male
85.7%
Probation or
parole revocation
1%
Other
15%
Detained
awaiting court
28%
Convicted and
serving sentence
55%
African
American
35.1%
White
48.3%
Hispanic
14.3%
Other
2.2%
55 and older
2.2%
18–24
28.1%
25–34
35–44 31.9%
26.0%
45–54
10.0%
17 and younger
1.8%
8th grade or less
12.3%
Some
high school
31.6%
GED
17.1%
High
school
diiploma
25.9%
Some college
10.1%
College grad/more
2.9%
Female
14.3%
FIGURE 7.1 Characteristics of Adults in U.S. Jails
Compared with the U.S. population as a whole, jails are disproportionately inhabited by men, minorities, the poorly educated, and
those with low incomes.
Sources: Todd D. Minton and Zhen Zeng, Jail Inmates in 2015 (Washington, DC: Bureau of Justice Statistics, December 2016); William J. Sabol and Todd D.
Minton, Jail Inmates at Midyear 2007 (Washington, DC: Bureau of Justice Statistics, June 2008).
200–299
300– 400
0 –199
See note
Over 400
WA
220
OR
180
NV
320
CA
280
ID
280
MT
360
ND
220
SD
260
NE
240
WY
320
UT
350 CO
290
AZ
270 NM
560
TX
340
KS
310
OK
430
MN
150
IA
170
MO
240
AR
380
LA
870
MS
590
AL
410
GA
550
FL
330
SC
290
NC
240
VA
450
WV
270 KY
570
TN 530
IL
210
IN
330
OH
200
PA
360
NY
170 MI
210
WI
270
MD 250
District Of
Columbia
450
DE
NJ
220
CT
ME
160
NH
170
VT
MA
190
RI
AK
HI
FIGURE 7.2 People Incarcerated in Local Jails per 100,000 Population, by State
What accounts for the fact that incarceration rates in jails differ from state to state?
Note: Six states—Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Rhode Island, and Vermont—have integrated jail–prison systems; therefore, information for these
states is not given.
Source: Todd D. Minton, Jail Inmates at Midyear 2012: Statistical Tables (Washington, DC: U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2013).
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CHAPTER 7 Jails: Detention and Short-Term Incarceration 169
One of the most troubling trends in jails is the rate of incarceration for African
Americans. Figure 7.3 shows the changes in these rates from 1990 to 2015; much of the
growth in jail population over the past decade has been caused by the huge increase in the
number of African Americans in jails. In 1990 the jail incarceration rate for African Americans was 560 per 100,000. By 2014, the rate had fallen to 600 per 100,000 after peaking at 820
per 100,000 in 2008—a 50% increase. The incarceration rate for white Americans has almost
doubled from 89 per 100,000 in 1990 to 175 per 100,000 in 2015. As we discuss in Chapter
19, the rate of incarceration for African Americans is now dropping relative to the white rate;
this trend applies to all of corrections, not just jails.
Administration
Of the 3,163 (city, county, or privately operated) jails in the United States, 80 percent have a
county-level jurisdiction, and most are administered by an elected sheriff. An additional 600
or so municipal jails are in operation. Only in six states—Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware,
Hawaii, Rhode Island, and Vermont—are jails for adults administered by state government.7
There are also an estimated 13,500 police lockups (or drunk tanks) and similar holding
facilities authorized to detain people for up to 48 hours. The Federal Bureau of Prisons operates 12 jails for the detained only, holding 11,864 people. There are 39 privately operated
jails, under contract to state or local governments, and they house 5.3 percent of the total jail
population.8
Jails serve every part of the United States, but because much of the country is sparsely
populated, most jails have a rated capacity to hold fewer than 250 people. The 145 jails with a
rated capacity of 1,000 or more represent less than 5 percent of all jails, but they hold almost
50 percent of the nation’s daily jail population.9
The 10 largest U.S. jails hold 10 percent of the
total national jail population, but it would be a mistake to think that jails are predominantly
an urban concern. Small county jail populations have been growing at a much faster rate than
their urban counterparts. In 1970 small county jails held about one-fourth of the nation’s jail
population. Today they hold more than four-fifths of the total population.10 This shift has a lot
lockup A facility authorized
to hold people before court
appearances for up to 48 hours.
Most lockups (also called drunk
tanks or holding tanks) are
administered by local police
agencies.
Number of people in jail per 100,000 U.S. residents
Year
200
400
600
800
1990
Hispanic of any race
Black non-Hispanic
White non-Hispanic
1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010
100
300
500
700
900
2012 2014
FIGURE 7.3 Jail Incarceration Rates by Race and Ethnicity, 1990–2015
What can explain the phenomenal increase in the incarceration rate of African Americans?
Source: Todd D. Minton and Zhen Zeng, Jail Inmates in 2015 (Washington, DC: U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2016).
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170 PART 2 Correctional Practices
to do with new jail construction in small and medium-sized jurisdictions, largely as a result of
legal actions taken against substandard jails that needed to be replaced. (See “Jail Crowding”
later in the chapter.)
As facilities to detain accused people awaiting trial, jails customarily have been run by
law enforcement agencies. We might reasonably expect that the agency that arrests and transports people to court should also administer the facility that holds them. Typically, however, neither sheriffs nor deputies have much interest in corrections. They often think of
themselves as police officers and of the jail as merely an extension of their law enforcement
activities. In some major cities, municipal departments of correction, rather than the police,
manage the jails.
Many experts argue that jails have outgrown police administration. Jails no longer serve
simply as holding places but now represent one of the primary correctional facilities in the
criminal justice system. In fact, much correctional work is directed toward people housed in
jails. Probation officers conduct presentence investigations in jails, people who abuse alcohol
and drugs receive treatment in many facilities, and many hours of community service are performed by people confined in jails. Therefore, the effective administration of jails requires skills
in management and rehabilitation that are not generally included in law enforcement training.
This point was well made over 40 years ago by the U.S. President’s Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice: “The basic police mission of apprehending offenders
usually leaves little time, commitment, or expertise for the development of rehabilitative programs, although notable exceptions demonstrate that jails can indeed be settings for correctional treatment.”11
Many jails still receive funds through a fee system, whereby the costs of housing, food,
and services are averaged, and a standard amount (say, $10 per day per person) is remitted to
the sheriff ’s department. This creates an incentive for poor jails to skimp on food, services, and
social support. Often the sheriff uses money saved on housing to augment the kinds of law
enforcement services that attract public support and are therefore helpful at the polls.
The Influence of Local Politics
Because of the close links between jail administration and local politics, fiscal pressures and
political conservatism greatly affect jails (see “For Critical Thinking”). Fiscally sound measures are often ignored because of political pressures. For example, pretrial release programs
are a cost-efficient and proven means of reducing institutional crowding, yet the public’s fear
of crime often makes the programs politically infeasible. Conversely, political pressures may
support expanded use of jail confinement for those who have been convicted of misdemeanors or who have violated probation (particularly when crime is a potent electoral issue), but
the funds to expand or upgrade the jail’s capacity
to handle these additional cases are often lacking.
The jail is a crime control service but also a drain
on revenues. The tension between these two public interests is often expressed in local debates over
capital expenditures for jail construction. Because
revenues are often insufficient, many jails are overcrowded and cannot house everyone who has been
sent to jail, so a portion end up being released or
placed in other facilities.
It is very hard to wrest control of local facilities away from a politically sensitive office such
as that of sheriff or police chief. Jail employees
constitute a large block of political patronage
for elected officials to distribute to political supporters. Political appointees spend most of their
time administering the jail, but during political campaigns they hustle votes and money for
their bosses. Even when jail employees are civil
fee system A system by which
jail operations are funded by a set
amount paid each day per person
held.
regional jail A facility operated
under a joint agreement between
two or more government units,
with a jail board drawn from
representatives of the participating
jurisdictions and having varying
authority over policy, budget,
operations, and personnel.
FOR CRITICAL THINKING
Everywhere in the United States, sheriffs have to run for office. That means they must convince voters they care about public safety
and other high-priority voter issues. But because many sheriffs also run
local jails, they are responsible for maintaining safe and effective facilities. Sometimes, jail safety and humaneness are not high priorities for
local voters. That means that the kinds of public policies that may attract
votes, such as “getting tough on people in jail,” may not contribute to
effective and humane conditions. In other words, there may be conflicts
between what it takes to get elected and what it takes to be a good jail
administrator.
1. Should the head of the jail be an elected official?
2. What are the advantages of electoral accountability for a person who
is a jail administrator? What are the disadvantages?
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CHAPTER 7 Jails: Detention and Short-Term Incarceration 171
servants, political considerations can affect hiring and promotion. Because few politicians willingly surrender control
over such a potential political force as the jail, change is slow.
See “Careers in Corrections” for more about what it means to
work in a local jail.
Regional Jails
Most local jails are located away from major population centers, and many hold as few as 30 people. Although the state
may provide a portion of their operating funds, the smallest
jails lack essential services, such as medical care, that must be
provided no matter how few people may need them.
One recent trend designed to remedy these problems is
regionalization: the creation of combined municipal–county
or multicounty jails. This multi-jurisdictional or regional jail,
fiscally sound though it may be, has been slow to catch on
because it negatively affects several interest groups. Local political and correctional leaders do not want to give up their
autonomy or their control over patronage jobs, and reformers
often object to moving local residents to places that are sometimes far away from their communities. Citizens who oppose
having regional jails “in their backyard” make finding locations to build these jails difficult. Nevertheless, the number of
jail jurisdictions in the United States has actually dropped by
more than 6 percent since 1999.12
Nature of the Work
Most jails are operated by county governments, and threequarters of them are under the jurisdiction of an elected
sheriff. The approximately 150,000 correctional officers
in the jail system admit and process more than 7 million
people per year in either pretrial or sentenced categories.
Officers must supervise individuals during the postarrest
phase, when they may be most stressed, violent, and dangerous. The constant turnover of the jail population is an
additional problem in terms of maintaining security and
stability.
Required Qualifications
Candidates for employment must be at least 18 or 21 years
of age (the minimum age varies), be a U.S. citizen, have
a high school education, have no felony convictions, and
have some work experience. They must be in good health
and meet formal physical fitness, eyesight, and hearing standards. Some local departments provide training
for officers according to criteria set by the American Jail
Association. In some states, regional training academies
are available to local correctional agencies. On-the-job
training is a major resource for officer candidates.
Earnings and Job Outlook
Job opportunities for correctional officers employed in
county jails depend on local budgetary constraints even in
the face of increases in the jail population, but job growth
is expected to be about 9 percent during this decade. Salaries for entry-level correctional officers vary greatly, with
the highest being in the Northeast and the lowest in the
rural South. Median annual wages of correctional officers and jailers are $45,320. The middle 50 percent earn
between $32,960 and $55,720. The lowest 10 percent earn
less than $27,830, and the highest 10 percent earn more
than $73,060.
More Information
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, www.bls.gov/oes
/current/oes333012.htm. For more information, see the
website of the Occupational Outlook Handbook and search
for “Correctional Officers.”
CAREERS in Corrections
Correctional Officer—Local Jails
▲ As a condition of his bail bond, John Wilson has to
surrender all 30 of the guns he owns to his bail bondsman
and cannot have any contact with his motorcycle group.
AP Images/Waco Tribune Herald/Rod Aydelotte
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172 PART 2 Correctional Practices
Jimmy James sat in the back of the Mountain View police car,
his hands cuffed behind his back. He had never been arrested
before, and thoughts about jail tormented his mind. When
Jimmy saw news reports depicting the crowded conditions
and violence, he didn’t pay much attention. The trauma of
confinement was the furthest thing from his mind. Yet he
found trouble by downloading nude pictures from the Internet. Facts later revealed that the girls in the pictures were
underage, and Jimmy now faced felony charges for child
pornography.
The police officers drove in to a basement garage and
parked their vehicle. After one of the officers opened the
car’s rear door, Jimmy stepped out, his heart pounding. The
officer gripped Jimmy by the handcuff, making him feel as if
he were a dog on a leash. The officer guided Jimmy into an
elevator. When the door opened again, Jimmy saw the madness of the large King County Jail.
Jimmy’s legs shook as he walked into the jail’s administrative area. His first stop was booking. To his right were
prisoners packed in a series of open holding cages. The cages
resembled the dog pound, he thought, though instead of
yelping and barking dogs, Jimmy heard the blustering cacophony that came from scores of young, seemingly angry
men. He hoped the officers would not lock him inside with
the other prisoners.
As the jail staff took Jimmy into custody, the officers lost
interest in him. He was fingerprinted, positioned for his mug
shot, and then led toward the bullpens.
“Can I go into that one?” Jimmy gestured toward the
bullpen that held only three prisoners seated on a bench,
each of whom looked contrite.
“No can do,” the jailer said. “That’s the misdemeanor
tank. You’re in with the felons, Class A.”
The jailer unlocked the gate to the most crowded cage.
“Step inside,” the jailer ordered.
Jimmy hesitated, and the prisoners taunted him.
“Step inside, bitch,” he heard one prisoner yell. “Don’t get
scared now. What is it homey, you too good to be in here
with us?”
“Get in,” the jailer ordered.
Jimmy walked into the cage. Once the jailer locked the
gate behind him, Jimmy passed his cuffs through the bars
and the jailer freed his wrists. Then the jailer walked away,
leaving the prisoners to themselves.
The crowd of strangers frightened Jimmy. He was 21,
shorter than average height with a slender build. His sandcolored hair was thinning prematurely. He didn’t have anywhere to sit, so he walked toward the back of the cell and
leaned against the wall.
A larger prisoner stepped toward Jimmy. “What up,
big dog?”
Jimmy didn’t know how to respond. He nodded his
head.
“Where you from?”
Jimmy didn’t want to talk to anyone. He stood silent
against the wall, with hunched shoulders and bowed his
head toward the floor.
“I’m sayin’,” the aggressive prisoner persisted, “you
ain’t tryin’ to talk?”
Jimmy kept silent.
“Okay, okay,” the prisoner said. “I feel ya. But check dis
out. Wussup wit dat watch?”
Jimmy looked up, realizing his efforts at disappearing
were not working. “What do you mean?”
“I’m sayin’, wassup wit dat watch? You know some’nes
gonna take it up off you once you get to the block.”
“Why?”
“You’s in jail, fool. Straight gangstas up in here. Best let
me hold it for you. I’m a take care it, make sure you get it
back when your daddy post bail.”
Jimmy thought for a split second. He didn’t want any
problems. The watch wasn’t fancy, just a simple digital model
with an alarm. Knowing he probably wouldn’t see it again,
he unfastened the Velcro band and handed it over.
“Dat’s wassup, homey,” the prisoner strapped the prize
on his wrist. “I’m a take good care you up in here. What dey
got you up in here for, youngun?”
“Internet porn.”
“Internet porn. Wus dat?”
“Internet porn, you know, downloading nude pictures
from the web.”
“They be lockin’ mothafuckas up for dat?”
“Well, the models were underage.”
The prisoner smiled. “Oh, you be likin’ dem kids.”
“I didn’t know the models were underage.”
“Uh-huh. Was dey little girls or little boys?”
“They were young women. I’m not gay, you know.”
“Ain’t no one sayin’ you was gay. I’s just axin’, dat’s all.
But check dis out, youngun. When we gets up on da block,
don’t be talkin’ ’bout your case. Just stay close to me. I’m a
look out for ya.”
The jailer returned to the bullpen. He unlocked the gate
and called names to step out. Jimmy made his way through
the crowd, as did his unnamed protector. The jailer handed
the men a roll of dingy sheets, a threadbare blanket, and a
brown sack that held two pieces of white bread with bologna. The prisoners marched through the jail’s corridor, passing through various sliding gates until they reached a housing
FOCUS ON
PEOPLE IN CORRECTIONS: Jimmy’s First Day in Jail
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CHAPTER 7 Jails: Detention and Short-Term Incarceration 173
Pretrial Detention
Imagine that you have been arrested by the police and accused of a crime. They have handcuffed
you, read you your rights, and taken you to the station for booking. Frightened, you have a hundred questions, but the police treat you as if your fears were irrelevant to their work. You may
be angry with yourself for what you have done. You may be frustrated that you cannot seem to
control the flow of procedure: fingerprints, mug shots, long waits while detectives and prosecutors discuss you without acknowledging your presence. Slowly you begin to understand that you
have acquired a new status: “accused offender.”
Then you are taken to the detention section of the jail. If it is an advanced facility, you are
placed in a holding room for an intake interview. There your situation is explained to you, you
are asked questions about your background that will help determine how best to manage you
while you are in jail, and you are told what you can expect next. If, however, you are in one of
many jails with no formal intake procedure, you are simply put in the holding tank. If you are
a man, several strangers likely will be in the cell with you, men whose stories you do not know
and whose behavior you cannot predict. If you are a woman, you probably will be by yourself.
In either case, once the guard leaves, you are on your own behind bars, and the full extent of
your situation begins to sink in. This can be an especially trying period for those people who are
thrust into a hostile and threatening environment.
In such circumstances, many people panic. In fact, the hours immediately following arrest
are often a time of crisis, stemming from the arrested person’s sense of vulnerability and hopelessness, fear of lost freedom, and sheer terror. Over one-third of the deaths that occur in jails
are suicides. Not surprisingly, most of these suicides happen within the first 6–10 hours after
lockup, and most psychotic episodes occur during or just after jail intake.
Other factors can exacerbate the crisis brought on by arrest and detention. Often the person
who has been arrested is intoxicated or on drugs, a state that may have contributed to the crime
for which the person is being held. Sometimes the criminal behavior stems from an emotional
instability that may worsen in detention. Especially for the young, the oppressive reality can
trigger debilitating depression.
Unquestionably, one of the most crucial times is the period immediately following arrest.
(See “Jimmy’s First Day in Jail.”) People differ in their need for help during this period. Those
under the influence of a mind-altering substance need time to overcome its effects; others need
to be left alone; still others need communication and advice. Jails lack the programmatic flexibility to accommodate the range of needs. However, the early confinement period also represents a
mental health opportunity because an individual in crisis is most likely to respond positively to
efforts of help. Unfortunately, the jail is not ordinarily well suited to provide aid in the first hours
of detention. Elaborate mental health measures are neither feasible nor necessarily required.
However, even simple human contact—conversation with correctional staff, involvement in
some activity, communication about what the person is likely to be experiencing—is frequently
enough to reduce many initial anxieties.
unit. “Grab a mat,” the jailer ordered, “and find yourself a
home on the floor.”
Jimmy couldn’t believe he would have to live in such
conditions. Sleeping mats were everywhere. A list on the
wall posted 30 names waiting for cell space. The bathrooms were open, lacking a modicum of privacy. A stench
of dried urine permeated the air. Noise from table games,
aggressive voices, and a television blasting rap songs
contributed to the frenetic energy in the housing unit.
He would go crazy if he had to stay in jail long, Jimmy
thought.
“Don’t even sweat it,” the larger prisoner said. “We
goin’ crash right here. I’m a look out for ya, youngun.”
Jimmy quivered. He sat on the mat that he had dropped,
held his knees, and waited, afraid for what might happen
next.
Source: Copyright © Michael Santos. Reprinted by permission of the
author.
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174 PART 2 Correctional Practices
Special Problems of
People Held for Trial
Beyond the initial crisis of being arrested
and jailed, people who are detained for an
extended period often face serious problems.
The most significant are mental health problems, substance dependency, medical needs,
and legal problems. Because so many people
housed in jail have these problems, local
jails have often been referred to as the social
agency of last resort.
Yet it is not easy for a jail to meet the
needs of the people who are sent there. The
most important issue is turnover. The average stay in jail is less than a month, and that
makes coherent programming difficult to
carry out. In fact, for most jails, half of the
population turns over every week.13
Mental Health Problems Growing attention is being paid to the mental health of people in jail whose behavior, while not seriously criminal, is socially bizarre—those who are only
partially clothed, who speak gibberish or talk loudly to themselves, who make hostile gestures,
and so on. These people, whose behavior is unpredictable and to some extent uncontrollable,
were once transported to mental institutions, where they could be treated. But with the nationwide deinstitutionalization movement they have become outpatients of society, and they often
spend time in jail instead of receiving the psychiatric treatment they once might have received.
In fact, some people say jails have replaced mental institutions for dealing with serious mental illness. One study found that in every U.S. county that had both a jail and a mental health
hospital, the jail held more people with serious mental health issues than did the hospital.14
Almost two-thirds of those in jail have a history of mental problems; for one-fifth of people
in jails, there is a very recent history of serious mental disorder.15 (See Figure 7.4.) But many jails
do not offer any form of psychological care at all, and only a minority receive any form of mental
health treatment.
Observers say that the percentage of people in jail who are considered to have a mental illness is increasing. However, police have few alternatives to confinement for people who behave
oddly or self-destructively, even if they are basically just nuisances. Moreover, unstable people
often respond to the stress of jail with emotional outbursts and irrational behavior. Jails not only
draw from but also add to the ranks of the mentally disturbed.
Most jails lack resources to provide care for people with mental illnesses. Three-fourths of
all jails have no rehabilitative staff, and among the remainder the vast majority of rehabilitative
personnel lack training to deal with severe cases of mental and emotional stress, particularly
when threats of self-injury are involved.16 Consequently, people with mental illnesses often languish in jails, where they are abused by their peers, misunderstood by correctional workers, and
left untreated by professional personnel.
The news is not all bad, however; some positive steps have been taken to divert the mentally ill from jail. Many jails now screen new arrivals for mental health problems, with specially
trained counselors interviewing and evaluating people held for trial. Those with mental health
problems are usually referred to local social service agencies for treatment and may be diverted
from criminal prosecution in order for treatment to proceed.
Substance Dependency Nationally, half of all people placed in jail are under the influence of alcohol or an illegal drug at the time of arrest, and over two-thirds, more than 400,000,
have a history of substance abuse. More than half of those entering jail have a history of failed
drug treatment, often during previous jail or probation terms.17 In a study of four large cities,
60–85 percent of all people arrested tested positive for illicit substances at the time of arrest.18
▲ Corey Miller, a
community mental health
worker in Cuyahoga
County, Ohio, does an
assessment of a jail
inmate. Most jails do
not have services for the
incarcerated with mental
problems.
AP Images/The Plain Dealer/Dale Omori
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CHAPTER 7 Jails: Detention and Short-Term Incarceration 175
75
Percent
39.6%
Major Depressive
or Mania Symptoms
Persistent sad, numb,
or empty mood
36.4%
Loss of interest or
pleasure in activities
17.5%
Psychotic Disorder
Symptoms
Delusions
Hallucinations 13.7%
42.8%
Increased or
decreased appetite
49.2% Insomnia or hypersomnia
46.2%
Psychomotor agitation
or retardation
43.0%
Feelings of worthlessness
or excessive guilt
34.1%
Diminished ability to
concentrate or think
12.9% Attempted suicide
49.4%
Persistent anger
or irritability
29.5%
Increased/decreased
interest in sexual activities
0 5 10 706560555045403530252015
Number of Major Depressive
Disorder Symptoms
Exhibited by People in Jail
Number of Mania
Disorder Symptoms
Exhibited by People in Jail
Number of Psychotic
Disorder Symptoms
Exhibited by People in Jail
None
22.8%
None
22.5%
None
1–2 76.0%
23.8%
3–4
23.0%
5 or more
30.4%
1
17.0%
2
7.2%
1
16.8%
2
20.1%
3
22.0%
4
18.4%
FIGURE 7.4 Percentage of People in Jail with Mental Health Symptoms in the Past 12 Months or Since Admission
People in jails exhibit a wide range of mental health problems.
Sources: BJS Special Report, September 2006, p. 2. Data are based on self-reports in the Survey of Inmates in State and Federal Correctional Facilities, 2004,
and the Survey of Inmates in Local Jails, 2002.
The most dramatic problems posed by drug abuse occur during withdrawal, when the
addict’s body reacts to the loss of the substance on which it has grown dependent. Both alcoholics and drug addicts suffer withdrawal, but it is especially painful for the latter group and may
last as long as a week. Addicts may attempt suicide to escape the pains of withdrawal, and a
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176 PART 2 Correctional Practices
higher percentage of drug addicts than nonaddicts succeed in the attempt. Early identification
of the drug addict is therefore a high priority in urban jails, for withdrawal symptoms can be
assuaged by methadone maintenance or release to an addiction treatment facility. Despite the
shortness of most stays in jail, treatment programs designed especially for jails have shown some
success. There is a great need for substance abuse treatment in jails, but less than one-fifth of
those who need such treatment receive it while there.19
Every jail regularly houses alcoholics, many of whom, during the initial hours of confinement, are physically sick, hallucinating, and paranoid. These symptoms tend to be viewed as
inconveniences rather than as conditions requiring treatment. Few jails provide any real form of
treatment, and treatment by outside agencies is often just as rare because agencies prefer voluntary clients.
Since the first detoxification center in the United States was established in St. Louis, in 1966,
the national trend has been toward treating public drunkenness as more of a medical than a
criminal problem. These detox centers are quasi-voluntary facilities for chronic alcoholics, many
of whom have no other place to go. The centers provide shelter, medical care, food, clothing, and
counseling for residents, most of whom are taken there by police.
Medical Needs People in jail have many medical needs, ranging from minor scrapes
and bruises sustained during arrest and booking to major injuries sustained during the
crime and its aftermath. To these injuries can be added the routine health deficiencies of
any lower-class citizen: infections, poor nutrition, lack of dental care, and so forth. Taken
together, more than one-third of those in jail report a physical ailment of some sort.20 Even
so, almost half of the nation’s jails do not screen routinely for infectious diseases, such as
tuberculosis.21
For the most part, citizens who end up in jail, on either charges or sentences, lack medical
insurance, so whatever medical care they receive is provided by the jail itself. Almost 60 percent
of America’s jails make people incarcerated there pay for at least some of the medical care they
receive; two-thirds of those require payment for all services. Forty percent provide the health
care through on-site staff or other government employees. Even in the jails that seek to address
health problems, services are problematic, and many residents have complained about the quality of care being offered.
Today, one of the more pressing medical issue in jails involves people with AIDS, estimated
at just over 1 percent of the national jailed population.22 About 1.6 percent of all jail deaths are
AIDS-related.23 As noted in Chapter 6, jail officials should be in a position to provide certain
treatments for people with HIV/AIDS, and all correctional workers should take standard health
precautions. The main problems have to do with staff training because many jail employees have
misconceptions about how the disease is spread. This can lead to mishandling of those who are
HIV-positive or AIDS-infected. The poor response to the HIV-positive in jails is exacerbated
by the fact that about nearly half of all jails do not routinely screen for the virus. Yet there is
good news as well. Nationally, HIV rates in jails are down markedly since 1996, dropping by
more than one-fourth, and AIDS as a cause of death during custody has also declined since that
time.24
Legal Needs People held for trial need access to legal assistance. In the emotionally
stressful postarrest period, they need information about what will happen prior to their trial.
They also need legal help in securing release through bail or diversion. If release is not possible, they must have help in preparing their case, negotiating with the prosecutor about
charges, or directing their attorney to people who may provide an alibi or exonerating evidence. Not surprisingly, research consistently shows that people held in jail until trial suffer
a disadvantage in preparing their defense. People in jail are likely to need a public defender,
an appointed counsel, or an attorney provided by contract. Unfortunately, because they must
process large numbers of cases for relatively small fees, criminal defense attorneys cannot
spend much time locating witnesses, conducting investigative interviews, and preparing
testimony. So for many people held for trial, these essential defense plans are only partially
pursued.
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CHAPTER 7 Jails: Detention and Short-Term Incarceration 177
They can expect to spend long periods without seeing an attorney. In fact, most have
only one or two hurried conversations with their attorneys before they appear in court. To
add insult to injury, they are brought to court in shackles and jail-issue clothing, in dramatic
contrast to well-groomed people who have been able to remain free. Some of those held for
trial who were once employed have long since been fired. In short, they have relatively dim
prospects.
The Rights of People Detained for Trial Unlike people serving time, people
in this group have not been convicted of the crimes for which they are being held. Technically,
they are innocent, yet they are detained under some of the worst conditions of incarceration. In
the 1970s several courts reasoned that such people should suffer no more restrictions than are
necessary to ensure their presence at trial and that their legal protections should exceed those of
the sentenced.
However, in 1979 the U.S. Supreme Court overruled the lower courts by limiting pretrial
detainees’ rights. As discussed in Chapter 5, the Court in Bell v. Wolfish ruled that conditions
can be created to make certain that detained people are available for trial and that administrative
practices designed to manage jails and to maintain security and order are constitutional.25 The
justices said that restrictions other than those that ensure court appearance may legitimately be
imposed on people held for trial and that when jail security, discipline, and order are at stake,
they may be treated like others in jail.
Release from Detention
One of the most startling facts about U.S. jails is that more than half of their occupants are
awaiting trial. For many, this pretrial detention will last a long time: The average delay between
arrest and sentencing is more than six months. For those charged with a felony, the average
delay between arrest and adjudication is 111 days.26 In urban jails the wait is often longer
because of heavy court backlogs. Remarkably, despite the constitutional right to a speedy trial,
in some court systems people can expect to languish in jail for a year or more before their cases
come to trial.
The hardship of pretrial detention exerts pressure on accused people to waive their rights
and plead guilty. Further, it undermines their defense. And delay, often a useful defense tactic because it can weaken the prosecutor’s case, imposes a further penalty on the detained
person.
Small wonder, then, that recent years have seen a major emphasis on programs to enable
release for those awaiting trial. Rates of pretrial release have gradually grown from less than
50 percent in the early 1960s to nearly 90 percent in some of today’s largest urban areas.
(See “The District of Columbia Sets the Standard for Pretrial Justice.”) Nationally, the percentages of pretrial release ranged from 12 percent for people brought into federal courts for
immigration violations to 71 percent for people charged with property crimes. However, in the
nation’s largest counties, 62 percent of people awaiting trial on felony charges are released prior
to the disposition of their case, half of them within a day.27 Even so, the proportion of people in
jail who are there because they are awaiting trial has increased from about one-half to nearly
two-thirds in the last 10 years.28 Today, jail overcrowding is accelerating the development of new
mechanisms for pretrial release, one of the simplest ways to reduce a jail’s population. Innovative alternatives to the traditional bail system (covered in the next section) have enabled police
departments to sustain high volumes of arrests even when local jails are severely overcrowded
and under court order to reduce daily populations.
Paradoxically, jail crowding may have exacerbated the problem of pretrial populations. As
mentioned, the 1990s saw a trend of closing down old, dilapidated jails and replacing them with
newer, larger facilities. The proportion of jail population that is housed in large jails (with over
2,000 capacity) has almost doubled since 1993. Jail capacity has increased nationally by more
than one-third. Many of the new spaces, though, are taken not by people sentenced to jail but by
people being held for trial, with the proportion of those serving sentences remaining steady at
just over half.29
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178 PART 2 Correctional Practices
The Bail Problem and Alternatives
When someone is arrested for a crime, the court seeks to ensure that he or she will appear at the
appointed time to face charges. Judges have traditionally responded to this need by requiring
that the person post bail, normally ranging from $1,000 to $25,000 (although higher amounts
may be required), to be forfeited if the accused individual fails to appear. See Figure 7.5 to see
the median bail amounts for people accused of a felony.
Dissatisfaction with the bail process stems from several factors. First, many people who
want to post bail—in some studies over 90 percent of those who are held for trial—are effectively
indigent and cannot afford bail. Second, money is a weak incentive for appearance in court in
many cases because the people who can afford bail are the ones most likely to appear at trial
without the threat of its forfeiture. Perhaps the most disquieting factor is that human freedom
can be had for a price. Imprisoning people merely because they are too poor to pay for their
release seems antithetical to our cultural ideals and our concept of justice. These are some of the
reasons that Federal Judge Lee H. Rosenthal declared the Harris County (Houston), Texas, bail
system “fundamentally unfair” to the poor and ordered the county to release people who were
accused of misdemeanors but were not able to post bail.30
To avoid the problems of bail, some jurisdictions have increased the use of citations and
summonses. For nonserious offenses, police can give the accused person a “ticket” specifying a
court appearance date and thus avoid having to take him or her into custody. Experiments with
this approach indicate that it effectively reduces demands for short-term detention space. See
Figure 7.6 for more on pretrial release.
bail An amount of money,
specified by a judge, to be posted
as a condition for pretrial release
to ensure appearance of the
accused individual at trial.
The hardships that happen when people are not released
from jail before their trial are well established: People lose
their jobs, families suffer breakups, people have trouble developing their defense against the charges, and the chances
of staying free of the justice system are diminished. Everyone agrees that for those who are accused of a crime, there
are major benefits to rapid release from jail. Despite these
statistics, the national picture is not encouraging: About half
of people who have been arrested stay there until trial, and
most of those who are released wait days and even weeks
before they get out. What makes this all the more tragic is
that what stands between most detained people and their
pretrial freedom is a handful of dollars—even small amounts
of bail are more than many individuals can afford.
What happens in our nation’s capital is a lesson in how the
national picture could be so much different. In the District of
Columbia, about 90 percent of the people arrested and sent to
jail are released by the court the next day. Even more remarkable, almost all of them are released without putting a penny
down for a bail bond. Instead, they promise to show up for
trial, and more than 90 percent do exactly that. Moreover, this
is not new; it has been going on for more than two decades.
“There is no evidence you need money to get people
back to court,” says D.C. Superior Court Judge Truman Morrison. “We’ve proven it can work without money.”
When the court determines that a person’s risk to the
community and risk of absconding are not high, the person
is offered conditional pretrial release. The conditions include
such precautions as reporting to a pretrial court officer, taking drug tests, and keeping a job. Some are put on electronic
monitoring. The court can tailor the exact conditions to create a plan that will keep a person safely on the streets, waiting for the trial date to arrive.
Of course the system is not perfect. There have been
high-profile cases of people released on this system committing heinous crimes, but these stories are rare enough that
the backlash has never threatened to end the system. People
who fail to abide by the conditions, or who are rearrested
before their trial date comes, can always be brought back
to jail.
Advocates are quick to point out that keeping a person
on conditional pretrial release costs less than one-tenth of
the cost of pretrial jail. But for most people, the money is
secondary. Running a system where people who have not yet
been convicted of a crime are not incarcerated seems simply fair and right. And the District of Columbia has proven
it works.
Source: Anne E. Martimow, “When It Comes to Pretrial Release, Few
Other Jurisdictions Do It DC’s Way,” Washington Post, July 6, 2016.
FOCUS ON
CORRECTIONAL POLICY: The District of Columbia Sets the Standard for Pretrial Justice
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CHAPTER 7 Jails: Detention and Short-Term Incarceration 179
0 25
Bail amount (thousands of dollars)
Violent
offenses
Property
offenses
Drug
offenses
Public order
offenses
$25,000
$7,500
$10,000
$10,000
5 10 15 20
FIGURE 7.5 Median Bail Amount for People Accused of Felonies, 2009
Most judges set low bail amounts for people facing felony charges, yet even these amounts are
hard for some people to raise.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, Felony Defendants in Large Urban Counties, 2009—Statistical Tables (Washington,
DC: U.S. Department of Justice, 2013), 7.
Release on Recognizance
By far the most successful alternative approach allows people to be released solely on their
promise to appear at trial, a practice known as release on recognizance (ROR). ROR programs assume that ties to the community (residence, family, employment) give people an incentive to keep their promise to appear and to retain their status in the community.
People released on recognizance frequently have higher appearance rates than do people
freed through various bail programs; they also have lower rearrest rates and higher rates of sentences to probation rather than prison. ROR programs have demonstrated clearly that the vast
majority of accused people can be safely released into the community on their promise to return
for trial. Loss of bail is an unnecessary threat. The rate of willful failure to appear in most jurisdictions is normally less than 5 percent.
Despite the benefits of ROR, questions arise. Because ROR requires that people have ties
to the community, only a small number of individuals can usually participate. One national
analysis of ROR found that women are more likely than men to be released and that African
Americans are less likely to be released than whites, especially in the West and South.
release on recognizance
(ROR) Pretrial release option
used when the judge believes the
person’s ties in the community
are sufficient to guarantee his or
her appearance in court.
Bail bond
26.4%
Other
financial bond
11.6%
Conditional release
6.4%
Other
3.6%
Denied bail
4.0%
Held,
bail not made
33.7%
ROR
14.3%
FIGURE 7.6 Pretrial Release Outcomes
More than one-third of people facing charges are held in jail awaiting trial.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, Felony Defendants in Large Urban Counties, 2009—Statistical Tables (Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, 2013).
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180 PART 2 Correctional Practices
Some jurisdictions have begun to experiment with
pretrial release under some form of supervision. Nationally, over 63,000 people are under some form of supervised release. Forty percent of these are supervised by
probation officers or other counselors or are under pretrial supervision, 7 percent attend day reporting centers,
22.6 percent perform community service (discussed
more fully in Chapter 9), and 22.4 percent are under
electronic monitoring.
31
Pretrial Diversion
As an alternative to adjudication, pretrial diversion began
with the belief that formally processing people through the
criminal justice system is not always beneficial. Each of the
three main reasons advanced in support of pretrial diversion
has provoked controversy:
1. Many of the crimes that result in going to jail are caused by special problems—vagrancy,
alcoholism, emotional distress—that cannot be managed effectively through the criminal
justice system.
2. The stigma attached to formal criminal labeling often works against rehabilitation and promotes an unnecessarily harsh penalty for a relatively minor offense.
3. Diversion is cheaper than criminal justice processing.
For the most part, correctional leaders agree that jails can do little for people who have mental, emotional, or alcohol-related problems. For such people, social programs are more suitable
than jails. There is less agreement about appropriate treatment for those whose problems are less
clearly beyond their own control—unemployed and unskilled youths, and multiple-drug users,
to name a few. Their marginal criminality may stem primarily from their disadvantaged status,
and their status can be seen as at least partly their own fault. Diversion from the criminal justice
system is controversial because to some critics it allows people to “get off easy.” Yet the rationale
for diverting them is attractive. The jail sanction does little to alter their disadvantaged status;
indeed, the stigma of a conviction often decreases their chances of becoming productive citizens.
A more enlightened policy would deflect them from criminal justice processes and instead put
them into reparations programs. That is, in fact, the precise aim of most pretrial diversion.
The mixed success of pretrial diversion programs highlights a persistent problem of criminal justice reform. Innovations designed to reduce the overall intrusiveness of the system, no
matter how well intentioned, often backfire and instead expand its capacity for social control.
The process, called “widening the net,” occurs when a new program is applied to people who
ordinarily would have gotten a less severe punishment; rather than diverting people from punishment, it increases the scope of corrections.
If pretrial diversion programs are to meet their objectives, they must be applied to people
who would otherwise be treated more harshly. This is not easy to accomplish because many
criminal justice system officials distrust programs that are more lenient or more oriented to
community service than are their current practices.
Conduct During Pretrial Release
People who are awaiting trial would seem to have a special incentive to behave well. If they show
up for court with a job and prospects for a good future, it will be harder for a judge to impose a
sentence of confinement. If they show they can adjust well to the community during the period
between the arrest and the trial, then the judge will likely take that into account when imposing
a sentence.
It may be surprising, then, that many people do not behave well during their period
of release before trial. While the vast majority—78 percent—of individuals on some form of
day reporting center
A facility where people under
pretrial release or with probation
violations can attend daylong
intervention and treatment
sessions.
electronic monitoring
Community supervision
technique, ordinarily combined
with home confinement, that uses
electronic devices to maintain
surveillance.
pretrial diversion An
alternative to adjudication
in which the accused person
agrees to conditions set by
the prosecutor (for example,
counseling or rehabilitation)
in exchange for withdrawal of
charges.
widening the net Increasing
the scope of corrections by
applying a diversion program to
people charged with offenses less
serious than those of the people
the program was originally
intended to serve.
▲ Bail bondsmen and
bounty hunters are a
troubling aspect of the
criminal justice system,
and reformers seek ways
to change the nature of
both roles.
AP Images/Intelligencer Journal/Blaine Shahan
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CHAPTER 7 Jails: Detention and Short-Term Incarceration 181
pretrial release show up for every court hearing, more than one in five do not. These are called
absconders; unless there is some good reason that they missed the court date, a warrant is sent
out for their arrest, and they are considered fugitives. Nationally, nearly one-fourth of these fugitives (3 percent of all people accused of a crime) remain at large at least one year after they were
supposed to have had their trial.32
The failure to appear for trial is not the only form of misbehavior that happens when people
are released before trial. Almost one in five (16 percent) of all people released while awaiting
trial are rearrested before their trial date arrives, half of them for a felony.33 The high arrest
rate of these people represents a significant concern to those interested in jail reform, who may
wonder if some sort of supervision or treatment program would help keep these numbers down.
They also see that high rates of arrests for this population lead to questions about the effectiveness of the pretrial system.
Preventive Detention
Even as ROR and other prerelease programs have moved forward, the heightened public concern about misconduct by people who are released while awaiting trial has led to a political
movement to prevent pretrial release, especially release on bail. With preventive detention,
people who are regarded as dangerous or likely to commit crimes while awaiting trial are kept in
jail for society’s protection. In 1984 the Comprehensive Crime Control Act authorized the holding of an allegedly dangerous person without bail if the judge finds that no conditions of release
would ensure the individual’s appearance at trial and at the same time ensure the safety of the
community.
The notion of the need for protection from people accused of committing a crime has been
subjected to sustained analysis. Many scholars believe that holding in custody a person who has
not been convicted of a crime but who someone thinks might commit a crime violates the due
process provisions of the Constitution. Others argue that the practice is impractical and potentially nefarious. And as we have seen, fewer than one in five of all people who are released pending trial are arrested for another crime before trial, and many of those are not convicted of the
new crime. One analysis of more than 100,000 pretrial releases found that judges often detain
the wrong people; overall, judicial authorities could use simple risk assessment devices to release
25 percent more people without increasing the amount of violent crime.34
Political pressure to incorporate the public’s safety concerns into release decisions has
become so strong that well over half of the states have laws allowing preventive detention. The
U.S. Supreme Court approved preventive-detention practices in Schall v. Martin (1984) and
United States v. Salerno (1987).35
People Sentenced to Jail
People who have been sentenced to jail by the court present special difficulties for the correctional administrator, mainly because of the short duration of the term and the limitations of the
jail’s physical plant. By definition, jail terms are shorter than prison terms—typically 30–90 days
for a misdemeanor. People convicted of a felony commonly serve from six months to a year,
and on some occasions (those convicted of sexual assault or robbery, for example) they will
serve two years or more.36 (See “Myths in Corrections.”) In many cases the sentence ultimately
imposed is “time served” because the judge believes that the time already spent in pretrial detention—when by law the person was presumed innocent—is sufficient, or more than sufficient,
punishment for the offense committed. The real punishment is not the sentence but rather the
impact of the unpleasant, costly, and harmful conditions of life behind bars from arrest up to
case disposition. In short, the process is the punishment.
Of those sentenced to additional jail time, people convicted of misdemeanors constitute the
forgotten component of local criminal justice operations. Over half are under criminal justice system supervision at the time of their arrest: probation, parole, or pretrial release. Nearly three-quarters have previously been sentenced to probation or confinement (see “Thinking Outside the Box”).
absconders People who fail
to appear for a court date for no
legitimate reason.
preventive detention
Detention of an accused person
in jail to protect the community
from crimes that he or she is
considered likely to commit if set
free pending trial.
Jails Are for People Convicted of Misdemeanors
THE MYTH: Jail sentences
are more common for people
convicted of misdemeanors than
they are for people convicted of
felonies.
THE REALITY: Nearly 40 percent
of people accused of committing
a felony are eventually sentenced
to jail, a rate that is almost the
same as prison sentences for
misdemeanors.
Source: Brian A. Reaves, Felony Defendants
in Large Urban Counties, 2009—Statistical
Tables (Washington, DC: U.S. Bureau of
Justice Statistics, 2013), 28.
MYTHS in Corrections
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182 PART 2 Correctional Practices
They also have a range of treatment needs. More than four-fifths
have a history of illegal drug use; 29 percent are unemployed,
and of the employed, 40 percent earn less than $1,000 per month.
More than one-third have experienced a serious physical injury,
and almost one-fifth have been abused.37 Most have not graduated from high school, and many are illiterate, yet educational
programming is unlikely to yield results in such a short time,
especially with adults.
Their short terms make treatment difficult. For example,
people in jail can rarely earn a high school equivalency diploma
in one or two months, and prospects for continued education
after release are dim. Similar impracticalities are inherent in
job-training programs, which may require 25–30 weeks to complete. In addition, job-placement prospects are spotty for people with jail records, many of whom do not have the help of a
parole or probation officer in looking for work. Treatment programs for the mentally ill, the emotionally disturbed, and alcoholics and drug addicts suffer from the same time constraints.
The jail facility also limits program opportunities. Jobs
within the institution are few, and most people have a lot of
idle time. Those assigned to work details find the labor menial
and monotonous: janitorial, kitchen, and laundry tasks. Still,
they are lucky. The vast majority simply languish in small cells.
Recreational options may consist of a small library of donated
books, some table tennis facilities, and a few card tables; few
jails have basketball courts, weight rooms, and the like. Whatever the resources, recreational
time is carefully rationed. Contact with friends and relatives is the only thing that sustains many
people in jail, but visiting hours are often limited to a few minutes each week.
In sum, with isolated exceptions, jail time is the worst kind of time to serve as a correctional
client. For corrections, jail is an expensive and largely ineffective proposition—a revolving door
that leads nowhere.
To ameliorate these problems, reformers have begun to emphasize the importance of carefully planned and supported reentry programs. Jail administrators are to begin preparing for a
sentenced person’s release from the first day of confinement,38 and partnerships with community supervision agencies are encouraged in order to provide more support for the person who is
returning to the community from the jail.39
THINKING
OUTSIDE
THE BOX
JAILS’ FREQUENT FLYERS
Anyone who works at a jail will attest that a small number
of people cycle in and out many times in a short period of
time. Sometimes called “frequent flyers,” these people have
almost never committed serious crimes, and they rarely pose
a risk to the community. They are disruptive people: often
intoxicated, often on the streets with no place to go. For
example, in New York City, up to 60 percent of people who
are homeless are rearrested within a year of being released
from jail.
This problem has led some experts to propose what
they call “frequent flyer programs.” These approaches begin
with research—just who are the people who enter and leave
jails so often, sometimes dozens of time in a year? Then the
research must be assessed—what are the problems underlying a person’s going to jail so frequently? The ultimate goal
of this research is to prescribe a strategy or program that will
deal with those problems and help keep the person out of jail.
What kind of treatment do you think such a program
would prescribe? What results might you expect? How much
should social science research be able to tailor individual
sentences?
Sources: Craig Davis, “How Police and Mental Health Professionals Work
Together in Framingham,” Metro West Daily News, October 28, 2012;
Richard R. Peterson, “Re-arrests of Homeless Defendants in New York
City,” Criminal Justice Agency Research in Brief 39 (February 2016).
▲ Families often
spend long periods just
waiting . . . waiting . . .
waiting, to see their
loved ones in jail.
AP Images/The Bismarck Tribune/Tom Stromme
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CHAPTER 7 Jails: Detention and Short-Term Incarceration 183
Issues in Jail Management
U.S. jails are faced with numerous problems, many of them age-old: lack of programs, poor
financial resources, antiquated facilities, and so on. Here we discuss five of the most important
issues related to jail: legal liability, jail standards, personnel matters, jail crowding, and the jail
facility itself.
Legal Liability
As discussed in Chapter 5, jail employees may be legally liable for their actions (42 U.S.C. 1983).
Whenever a government official (such as a correctional officer) uses his or her authority to
deprive a citizen of civil rights, the victim can sue the official to halt the violation and to collect
damages (both actual and punitive) and recoup legal costs. Supervisors, including wardens, can
also be liable for the actions of staff members—even if they were not aware of those actions—if
it can be shown that they should have been aware. A lack of funds does not excuse an administrator from liability for failing to train staff sufficiently or to provide basic, constitutionally
required custodial arrangements. Local governments that administer the jails are also liable for
injurious conduct.
Many people believe that court decisions awarding civil judgments under Section 1983 are
an open invitation to sue, and the frequency of suits filed by people in prison has certainly
increased. Just about every conceivable aspect of the conditions of incarceration has been litigated, from hours of recreation to quality of food. The most successful suits have been those
showing that an employee’s action has contributed to harming someone. But jail conditions
have also been the subject of suits, especially when substandard safety mechanisms result in
injury or death.
The threat of litigation has forced jails to develop basic humane practices for management.
Civil damages and legal fees of more than $1 million have been awarded often enough to draw
the attention of sheriffs, jail managers, and local government officials. Budgets for jails have
been increased to reflect the additional costs of developing training programs, classification procedures, and managerial policies to prevent actions leading to liability suits.
Jail Standards
One of the best ways to reduce litigation is to develop specific standards for the practices and
procedures that routine jail operations entail. Standards are important for at least three reasons.
First, they indicate proactive criteria for jail management, which help eliminate the “Monday
morning quarterback” (rehashed in hindsight) aspect of much litigation. If jails are following
standard procedures, they cannot be held as accountable as they otherwise would for problems
experienced during incarceration. Second, standards provide a basis by which administrators
can evaluate staff performance: They need merely determine whether staff are complying with
operational standards. Third, standards aid the planning and evaluation of jail programs by giving program managers a target to consider in their work.
Even so, authorities are uncertain about the best way to design and implement jail standards. Some experts argue that standards should be binding. Generally, this means that an oversight agency visits each jail in the state and determines whether its programs are consistent with
the standards. Jails that fail to comply with standards are given a deadline by which to meet
them. If they do not, they may be fined—or even closed down.
Other experts argue that because jails differ so much in size and needs and because so many
of them suffer from underfunding and inadequate facilities, holding all jails accountable for
meeting the same inflexible set of standards is unreasonable. These experts push for voluntary
guidelines by which program goals for jail operations would be set by groups such as the American Correctional Association and monitored by teams of professionals.
The bottom line is that if jail administrators do not implement standard practices, the courts
will intervene. Even new jails are not immune to this problem. In the late 1980s, jails commonly
9)
MORIAH SHOCK INCARCERATION
FACILITY, LOCATED IN THE
BUCOLIC SETTING OF THE
ADIRONDACK MOUNTAINS IN
UPSTATE NEW YORK, is a correctional dinosaur. It is a
prison “boot camp,” and people who serve their sentences there wear military fatigues,
doing predawn training routines of sit-ups and push-ups under the harsh eye and barked
commands of a uniformed drill instructor. The place feels like a military training camp:
shaved heads, platoons in marching drills, poetic cadences for almost every activity,
early lights-out. The people here seem enthusiastic about the strictness and the arduous
physical routine. As Drill Captain Bruce Rawson declares, “It instills discipline.”
But Moriah is part of a dying breed. In the 1990s, correctional “boot camps” were
all the rage. Acclaimed as a way of saving money and souls at the same time, and having
the enthusiastic endorsement of President Bill Clinton, boot camp prisons were opened
in almost every state in the country. Politicians loved them.
Then the evaluations started rolling in. Boot camp graduates did no better upon
release than people who went to regular prison. Boot camps didn’t save money. And
there were scandals, with some boot camps brutalizing the young men sent there to do
their time. Experts in corrections derided them as “correctional quackery.”
Soon enough, states started closing them down; the federal system closed its last
boot camp prison more than a decade ago. Moriah has its proponents, but they now
keep a low profile, claiming to be effective but without the kind of credible evidence that
policy makers have come to expect.1
The boot camp story illustrates two facets in the energetic national conversation
about “intermediate sanctions.” First, the costliness of the U.S. prison system has motivated policy makers to consider a wide range of alternatives to the traditional prison.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After reading this chapter, you
should be able to . . .
1 Explain the rationale
for nonincarceration
penalties.
2 Explain the rationale
for intermediate
sanctions.
3 Illustrate the
continuumof-sanctions concept.
4 Describe some of the
problems associated
with intermediate
sanctions.
5 List the various types
of intermediate
sanctions and who
administers them.
6 Explain what it takes
to make intermediate
sanctions work.
7 Assess the role of
the new correctional
professional.
8 Explain how
community
corrections legislation
works and evaluate
its effectiveness.
9 Assess the future
of probation, intermediate sanctions,
and community
corrections.
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230 PART 2 Correctional Practices
Second, we need to base these alternatives on evidence that they work, not just a whim.
In other words, isn’t there some way of punishing people who break the law but are not
dangerous, a way that is less costly than prison and maybe more effective?
Intermediate Sanctions
in Corrections
Prison is expensive, no doubt about it. More than $80 billion is spent on corrections each year.2
Over 90 percent of that goes to pay for incarceration, even though more than two-thirds of people under correctional authority are under community supervision. A year behind bars costs
25 to 50 times as much as a year on probation. In many states the correctional budget exceeds
the higher-education budget. Years of growth in prison expenditures have often been matched
by an equivalent drop in education dollars.
More and more, policy makers look at the prison budget and wonder if there is a less expensive way to carry out punishments. Especially in times when state-level revenues are tight and
governors face the possibility of having to cut popular health and education programs, prison
costs come under scrutiny.
Undeniably, prison is more expensive than probation because it provides total control over
a person’s life in a way probation cannot. For this reason, people who want to save money by
doing something less expensive than prison have been uneasy with probation as the only alternative. As Norval Morris and Michael Tonry have noted, “Prison is used excessively; probation
is used even more excessively; between the two is a near vacuum of purposive and enforced
punishments.”3
Judges know that prison is often too much and probation is just as often not enough. For
first-timers convicted of nonviolent crimes who have solid links to the community such as a
good job, judges generally feel comfortable with a probation term. But the truly first-time, nonviolent felony case is unusual. Much more commonly, a felony conviction is not the person’s first
crime. Too often, probation or some other sanction has been tried before, and the person has
ended up in trouble again.
Just as often, the crime is serious but not alarming. For instance, the person was caught once again
using drugs (or was implicated in another theft or was caught with an illegal handgun or got drunk
and got in a fight). What good would another term of probation do? What message would it send?
Yet just as clearly, a prison term makes little sense. The 30 months or so of a typical sentence
will require $50,000 or more from the taxpayer; this seems expensive in view of the minor costs
of the crime itself.4
Further, people who go to prison do not have better prospects of making it
than do people who remain in the community.
There are other considerations. Most people accused of a crime have dependents—a spouse
and/or children—and what will happen to them when the person goes to prison? Many studies
have shown that children and families suffer many hardships, ranging from financial to psychological, when a loved one is incarcerated.5 One of those hardships costs everyone in the long
run: In the United States, children of people who go to prison are more likely than others to end
up in trouble with the law and eventually land in prison themselves.
And what about the victims? They always seem to want the toughest penalty the law
provides, but getting the judge to choose a prison sentence will gain little for the victim.
Too many victims leave court feeling alienated from justice, whatever the sentence. Further,
they all face the uphill battle of recovering from the emotional and practical costs of crime, a
battle that the sentence does little to help. At least people on probation can be ordered to pay
restitution. With probation officers’ caseloads often 100 or more, what can one realistically
expect?
Finally, many types of nonprison sentences seem to lead to lower recidivism rates. Perhaps
going to prison makes people less likely to obey the law, or staying in the community makes
adjustment to a law-abiding life easier. But if the idea is to help people turn their lives around, in
most cases the judge has far better choices than sending them to prison.
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CHAPTER 9 Intermediate Sanctions and Community Corrections 231
For all of these reasons, our society benefits from choices that fall between probation and
prison—intermediate sanctions that are more exacting than probation but less costly and with
fewer collateral consequences than prison. In this chapter we present and analyze nonprobation
programs designed to keep people who have been convicted of crimes in local community corrections instead of prisons.
The Case for Intermediate
Sanctions
The enormous cost of incarceration is a powerful practical argument for community-based
alternatives. But there are other reasons that we need a range of correctional strategies between
probation and imprisonment, including these: (1) imprisonment is too restrictive, (2) traditional probation does not work, and (3) justice is well served by having options in between. In
the following sections we explore these arguments in more detail.
Unnecessary Imprisonment
Americans have traditionally tended to equate prison with punishment. When someone is sentenced to something other than prison, many people suspect that the person “got off ”; similarly,
a person who receives a short prison sentence is thought to have “gotten a break.” Yet to treat
prison as the primary means of punishment is wrong on two grounds.
First, most sanctions in Western democracies do not involve imprisonment. In the United
States, probation is the most common sanction: For every person in prison or jail, three are on
probation or parole. In Europe this is even more evident. For example, Germany imposes fines
as a sole sanction on two-thirds of those convicted of property crimes; in England the figure
approaches half. Community service is the preferred sanction for property crimes in England.
Further, Sweden, the Netherlands, France, Austria—and virtually every other European Common
▲ Judge jennie Barkey hands a certificate to U.S. Army veteran Shane Millay, 34,
as he graduates from veterans' treatment court. Specialized courts such as this one
have become quite popular. Advocates say they improve on justice, but detractors
say they make it harder for regular courts to function effectively.
AP Images/The Flint Journal/Jake May
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232 PART 2 Correctional Practices
Market country—use such sanctions far more than incarceration. Because nonprison sanctions
are a worldwide phenomenon, it makes little sense to think of them as lack of punishment.
Second, prison is simply not effective in most cases. We expect prison to deter someone
from a life of crime, but evidence speaks to the contrary. A host of recent studies now show
that people who go to prison do worse after their release than they would have done under a
sentence to a community penalty.6
Along these lines, public sentiment about nonprison punishment appears to be changing. A recent national survey sponsored by the Pew Charitable Trusts
found strong public support for reducing the prison population (see Figure 9.1).
If prison is neither the most common nor the most effective sanction, why does it dominate
our thinking on punishment? Perhaps it is time to recognize that corrections can and should
develop nonincarcerative sanctions that fill the gap between prison and probation.
Limitations of Probation
As we mentioned in Chapter 8, probation may not work with everyone. Because many probation officers handle 100 or more cases at a time, the average person on probation gets maybe
15 minutes of contact per week—hardly meaningful supervision. Further, in many cases this
supervision does not really address problems that matter. The probation officer may check the
person’s pay stubs and test for drug use. But in the limited time available, little may happen to
help the person achieve a change in lifestyle.
Intermediate sanctions can improve traditional probation supervision in two ways. First,
they can intensify supervision. Second, they can provide specialized programs better suited to
more-important needs.
Improvements in Justice
Judges sometimes complain that their sentencing choices are limited. They face the need
to sentence people whose cases do not warrant prison but for whom probation seems inadequate. Developing an array of sanctions between these two extremes lets judges better match
Some of the money that we are
spending on locking up low-risk,
nonviolent inmates should be shifted to
strengthening community corrections
programs such as probation and parole.
26%
58%
People who commit crimes belong
behind bars, end of story. It may cost
a lot of money to run prisons, but it
would cost society more in the long run
if more criminals were on the street.
15%
One out of every 100 American adults
is in prison. That’s too many, and
it costs too much. There are more
effective, less expensive alternatives
to prison for nonviolent offenders,
and expanding those alternatives is
the best way to reduce the crime rate.
19%
50%
Strongly agree
20 40 60 80 100
Percent
Agree
10%
FIGURE 9.1 Public Opinion About Punishment
A majority of Americans approve of intermediate sanctions for most kinds of nonviolent crimes.
Source: Pew Center for the States, Public Opinion on Sentencing and Corrections Policy in America (Washington,
DC: Author, 2012).
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CHAPTER 9 Intermediate Sanctions and Community Corrections 233
the sentence to the crime. Similarly, when supervision conditions are broken, some response
is needed to maintain the credibility of the rules. However, sending the violator to prison for
behavior that is not otherwise criminal seems unwarranted.
Finally, intermediate sanctions allow a closer tailoring of the punishment to the situation.
Sometimes, a fine is adequate punishment. Other situations may call for a drug treatment program. In still other cases, a period of home confinement will be sufficient. In sum, intermediate
sanctions, tailored to fit the specific circumstances, may provide the greatest justice. This may be
one reason why public opinion surveys so consistently find support for intermediate sanctions
as alternatives to prison and traditional probation.
Continuum of Sanctions
Intermediate sanctions fit the concept of the continuum of sanctions—a range of
punishments that vary in intrusiveness and control, as shown in Figure 9.2. Probation plus a fine
or community service may be appropriate for minor offenses, whereas six weeks of boot camp
followed by intensive probation supervision may be right for serious crimes.
The continuum-of-sanctions concept also incorporates a range of correctional management
strategies that vary in intrusiveness and control. Clients are initially assigned to a level of control, depending on the seriousness of their offense and their prior record. They may then move
to a less or a more restrictive level, depending on how well they do at each level. For example,
a person might start with a 7:00 p.m. curfew, a community service obligation, and mandatory
treatment programs on the weekends. If those restrictions are satisfactorily met for six months,
the person might have the curfew rescinded.
Many jurisdictions have developed a continuum of sanctions, and its advantages now seem
plain. First, it increases the corrections system’s flexibility. As jails and prisons become more
crowded, some clients can be moved to less restrictive options, such as work release programs.
Second, it allows more-responsive management of individuals. Thus, if a person on regular probation is not reporting, a brief home confinement can be followed by a return to probation.
Finally, it costs less than other alternatives.
Both state and county agencies can benefit from using a continuum of sanctions. Further,
this approach can be either codified into law or operated as a practice agreed to by the various
correctional agencies. For instance, in Maricopa County, Arizona, the combined resources of
multiple agencies—the jail, treatment centers, and probation—are used to develop the punishment system along a continuum of sanctions. This meets the same aims as the state of Delaware’s
sentencing accountability system, but it is neither a part of penal law nor operated by a single
state agency.
continuum of sanctions A
graded range of correctional
management strategies based
on the degree of intrusiveness
and control, along which a client
is moved based on his or her
response to those correctional
programs.
LOW CONTROL
HIGH CONTROL
Intensive
probation
supervision
Boot
camp
Shock
incarceration Jail
Fines or
restitution
Community
service
Drug, alcohol
treatment
Home
confinement Probation
FIGURE 9.2 Continuum of Sanctions
Judges may use a range of intermediate sanctions, from those exerting a low level of control to
those exerting a high level.
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234 PART 2 Correctional Practices
Problems with Intermediate
Sanctions
Despite the growing range of available alternatives to incarceration and parole, all is not well
with the intermediate sanctions movement. Problems arise in selecting which agencies will
operate the process and which people will receive the sanctions. Further, intermediate sanctions
often inappropriately “widen the net.”
Selecting Agencies
Administrators of such traditional correctional agencies as jails, prisons, probation, and parole
often argue that they should also administer intermediate sanctions. They claim to have the
staff and the experience to design new programs for special subgroups, and they suggest that to
maintain program coherence, they ought to operate all correctional processes. Critics counter
that because traditional correctional organizations must give the highest priority to traditional
operations, they cannot adequately support midrange alternatives. Therefore, new agencies,
both public and private, should run intermediate programs. Others believe that intermediate
sanctions programs will inevitably be controlled by the probation and prison systems—
especially because these systems need intermediate sanctions to resolve swollen caseloads and
overcrowded facilities.
Selecting People
A second issue has to do with selecting appropriate people for alternative programs. One school
of thought emphasizes selection by seriousness of crime; the other concentrates on the client’s
problems. A focus on the offense usually eliminates some crime categories from consideration.
Many argue that violent or drug-marketing offenses are so abhorrent that a nonincarcerative
program is not appropriate. Yet often these are the people best able to adjust to these programs.
Moreover, to the degree that these programs are needed to reduce prison overcrowding, they
must include some serious cases.
In practice, both the crime and the client are considered. Certain offenses are so serious
that the public will not tolerate intermediate punishments for them (even though there are many
instances of successful community-based control of people convicted of murder and other serious crimes). At the same time, judges want programs to respond to the needs of the people they
sentence.
Underlying this issue is the thorny problem of stakes. Most of us would be willing to bet
$1 on a 1-in-10 chance of winning $10, yet few of us would be willing to bet $1,000 on a 1-in-10
chance of winning $10,000. The odds are the same, but we stand to lose so much more in the
second case. Similarly, intermediate sanctions programs are often unwilling to accept people convicted of serious crimes, particularly violent crimes, even though the chances of them successfully
completing a program may be quite good. If one of them commits a new serious crime, the damage to the community and—through negative publicity—to the corrections system can be substantial. With some high-profile cases, the stakes are simply too high, regardless of the amount of risk.
Widening the Net
A third major problem with selecting people for intermediate sanctions is widening the net
(see Chapter 7). In some ways this problem is potentially the most damaging because it strikes
at the very core of the intermediate sanctions concept. Critics argue that instead of reducing the
control over people’s lives, the new programs have actually increased it. You can readily see how
this might occur. With the existence of an alternative at each possible point in the system, the
decision maker can select a more intrusive option than ordinarily would have been imposed.
For instance, community service can be added to probation; shock incarceration can be added
to a straight probation term.
stakes The potential losses to
victims and to the system when
someone recidivates; stakes
include injury from violent crimes
and public pressure resulting
from negative publicity.
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CHAPTER 9 Intermediate Sanctions and Community Corrections 235
Available evidence reveals that implementing intermediate sanctions has had three
consequences:
1. Wider nets: The reforms increase the proportion of people in society whose behavior is regulated or controlled by the state.
2. Stronger nets: By intensifying the state’s intervention powers, the reforms augment the state’s
capacity to control people.
3. Different nets: The reforms create new jurisdictional authority or transfer it from one agency
or control system to another.
Varieties of Intermediate Sanctions
How the various sanctions programs relate to one another depends on the jurisdiction running them. For example, one county may use intensive supervision in lieu of a jail sentence;
another may use it for probation violators. We have organized our description of the main types
of intermediate sanctions according to which agencies administer them—the judiciary, probation departments, or correctional departments.
Sanctions Administered by the Judiciary
The demand for intermediate sanctions often comes from judges dissatisfied with their sentencing options. In courts that have managerial authority over probation, this discontent has
translated into new probation programs. Other courts have sought to expand their sentencing options by relying more on programs within their control, such as pretrial diversion, fines,
forfeiture, community service, and restitution. These programs aim primarily at reducing trial
caseloads, especially focusing on less serious cases that need not tie up the court system. The
programs also seek to impose meaningful sanctions without incarceration.
Pretrial Diversion The functions of pretrial diversion, especially as a jail alternative, are
examined in Chapter 7. Because courts have extremely broad discretion in the pretrial phase of
adjudication, some have sought to apply this discretion to a greater range of cases.
Pretrial-diversion programs typically target petty drug crime. A new strategy in Wayne
County (Detroit), Michigan, exemplifies this practice. People arrested for first-time drug possession are “fast-tracked” into drug treatment programs within hours of arrest. They are promised that if they successfully complete the drug treatment program, the charges against them will
be dropped. This kind of treatment-based diversion program depends on cooperation between
the court and the prosecution. Judges indicate their willingness to delay trial if prosecutors are
willing to drop charges after the person has demonstrated a change in lifestyle. See “Myths in
Corrections” for more about drug treatment as diversion.
Fines Over $1 billion in fines is collected annually in the United States. Yet, compared with
other Western democracies, the United States makes little use of fines as the sole punishment for
crimes more serious than motor vehicle violations; the latest national data available show that
about 1 percent of people convicted of a felony receive a fine as the sole penalty.7
Instead, fines
are typically used with other sanctions, such as probation and incarceration. For example, it is
not unusual for a judge to impose two years’ probation and a $500 fine.
Many judges cite the difficulty of enforcing and collecting fines as the reason they do not
make greater use of this punishment. They note that the people handled by the court system
tend to be poor, and many judges fear that fines would end up being paid from the proceeds of
additional illegal acts. Indeed, there is evidence that the imposition of a fine can lead to higher
rates of rearrest.8
Other judges are concerned that relying on fines as an alternative to incarceration would let the more affluent “buy” their way out of jail while forcing the poor to serve time.
In Europe fines are used extensively, are enforced, and are normally the sole sanction for
a wide range of crimes. The amounts are geared to both the severity of the offense and the
Hopeless Cases
THE MYTH: Persistent, lowlevel drug addicts are so downand-out, so hopeless, that there
is really nothing to be done to
help them.
THE REALITY: Targeted
programs that provide treatment
and services for people who
are homeless and addicted to
drugs—cycling in and out of
the justice system on low-level
crimes—can reduce recidivism
rates by up to 60 percent.
Source: Susan E. Collins, Heather S.
Lonczak, and Seema L. Clifasefi, LEAD
Program Evaluation: Recidivism Report
(Seattle: University of Washington—
Harborview Medical Center, 2015).
MYTHS in Corrections
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236 PART 2 Correctional Practices
financial resources of the convicted person. To deal with the concern that fines
exact a heavier toll on the poor than on the
wealthy, Sweden and Germany have developed the day fine, which bases the size of
the penalty on one’s income. For example,
a person making $36,500 a year and sentenced to 10 units of punishment would
pay $3,650; a person making $3,650 and
receiving the same penalty would pay $365
(see “For Critical Thinking”).
Forfeiture With the passage of the
Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) and the Continuing Criminal Enterprise Act (CCE) in
1970, Congress resurrected forfeiture, a
criminal sanction that had lain dormant
since the American Revolution. Through
amendments in 1984 and 1986, Congress
improved ways to implement the law,
making prosecution easier. Similar laws
are now found in several states, particularly with respect to controlled substances and organized crime.
Forfeiture, in which the government seizes property derived from or used in criminal activity, can take both civil and criminal forms. Under civil law, property used in criminal
activity (for example, automobiles, boats, or equipment used to manufacture illegal drugs) can
be seized without a finding of guilt. Under criminal law, forfeiture is imposed as a consequence
of conviction and allows the courts to impound various assets related to the crime. These assets
can be considerable. In 2014 a total of $4.5 billion in assets were seized under asset forfeiture
laws—more than the total losses of all the burglaries that same year.9
However, forfeiture is controversial. Critics argue
that confiscating property without a court hearing
violates citizens’ constitutional rights. In 1993 the
U.S. Supreme Court restricted the use of summary
forfeiture. Now the use of this sanction has waned.10
Community Service and Restitution
Although for years judges have imposed community service and restitution, few judges have used
them as exclusive sanctions. Recently, with prisons
overcrowded and judges searching for efficient
sentencing options, interest in these sanctions has
increased.
Community service requires the performance of a specified number of hours of free labor
in some public service, such as street cleaning,
repair of run-down housing, or hospital volunteer
work. Restitution is compensation for financial,
physical, or emotional loss caused by the crime, in
the form of either payment of money to the victim
or to a public fund for crime victims.
Both alternatives rest on the assumption that
a person can atone for the crime with a personal
or financial contribution to the victim or to society. They have been called reparative alternatives
day fine A criminal penalty
based on the amount of income a
person earns in a day’s work.
forfeiture Government seizure
of property and other assets
derived from or used in criminal
activity.
▲ Authorities prepare vehicles for auction after they were seized during
drug arrests. Money received from these auctions pays for training and
equipment for criminal justice agencies.
ZUMA Press Inc./Alamy Stock Photo
FOR CRITICAL THINKING
Fines and restitution are two of the most commonly used
intermediate sanctions. Advocates say they enable a person to be held
accountable for a crime without having to impose a term of incarceration. But some critics point out that financial penalties can inadvertently
favor people who have greater means, and work against the poor.
Moreover, financial penalties tend to stack up, leaving people forever
dealing with the consequences of their conviction because their money
problems keep them in trouble.
1. Do fines work in favor of the rich? What can be done about that?
2. Is it fair to impose monetary penalties that also affect family member
quality of life?
3. Is it fair to victims to impose restitution as a sentence when it is clear
that a person will never be able to afford to pay it?
4. Does it make sense to stack on financial penalties? At what point
does the use of financial penalties become counterproductive?
Source: Karin D. Martin, Sandra Susan Smith, and Wendy Still, “Shackled to Debt: Criminal Justice Financial
Obligations and the Barriers to Re-entry They Create,” New Thinking in Community Corrections Paper No. 4
(Washington, DC: National Institute of Justice, 2017).
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CHAPTER 9 Intermediate Sanctions and Community Corrections 237
because they seek to repair some of the harm done.
Such approaches have become popular because
they force a positive contribution to be made to
offset the damage, thus satisfying a common public
desire that people not “get away” with their crimes.
The effectiveness of these programs is mixed.
Studies have found that, without such programs,
many—perhaps most—of the people who were
ordered to provide community service and restitution would have been punished with a traditional
probation sentence. This does not speak strongly
to community service being a real solution for
correctional crowding. The most comprehensive
study of community service versus imprisonment
finds persuasive evidence that community service
results in lower recidivism rates than prison.11
Moreover, people made to pay restitution experience it as both punitive and rehabilitative. And
people sentenced to community service may end
up having lower rearrest rates than would be
expected if they had been sentenced differently.
In sum, community service and restitution
show that simply implementing a so-called alternative does not always achieve the aims of intermediate sanctions. In order not to widen the net,
careful attention must be paid to selecting appropriate people for these programs. Judicial decision
making must be controlled to ensure that people
who enter the programs are those who otherwise
would have been incarcerated.
Sanctions Administered by Probation
Departments
One basic argument for intermediate sanctions is that probation, as traditionally practiced, is
inadequate for a large portion of people convicted of crimes, particularly serious crimes. Probation leaders have responded to this criticism by developing new intermediate sanctions programs and expanding old ones. New programs often rely on increased surveillance and control.
Often, old programs are revamped to become more efficient and expanded to fit more people.
Day Reporting (Treatment) Centers Recently, as prisons became more and more
crowded, judges grew reluctant to incarcerate probation violators except when the violation involved a new crime. As a result, people on probation in some jurisdictions came to realize that
they could disregard probation rules with relative impunity. Probation administrators found
that the lack of credibility with clients severely hampered their effectiveness.
The solution seemed to be the development of probation-run enforcement programs. For
example, Georgia has experimented with probation centers, where persistent probation violators reside for short periods. Massachusetts and New York City have instituted day reporting centers, where violators attend daylong intervention and treatment sessions (see Chapter 7).
Minnesota and other states have established restitution centers, where those who fall behind
in restitution are sent to make payments on their debt. These centers have been found to reduce
the amount of jail time that clients end up serving and to reduce their recidivism rates.12
All of these types of centers are modeled after an innovation developed in Great Britain in
the 1970s. In the United States these facilities vary widely, but all provide a credible option for
probation agencies to enforce conditions when prisons are overcrowded. All of them, regardless
community service
Compensation for injury to
society by the performance of
service in the community.
restitution Compensation for
financial, physical, or emotional
loss caused by the crime, in the
form of either payment of money
to the victim or to a public fund
for crime victims, as stipulated by
the court.
probation center Residential
facility where persistent probation
violators are sent for short
periods of time.
restitution center Facility
where people who fall behind
in restitution are sent to make
payments on their debt.
AP Images/Daily Journal/Scott Roberson
▲ Community service can involve many different kinds of jobs. Here,
Brandon Hinkle cleans kennels at an animal shelter as part of his
court-ordered community service. When it works well, community
service not only does something for the community but also offers
an opportunity for the offender to feel good about “giving back.”
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238 PART 2 Correctional Practices
of specific type, are usually referred to as day reporting centers. Most day reporting centers use
a mix of common correctional methods. For example, some provide a treatment regimen comparable to that of a halfway house—but without the problems of running a residential facility.
Others provide contact levels equal to or greater than intensive supervision programs, in effect
creating a community equivalent to confinement.
The only sophisticated study of day reporting centers to date does not support this
approach. People who participated in day reporting centers were much quicker to experience a
new arrest than those who did not participate. In the long run, there was no overall difference in
recidivism rates.13 One problem common to newly established intermediate sanctions programs
is that stringent eligibility requirements result in small numbers of cases entering the program.
Day reporting centers are growing in popularity faster than evidence concerning their
effectiveness is appearing, with hundreds of programs now operating in more than half of the
states. If they do not affect recidivism, then the ultimate test of these programs will involve two
questions: (1) how much do they improve probation’s credibility as a sanction? and (2) how well
do they combat jail and prison crowding?
Intensive Supervision Intensive supervision probation (ISP) has sprung up around
the country, and it seems ideally suited to the pressures facing corrections. Because ISP targets
those who are subject to incarceration, it should help alleviate crowding; because ISP involves
strict supervision, it responds to community pressures to be in control.
What constitutes intensive supervision? Even the most ambitious programs require only
daily contacts between probation officers and those they are supervising. Such contacts, which
can last 10 minutes or less, never occupy more than a minuscule portion of the client’s waking
hours. So, no matter how intensive the supervision, substantial trust must still be placed in the
person on probation.
Early evaluations of ISP programs in Georgia, New York, and Texas found that intensive
supervision can reduce rearrest rates. Nevertheless, these programs were not received without
controversy. For one thing, the low number of rearrests came at a cost. All evaluations of intensive
supervision found that, probably because of the closer contact, probation officers uncovered more
rules violations than they did in regular probation. Therefore, ISP programs often had higher
technical failure rates than did regular probation, even though ISP clients had fewer arrests.
This was precisely what researchers found in a series of important experiments testing ISP
effectiveness. People on probation in California were randomly assigned to either ISP or regular
supervision. Results indicated no differences in overall rearrest rates but substantial differences in
probation failure rates. ISP clients did much worse under the stricter rules—possibly because ISP
makes detecting rules violations easier.14 In sum, these programs not only failed to reduce crime
but actually cost the public more than if the programs had not been started in the first place.
Despite questions about the effectiveness of ISP, the approach has enjoyed wide support
from correctional administrators, judges,
and even prosecutors. The close supervision
has revitalized the reputation of probation in
the criminal justice system. It has also demonstrated probation’s ability to enforce strict
rules, ensure employment, support treatment
programs, and so forth. Given the positive
public relations, ISP is likely here to stay.
Although intensive supervision may satisfy public demands for control measures, the
people placed on probation continue to need
various forms of assistance. Many of them face
serious personal problems—unemployment,
emotional and family crises, substance
abuse—that require service or treatment.
Therefore, officers still have to juggle the
roles of helper and controller. On paper the
conflicts between these roles in ISP programs
intensive supervision
probation (ISP) Probation
granted with conditions of strict
reporting to a probation officer
who has a limited caseload.
David Samson, center,
former chairman of the
Port Authority of New
York and New Jersey,
has reason to be pleased.
Instead of prison he
was sentenced to a year
of home confinement
followed by four years of
probation for a bribery
conviction. ▼
Peter Foley/Bloomberg/Getty Images
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CHAPTER 9 Intermediate Sanctions and Community Corrections 239
may seem less extreme, but in practice they may well continue and perhaps be exacerbated by
the mixed messages of the programs.
Home Confinement Under home confinement, people are sentenced to incarceration but serve their term in their own home. Variations are possible. For instance, after a time
some might be allowed to go to work or simply leave home for restricted periods during the day;
others might be allowed to maintain employment for their entire sentence. Whatever the details,
the concept involves using the person’s residence as the place of punishment.
On the surface, the idea of home confinement is appealing. It costs the state nothing
for housing; the client pays for lodging, subsistence, and often even the cost of an electronic
monitor. More importantly, significant community ties can be maintained—to family, friends
(restricted visitation is ordinarily allowed), employers, and community groups. The punishment
is more visible to the community than when the sentence is prison. The goals of reintegration,
deterrence, and financial responsibility are served simultaneously. When people know a little
bit about home confinement, they tend to favor it for many kinds of crimes. To illustrate how
powerful this can be, some criminal justice college classes require students to stay at home for an
entire 24-hour period. Students generally learn that a long stay at home would be quite a penalty.
Evaluations of home confinement provide a few impressions of how the program works.
Anecdotal evidence suggests that the effectiveness of home confinement seems to wear off after
a few months; it is increasingly difficult to enforce detention conditions as the sentence rounds
into its second half-year. The program seems best suited to low-risk cases who have relatively
stable residences.
Electronic Monitoring One of the most popular new approaches to probation supervision is surveillance by electronic monitors. The use of electronic monitors has more than doubled in the last decade.15 Electronic monitoring is ordinarily combined with and used to enforce
home confinement. The total number of people currently under monitoring is difficult to estimate because the equipment manufacturers consider this to be privileged information, but the
U.S. Department of Justice has estimated that there are 14,200 people under electronic monitoring.16 For most of these people, monitoring is a condition of a probation sentence.
Two basic types of electronic-monitoring devices exist. Passive monitors respond only to
inquiries; most commonly there is an automated telephone call from the probation office, and
the device has to be placed on a receiver attached to the phone. Active devices send continuous
signals that are picked up by a receiver; a computer notes any break in the signal.
Advances in the technology will soon make passive monitors obsolete. The coming generation of devices will be smaller and less awkward to wear. The data they send will be combined
with mapping data to show the exact whereabouts at any given time of the person being monitored, including whether the person has ventured into a restricted area and whether there is
another person under monitor control close by. The companies that provide electronic monitoring advocate that a “new generation” of devices and programs will more closely integrate monitoring into treatment aspects of programs, rather than just providing surveillance.17 The chances
for a deeper penetration into the life of a person who is on the streets seem already upon us.18
Advocates of these systems point out that they are tougher than probation and cheaper
than incarceration (a per diem cost of $6–$20 for electronic monitoring versus $40–$90 for jail),
especially because the client often pays to use the system.19 Yet even if most of the 14,200 people
under electronic monitoring as a condition of a jail sentence have been truly diverted from confinement, that is only around 1.7 percent of the total jail population.20 Nonetheless, these systems are more humane than prison or jail because people under surveillance can keep their jobs
and stay with their families. In addition, probation officers are free to spend more time providing services rather than carrying out surveillance.
Studies of electronic monitoring show that they hold promise for achieving important correctional goals. Florida’s community control cases have lower rearrest rates than people sentenced
to jail, and this large program of electronic monitoring is believed to save the state a considerable amount of money, though studies in other states have not been as positive.21 An electronic
monitoring experiment in San Diego for people convicted of sex crimes found higher rates of
compliance with registry laws and lower rearrest rates, suggesting that electronic monitoring
home confinement
Sentence whereby people serve
a term of incarceration in their
own home.
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240 PART 2 Correctional Practices
could be successful with this kind of conviction, which typically results in a prison sentence.22 A
large field study in Denmark found that electronic monitoring proved less harmful than prison
for people under correctional control, indicating that it is a more humane alternative.23
Some observers oppose electronic monitoring because only people who own telephones
and who can afford the $25–$100 per week that these systems cost to rent are eligible. In addition, confinement to the home is no guarantee that crimes will not occur. Many crimes—child
abuse, drug sales, and assaults, to name a few—commonly occur in residences.
Moreover, the reliability of these devices has recently become an issue. Some people have
figured out how to remove the monitors without detection; others have been arrested at the
scene of a crime—even though the monitoring system indicated that they were safely at home.
Monitors can also intrude on the privacy of the family and be unduly stressful for the family.
Despite these drawbacks, the use of electronic monitoring will likely continue to increase,
along with technological advances. Recently, global positioning systems (GPS), which use satellite tracking devices to monitor whereabouts, have become more feasible. These new approaches
provide 24-hour verification of a person’s exact location.
Sanctions Administered by Correctional
Departments
Correctional agencies have had to develop intermediate sanctions to manage their burgeoning caseloads. Some correctional agencies rely on electronic monitoring to support an earlyrelease program, but shock incarceration and boot camps are the two most common responses
to overcrowding.
Shock Incarceration The fact that the deterrent effect of incarceration wears off after
a very short term of imprisonment has led to experimentation with shock incarceration. The
person is sentenced to a jail or prison term; then, after 30 to 90 days, the judge reduces the sentence. The assumption is that the jail experience will be so distasteful that the person will be
motivated to “stay clean.”
Shock incarceration is controversial. Its critics argue that it combines the undesirable
aspects of both probation and imprisonment. People who are incarcerated lose their jobs, have
their community relationships disrupted, acquire the convict label, and are exposed to the brutalizing experiences of the institution. Further, the release to probation reinforces the idea that
the system is arbitrary in decision making
and that probation is a “break” rather than
a truly individualized supervision program. It is hard to see how such treatment
will not be demeaning and embittering.
As we pointed out at the opening of this
chapter, many studies of shock incarceration showed no improvement in recidivism
rates. Nonetheless, interest has remained
high, leading to a new form of the shock
technique called boot camp.
Boot Camp One variation on shock
incarceration is the boot camp, in which
young people serve a short institutional
sentence and then go through a rigorous,
paramilitary regimen designed to develop
discipline and respect for authority. The
daily routine includes strenuous workouts,
marches, drills, and hard physical labor.
Proponents of boot camp argue that
many young people get involved in crime
shock incarceration A
short period of incarceration (the
“shock”), followed by a sentence
reduction.
boot camp A physically
rigorous, disciplined, and
demanding regimen emphasizing
conditioning, education, and job
training, designed primarily for
the young.
Social worker Billie Sue
Wallis serves up fresh
bread pudding for clients
of Partnership for Active
Community Engagement,
which offers mental
health and other services
to keep people in the
Boulder, Colorado, justice
system from returning to
jail. ▼
Brian Brainerd/The Denver Post/Getty Images
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CHAPTER 9 Intermediate Sanctions and Community Corrections 241
because they lack self-respect and cannot order their lives. Consequently, the boot camp model
targets young first-timers who seem to be embarking on a path of sustained criminality. Evaluations show that those who are given boot camp may improve in self-esteem. But critics argue
that military-style physical training and the harshness of the experience do little to overcome
problems that get inner-city youths in trouble with the law. In fact, follow-ups of boot camp
graduates show they do no better than others after release. This ineffectiveness has led several
authorities to close their boot camps. Even more troubling are the charges of fatal physical abuse
that, in some states, have led to the closing of all of their boot camps.
Studies show that only boot camps that are carefully designed, target the right people, and
give them rehabilitative services are likely to save money and reduce recidivism.24 Too many
boot camps overemphasize discipline, to the detriment of the graduates. In fact, in Maricopa
County, Arizona, a special group had to be set up for boot camp graduates because their failure
rates were so high after leaving the program.
Do boot camps work? There is no firm answer, but results to date have not been promising.
Perhaps job training and education would be more beneficial than physical training. The intentionally harsh tactics of boot camp are brutal, especially for impressionable young people, and
even when these tactics are combined with a heavy emphasis on rehabilitation programming,
they appear to fail to reduce rearrest rates.25 Nevertheless, the approach has proved popular with
a public that is searching for new ways to deal with crime.
Making Intermediate
Sanctions Work
Intermediate sanctions have not been used long enough to allow a complete evaluation of their
effectiveness. Only a few of the hundreds of programs attempted since the mid-1980s have been
studied. Summaries of the value of intermediate sanctions note frequent failures to achieve
goals, but that certainly does not mean the idea should be abandoned.
One evaluation problem is that intermediate sanctions often profess lofty goals such as
improving justice, saving money, and preventing crime. Yet the limited record on intermediate sanctions suggests that these goals are not always accomplished. If intermediate sanctions
are to work, they must be carefully planned and implemented. Even then they must overcome
obstacles and resolve such issues as sentencing philosophies and practices, selection criteria, and
surveillance and control methods.
Sentencing Issues
The most important issue concerning the use of intermediate sanctions has to do with sentencing
philosophy and practice. In recent years, greater emphasis has been placed on deserved punishment: the idea that similar offenses deserve penalties of similar severity. Intermediate sanctions
could potentially increase the number of midrange punishments and thereby improve justice.
Yet advocates of deserved punishment argue that it is not automatically evident how intermediate sanctions compare with either prison or probation in terms of severity, nor is it clear
how they compare with one another. For example, placing someone on intensive probation
while ordering someone else to pay a heavy fine may violate the equal punishment rationale of
just deserts.
When intermediate sanctions are used to reduce prison crowding, the issue becomes even
murkier. For example, is it fair for some to receive prison terms while others receive the intermediate sanction alternative?
For intermediate sanctions to be effective, exchange rates consistent with the
principle of interchangeability must be developed so that one form can be substituted for
or added to another form. In other words, different forms of intermediate sanctions must be
calibrated to make them equivalent as punishments despite their differences in approach. For
example, 2 weeks of jail might be considered equal to 30 days of intermittent confinement or
principle of
interchangeability The
idea that different forms of
intermediate sanctions can
be calibrated to make them
equivalent as punishments
despite their differences in
approach.
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242 PART 2 Correctional Practices
2 months of home confinement or 100 hours of community service or 1 month’s salary. (Table 9.1
shows the number of people who serve various intermediate sanctions as an alternative to jail.)
Advocates say that, in terms of intrusiveness, a short prison sentence can be roughly equivalent to some intensive supervision programs or residential drug treatment and that various
forms of intermediate sanctions can be made roughly equivalent to one another. It is clear, both
from studies and from experience, that some people would rather be in prison than be placed on
tough intermediate sanctions. Thus, one can design intermediate sanctions that equal incarceration in terms of intrusion, thereby upholding the principles of deserved punishment.
Yet these studies are troubling in that they find substantial differences across racial groups
in the preference for prison over intermediate sanctions. For example, African Americans and
Hispanics are more likely than whites to rate prison as preferable to an intermediate sanction.
This raises a concern that widespread adoption of intermediate sanctions may further exacerbate racial disparities in prison populations.
In practice, some observers have tried to structure this principle of interchangeability by
describing punishment in terms of units: A month in prison might count as 30 units; a month
on intensive supervision might count as 10. Thus, a year on ISP would be about the same as a
four-month prison stay. To date, no one has designed a full-blown system of interchangeability, though both the federal sentencing guidelines and those in Oregon embrace the concept of
punishment units. The future will likely bring attempts to create interchangeability based on the
relative weights of punishments.
Selection Issues
If intermediate sanctions are to work, they must be reserved for the right cases; which clients
are chosen, in turn, depends on a program’s goals. No matter what the program’s goals, however,
intermediate sanctions must be made available regardless of race, sex, or age.
The Target Group Intermediate sanctions have two general goals: (1) to serve as a less
costly alternative to prison and (2) to provide a more effective alternative to probation. To meet
these goals, intermediate sanctions managers search for appropriate cases to include in their
program—often a difficult task. But there are plenty of people who might be prison-bound yet
who seem to be appropriate candidates for intermediate sanctions: One study of prison-bound
Californians found that as many as one-fourth of them would have been suitable for intermediate sanctions.26
TABLE 9.1 Persons Under Jail Supervision Assigned to Intermediate Sanctions
Of the 808,070 people who are under some form of jail supervision, more than 1 in 12 are in
an intermediate sanction program.
Intermediate Sanction Program Number
Weekender programs 9,698
Electronic monitoring (EM) 14,223
Home detention (no EM) 646
Day reporting 4,413
Community service 14,331
Other pretrial supervision 8,634
Other work programs 7,003
Treatment programs 2,100
Other outside programs 2,430
Total 63,478
Source: U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, Statistical Tables (June 2015), 9.
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CHAPTER 9 Intermediate Sanctions and Community Corrections 243
Because of judges’ reluctance to divert people from prison, many intermediate sanctions
programs billed as prison alternatives actually serve as probation alternatives. As an example,
consider boot camp programs, which are usually restricted to first-timers, age 16 to 25, who
have been convicted of property crimes. Boot camp, then, cannot be considered an effective
prison alternative because young first-timers convicted of property crimes seldom go to prison.
Probation alternatives (often called probation enhancements) face a similar problem. Theoretically, they should be restricted to the highest-risk cases on probation—those needing the
most surveillance and control. Typically, however, the conservatism inherent in new programs
makes the truly high-risk cases ineligible for the program.
Clearly, when intermediate sanctions are applied to the wrong target group, they cannot
achieve their goals. When prison alternatives are applied to nonprison cases, they cannot save
money. When probation-enhancement programs are provided to low-risk clients, they cannot
reduce much crime.
One possible solution is to use intermediate sanctions as a backup for clients who fail on
regular probation or parole. This practice would increase the probability that the target group is
composed of high-risk clients and the prison-bound.
Problems of Bias Race, sex, and age bias are of particular concern for intermediate sanctions. Because getting sentenced to an intermediate sanction involves official (usually judicial)
discretion, the concern is that white, middle-class cases will receive less harsh treatment than will
other groups. In fact, unless program administrators work hard to widen their program’s applicability, nonwhites will be most likely to remain incarcerated rather than receive alternative sanctions, and minorities may be more likely to face tougher supervision instead of regular probation.
Alternative sanctions also tend to be designed for men, not women. One could argue that
this is reasonable because men make up over 80 percent of the correctional population, but the
patently unfair result may be that special programs are available only to men. Moreover, some
experts on women who have committed crimes challenge the design of intermediate sanctions,
which are often based on tough supervision. They argue that measures for many women should
instead emphasize social services.
Solutions to the problem of bias are neither obvious nor uncontroversial. Most observers
recognize that some discretion is necessary in placing people in specialized programs. They
believe that without the confidence of program officials, people are more likely to fail. This
means that automatic eligibility for these programs may not be a good idea. It may be necessary
to recognize the potential for bias and to control it by designing programs especially for women,
for example, making certain that cultural factors are taken into account in selecting people for
these programs.
Using Surveillance and Control
in Community Corrections
People who are in prison are always being watched, and they have extreme limits placed on their
freedom. In order to be palatable as alternatives to imprisonment, many intermediate sanctions
use heightened surveillance and control as a means of demonstrating that intermediate sanctions can also be onerous. The rhetoric of “tough” supervision is designed to instill confidence in
a doubting public that keeping people in the community will pose no threat.
Surveillance has other goals as well. Without some degree of surveillance, treatment providers cannot know for sure if a given treatment is working. The providers argue that some form
of drug use surveillance, for instance, is essential to any drug treatment program. Deterrenceminded people argue that tough surveillance deters crime in two ways: (1) it makes people less
willing to decide to commit a crime because they are being watched so closely, and (2) it catches
people still active in crime earlier in their recidivism.
Community corrections uses four general types of control strategies: drugs, electronics,
human surveillance, and control programs. They may be used either separately or in combination.
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244 PART 2 Correctional Practices
Drug Controls
It is perhaps ironic that a society so concerned about drug abuse uses chemicals as one of the
main strategies for controlling human behavior. A long tradition of prescribing drugs for precisely this purpose exists in the United States. Four drugs illustrate the kind of control regimen
that is available by using chemicals:
1. Antabuse is frequently given to alcohol abusers. Antabuse blocks the metabolism of alcohol,
so if a person on Antabuse drinks, he or she will experience unpleasant side effects, such as
severe nausea. The drug is controversial because it is seldom taken voluntarily and its side
effects are so undesirable.
2. Sometimes called “chemical castration,” the drug Depo-Provera constrains the male sexual
response. It is used to reduce or eliminate the sex drive of men convicted of certain sex offenses. The drug is fairly effective in eliminating the capacity to sustain an erection, but it
does nothing to counter the aggression inherent in sex offenses.
3. Chlorpromazine (trade names include Thorazine and Largactil) has long been prescribed
for people suffering from certain psychotic disorders, such as schizophrenia. Chlorpromazine is a drug designed to help people think more clearly. It may also reduce hallucinations
experienced by people with schizophrenia, as well as the likelihood of them engaging in
violence toward themselves or others.
4. For clients who suffer from depression, the drug Prozac is often prescribed. Widely used,
this drug decreases the low, sad feelings that accompany depression. (Zoloft and Paxil are
also used, though less frequently.)
These examples illustrate the range of problems addressed through drugs and the variety of
physical, biological, and emotional responses that these drugs produce. The examples also show
the controversial nature of chemical controls—they often have adverse side effects, and their
effectiveness is sometimes questionable.
Electronic Controls
Perhaps the most important penal innovation of the 1980s was electronic monitoring. As we
saw earlier in the chapter, the idea of electronic monitoring has many advantages: It represents
“high-tech” corrections, and it costs less than prison. This technology is becoming particularly
popular in community supervision of people convicted of sex crimes.
The electronic age has made possible a quantum leap in surveillance technology. For example,
the technology now exists for visual monitoring via telephone lines. Therefore, video screens can
be used to ensure that the person is actually at home during the phone call. The probation officer
can simply make a call and then conduct a face-to-face interview without ever leaving the office.
Consider also the technology of the “electric fence” that is now used to confine some dogs.
It establishes a perimeter (usually the yard) outside of which the dog may not venture without
getting an electric shock. This kind of technology might be easily adapted to keep selected individuals away from schools, bars, or other areas. In theory, at least, it could allow extensive freedom within the necessary restrictions.
The state of New Jersey requires people released from prison who have criminal histories
for sex crimes to receive some form of parole supervision for life.27 Another application of technology allows correctional officials to monitor the computer and Internet use of people convicted of sex crimes and to restrict access to sexually explicit websites, under the theory that
such websites stimulate the desire for repeat sexual offending.28
Human Surveillance Controls
Unlike the technological advances of electronics and drugs, personal contact allows the correctional worker to process an array of subtle information—body language, attitudes, odors, and
so forth. When it comes to surveillance, no approach can fully supplant the basic strategy of
increasing contact with the experienced correctional worker.
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CHAPTER 9 Intermediate Sanctions and Community Corrections 245
Intensive supervision systems have been used to increase both the frequency and the diversity of this surveillance contact. What makes the surveillance effective is not just how much
contact there is but how diverse it is. Clients are seen at the office, in their homes, and at work;
they are seen at regular intervals and in “surprise” visits. The dominant effect is an aura of surveillance in which no aspect of the person’s life is totally free of potential observation.
In short, through routine and random contacts, the correctional officer can observe a wide
range of behavior in a broad array of situations. Increasing this capacity yields a deeper confidence that there is compliance with the law.
One of the most recent trends is to empower everyday citizens to perform their own surveillance. All 50 states now have sex offender registries, and both law enforcement and the general public have access to much of the data on these registries.29 Sex offender notification laws
enable neighbors to keep an eye on any people living near them who have been convicted of
a sex crime. Similar measures being considered include sex offender license plates30 and public access to GPS monitoring.31 These programs have proved very popular, even though their
results have sometimes been problematic.32 In Chicago, for example, housing restrictions placed
on people with sex crime histories can exclude them from vast sections of the neighborhoods
where most of them can afford to live, and as a consequence many live in places that violate the
restrictions because of proximity to a school or day-care center.33
Programmatic Controls
The most widely used techniques of surveillance and control are established elements of treatment programs. Drug testing is a good example. In these programs, urine samples are routinely
taken to test for drug use. Normally, a urine sample has to be submitted (with a correctional
worker watching as it is “produced” to ensure whose urine it is) and then sent to a lab for testing. Recently, on-the-spot tests have been developed to overcome the problem of delays in test
results.
Programs also sometimes provide for systems of surveillance and control to support treatment. Vermont’s Relapse Prevention Program trains the client to be aware of potential “signals”
that indicate a return to deviant sexual behavior, and selected individuals living in the client’s
personal community—family, friends, therapists, and coworkers—are taught to look for the
same signs. In effect, these people become additional eyes and ears for the correctional worker,
who regularly contacts them to see if the person is exhibiting behavioral changes that should
concern the authorities. Similarly, electronic monitoring is being tested to aid programs for
school truants and for people who have been ordered to pay child support.34
The New Correctional Professional
Without a doubt, the advent of intermediate sanctions has changed the work world of the professional in corrections. The long-standing choice between prison and probation now includes
community and residential options that run the gamut from tough, surveillance-oriented operations to supportive, treatment-based programs. The kinds of professionals needed to staff these
programs vary from recent college graduates to experienced and well-trained mental health clinicians. However, three major shifts in the working environment of the new correctional professional are central to this growth.
First, nongovernment organizations have emerged to administer community corrections programs. Hundreds of nonprofit agencies, such as CASES, now dot the correctional
landscape (see “CASES: Center for Alternative Sentencing and Employment Services”). These
organizations contract with probation and parole agencies to provide services to clients in the
community.
Second, an increased emphasis on accountability has reduced individual discretion. Professionals currently work within boundaries, often defined as guidelines, that specify policy
options in different case types. For instance, a staff member may be told that each client must be
seen twice a month in the office and once a month in the community and that each time a urine
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246 PART 2 Correctional Practices
The Center for Alternative Sentencing and Employment
Services (CASES) was created in 1989 as a New York City
nonprofit “alternative to incarceration.” Its mission is “to
increase public safety through innovative services that reduce
crime and incarceration, improve behavioral health, promote
recovery and rehabilitation, and create opportunities for success in the community.”
CASES illustrates what can be accomplished with a comprehensive, nonprofit service center designed to reform correctional practice. Over the years, the agency has evolved from
a focus on providing community service and employment services at sentencing to offering prevention programs across the
spectrum of the criminal justice system. Today, CASES serves
nearly 6,000 youths and adults across New York City by operating more than 20 programs, including the following:
■ Preventing arrest among young people who are gang
affiliated or otherwise at high risk for involvement with
the criminal justice system
■ Preventing a criminal record for youths who have been
arrested but have not yet been formally charged
■ Diverting youths and adults from jail while they are
awaiting trial on misdemeanor or felony charges
■ Diverting youths and adults from incarceration after felony convictions, when they can be safely supervised in
the community through engagement in support and/or
treatment services
■ Reducing recidivism of youths and adults returning from
jail or prison to the community
CASES has also become known for its expertise in working with justice-involved people who have mental health
needs including even serious mental illness, with national recognition for its award-winning Nathaniel Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) alternative to incarceration program for
adults who have serious mental illness and who are prisonbound as the result of felony convictions. Aside from being
more effective in dealing with complicated clients, CASES’s
many programs result in significant public savings. The agency’s services cost an average of $63 per client per day, compared to an average daily cost of incarceration at New York
City’s Rikers Island jail of $460.
FOCUS ON
CORRECTIONAL PRACTICE: CASES: Center for Alternative Sentencing
and Employment Services
sample must be taken. Rules such as these not only constrain discretion but also provide a basis
for holding staff accountable.
Third, the relationship between the professional and the client has become less important
than the principles of criminal justice that underlie that relationship. Instead of training in psychology and counseling, for instance, the new correctional professional receives training in law
and criminal justice decision making. This means that the sources of job satisfaction have shifted
from helping people with their problems toward simply shepherding them through the system.
Thus, the new correctional professional is more accountable for decision making and is
more oriented toward the system in carrying out agency policy. This has significant implications for the motivation and training of staff, but it also means that in the traditional threeway balance among clients, staff, and the bureaucracy, the last has grown in importance.
(See “Careers in Corrections” to learn about one type of correctional professional: addiction
treatment specialist.)
Community Corrections Legislation
Most correctional clients in the United States are under state or county authority. Corrections
systems located only a few miles apart can vary dramatically in philosophy and practice because
of differences in community values, interests, and politics. In most states, judges, prosecutors,
and sheriffs are elected by voters in each county. These officials have extensive discretion concerning the disposition of cases. Their decisions often reflect the political and social realities of
their community. For instance, a person who crosses the border from Utah to Nevada goes from
a state with one of the lowest incarceration rates in the United States to a state with one of the
highest, even though their crime rates are nearly identical.
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CHAPTER 9 Intermediate Sanctions and Community Corrections 247
The differences in the style and philosophy of correctional programs in different localities
reflect a basic truth about law and order: Beliefs about right and wrong, as well as values about
how to deal with wrongdoers, differ from one locality to the next. Over the years the concept of
community corrections has revolved around many themes, but one core idea has endured—that
local governments know best how to deal with their own crime problems. As such, local and
state laws reflect unique ways of implementing community corrections, even though they share
similar goals. As we will see in the following discussions, the implementation and evaluation of
community corrections must take local differences into account.
Reducing Reliance on Prison
Community corrections legislation is best understood in terms of its goal to reduce reliance
on prisons. In pursuit of this goal, it embraces a wide spectrum of alternatives to incarceration
among which judges and other criminal justice system officials can choose.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, several states considered legislation that would establish
financial and programmatic incentives for community corrections. For example, in 1965 California passed the Probation Subsidy Act, which sought to reimburse counties for maintaining
correctional clients in the local corrections system instead of sending them to state facilities.
Lawmakers developed a formula to determine the number who ordinarily would be sent to state
institutions and to pay the counties a specified sum for each one not sent to prison. The counties
could then use the money to strengthen probation and other local correctional services in order
to handle the additional numbers. (See “Thinking Outside the Box.”)
In 1973 Minnesota passed the Comprehensive Community Corrections Act, which funded
local corrections systems with money saved by state corrections when individuals were not sentenced to state facilities. Colorado in 1976 and Oregon in 1978 passed legislation patterned after
Minnesota’s law. The experiences of these pioneering states in community corrections were so
well regarded that by 1995, more than half of U.S. states had passed community corrections legislation. By 2007, the vast majority of states had done so, as shown in Figure 9.3.
Nature of the Work
Drug and alcohol abuse is a major problem that is often
linked to criminal behavior. Correctional addiction treatment specialists, also known as clinical social workers
or addiction counselors, may work with clients either in
prisons or in community health organizations. Addicted
clients are usually referred to treatment by the courts or by
probation, prison, or parole authorities. Addiction treatment is a major component of community corrections.
Addiction treatment specialists assess and treat
individuals with substance problems, including abuse of
alcohol or drugs. They develop treatment plans by examining a case’s institutional files and gathering information
from family members and other counselors. Treatment is
through individual and group therapy in either outpatient
or residential settings. Twelve-step programs are often incorporated into the treatment regimen.
Required Qualifications
A bachelor’s degree in social work and training in addiction therapies are normally the minimal requirements for
entry into this position. Some states require a master’s degree, certification in addiction treatment, and supervised
work experience.
Earnings and Job Outlook
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics expects that the
demand for treatment specialists will grow rapidly over
the next decade because substance abusers are increasingly being placed into community treatment programs
instead of being sent to prison. The median annual salary
for a substance abuse and behavioral disorder counselor
was $42,920 in 2015, with the lowest quartile earning less
than $31,850 and the highest more than $51,140.
More Information
You can obtain additional information about this occupation from the website of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Occupational Outlook Handbook.
CAREERS in Corrections
Addiction Treatment Specialist
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248 PART 2 Correctional Practices
Community corrections legislation is based on the idea that local justice systems have little
incentive to keep their own community members in local corrections. State-administered institutions are funded by state tax revenues, and it costs communities little to send large numbers of
cases there. In contrast, it costs local citizens much more to keep clients in jail or on local probation because their taxes pay for those services.
THINKING
OUTSIDE
THE BOX
USING COST–BENEFIT ANALYSIS TO
DECIDE ON CORRECTIONAL PROGRAMS
It is now possible to analyze programs in terms of their “cost–
benefit ratio.” A cost–benefit ratio is a statistic that shows
how much benefit is received by a program or correctional
strategy for each dollar that it costs. The cost–benefit ratio
enables us to compare two different programs in terms of
payoff. For example, an expensive correctional program may
be so effective that it is worth what it costs; likewise, a much
cheaper correctional program may be preferable, even if its
outcomes are slightly less desirable.
Policy makers calculate cost–benefit ratios for correctional programs by putting a price tag on the crimes a person
commits when a program fails, then comparing the costs of
two different programs in terms of both their program costs
and the cost differences of their outcomes. Analysts who specialize in this kind of work point out that policy makers often
employ programs with unfavorable cost–benefit ratios because they like something about the program. For example,
boot camps have problematic cost–benefit ratios because
people who go to boot camps do no better than people who
are on regular probation. By contrast, people who get multisystemic family therapy have much better cost–benefit ratios
than people who simply go to jail. In the long run, some say,
cost–benefit ratios should be used to decide which programs
that correctional systems should employ.
Source: Adapted from Patricio Dominquez and Steven Raphael, “The
Role of the Cost-of-Crime Literature in Bridging the Gap Between Social
Science Research and Policy Making Potentials and Limitations,”
Criminology & Public Policy 14 (no. 4, November 2015): 589–632.
States with community
corrections acts
States without community
corrections acts
WA
OR
NV
CA
ID
MT ND
SD
NE
WY
UT
CO
AZ
KS
OK
MN
IA
MO
AR
LA
MS AL GA
FL
SC
NC
VA WV
KY
TN
IL OH
PA
WI NY
MD
DE
NJ
CT
ME
NH
VT
MA
RI
AK
HI
NM
TX
MI
IN
FIGURE 9.3 States with Community Corrections Acts
Many states provide financial incentives for local governments to keep people in local correctional agencies instead of sending
them to state prisons.
Source: Mary Shilton, “Community Corrections Acts by State,” http://centerforcommunitycorrections.org/?page_id=78 , September 24, 2009.
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CHAPTER 9 Intermediate Sanctions and Community Corrections 249
Yet incarceration in a state prison costs substantially more than local incarceration or probation (see Table 9.2). In the long run, centralized, state-administered punishments seem to be
more expensive than local corrections. If we also acknowledge that many people are sentenced
to state prison when this extreme punishment is not necessary, we can easily see that the financial incentives that favor imprisonment run contrary to good correctional policy.
The “payback system” must establish some formula for determining baseline prison
commitment rates—that is, what number would normally be expected to be sent to prison.
Sending fewer people to prison would qualify for payback funds. Further, this formula must
be applied to all the state’s jurisdictions. This idea has problems, of course. Local corrections
systems do not contribute equally to over-incarceration; for example, urban and rural areas are
bound to contribute differently. The funding formula, then, is likely to result in some serious
inequities. For instance, California’s formula did not adjust for counties that had traditionally
restricted their use of incarceration; as a consequence, subsidies given to “progressive” counties were unlikely to be equal to those given to more “conservative” ones. Also, California’s
original 1965 rate of payback ($4,000 per person) was not adjusted for inflation, and by 1975
this amount was worth less than $2,500 per person. In contrast, Minnesota’s formula included
an inflation factor and permitted adjustments for a locality’s crime rate and the capacity of its
corrections system. Even so, the formula was criticized for providing lesser financial incentives
to cities, which had more eligible cases to deal with and correspondingly larger corrections
systems.
Evaluation of Community
Corrections Legislation
The main thrust of community corrections legislation—to limit dependence on prison—
comprises three aims:
1. To reduce the rate and number of people sentenced to state correctional facilities
2. To reduce tax revenues spent on corrections by transferring both the costs and the funding
to less-expensive local correctional facilities
3. To reduce prison populations
Have these aims been achieved? The answer is complicated.
Early evaluations of California’s Probation Subsidy Act showed that both adult and juvenile
commitments to state facilities decreased immediately following the enactment of the probation
TABLE 9.2 Costs of Incarceration and Intermediate Sanctions in Four States
In a study of Colorado, North Carolina, Ohio, and Virginia, intermediate sanctions proved far
less expensive than imprisonment.
Correctional Method Cost per Year per Person
Prison $27,851
Jail 19,555
Probation 1,307
Intensive supervision 3,585
Community service 4,316
Day reporting 4,352
House arrest 629
Electronic monitoring 3,148
Halfway house 19,555
Boot camp 37,108
Source: Based on data from Seeking Justice: Crime and Punishment in America (New York: Edna McConnell Clark
Foundation, 1997), 34. Adjusted for 2018 inflation by the authors.
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