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Proposed Study: Probation/Suspended Sentence Violations Scored on the Felony Sentencing Guidelines.

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Presentation on theme: "Proposed Study: Probation/Suspended Sentence Violations Scored on the Felony Sentencing Guidelines."— Presentation transcript:

1 Proposed Study: Probation/Suspended Sentence Violations Scored on the Felony Sentencing Guidelines

2 Background

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4 F.1 - All Violations under § 19.2-306: Submit Sentencing Revocation Report F.2 - Technical Violations: Submit Revocation Report & Probation Violation Guidelines Current Requirements 4

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6 In cases where an offender is being sentenced for a suspended sentence/probation violation at the same time as a new felony offense, the Sentencing Revocation Report (SRR) and the sentencing guidelines should be completed Suspended sentence/probation violations are scored as an additional offense based on the highest statutory maximum for the underlying offense(s) Current Requirements 6

7 Not all revocations (§ 19.2-306) in the same sentencing event are scored on new offense guidelines Attorneys and Officers have to prepare two sets of guidelines (Court’s decision on the revocation based on a new offense often is unknown) 1. New offense guidelines and 2. New offense guidelines with a revocation scored as an additional offense and a Sentencing Revocation Report Submitting both the new law guidelines and the sentencing revocation report was viewed as duplication of work and confused many. (As a result, both forms are often not completed) There is no complete data source for new law probation violations (Condition 1) ― Court data is missing or overwritten ― Corrections data is missing or overwritten ― Sentencing guidelines are not always modified to reflect convictions in the sentencing event ― Probation violation data is sometimes missing violations scored as additional offense on the new offense guidelines Result of the Current Requirements 7

8 Procedural issues complicate the data collection process ― In some jurisdictions, the same judge that heard the original offense presides over the violation hearing. For offenders with multiple offenses and multiple sentencing judges, this may result in separate hearings for the same violation behavior. ― In other jurisdictions, one judge presides over all violations, regardless of the original judge, offenses or sentencing dates. ― In some jurisdictions, offenders are prosecuted for technical violations while the new law violation proceeds through court. Once there is a conviction for the new offense, the offender is brought before the court for a second violation. ― In other jurisdictions, offenders appear before the court for a violation after the new law violation is concluded. Both technical violations and new law violations are resolved in the same hearing. ― When found in violation, some judges will impose a sentence and then suspend a portion of the sentence. Others will impose just a portion of the suspended time. As a result, It is often difficult to calculate the amount of revocable time. Other Issues 8

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10 Research Considerations

11 Determining the scope of the issue and the potential impact of modifying the guidelines: 1. How often are offenders sentenced for a new felony at the same time as a probation/suspended sentence violation? ─ Research Strategy: Match sentencing guidelines data to the SRR, court, and jail databases 2. How often is the violation listed as an additional offense on the sentencing guidelines and how often are these guidelines scored correctly? ─ Research Strategy: Analyze sentencing guidelines data and compare expected scores to actual scores recorded on the guidelines 3. How often is an SRR completed when a probation/suspended sentence violation is listed as an additional offense? ─ Research Strategy: Match sentencing guidelines data to SRR database 4. How would modifying the rules for scoring probation/suspended sentence violations as an additional offense affect compliance? ─ Research Strategy: Estimate guidelines compliance based on potential rule change Research Questions and Strategies 11

12 Possibilities for addressing the issue(s): ― Training efforts over the past few years may have led to an increase in the number of guidelines submitted that list a probation/suspended sentence violation as an additional offense. However, this does not address disparities in recommendations due to differences in scheduling cases. Research Considerations 12 Sentencing Guidelines Cases with Violations Included FY2009 - FY2013 (Preliminary) N=1,697

13 Possibilities for addressing the issue(s), continued: ─Staff would like to explore the option of modifying the rules so that probation/suspended sentence violations would not be scored on the felony sentencing guidelines, even if they are sentenced at the same time as a new felony offense. ─Under this scenario, the Sentencing Guidelines form would be completed for the new felony offense and the Sentencing Revocation Report (SRR) would be completed for the probation/suspended sentence violation.  May allow for more consistency in guidelines recommendations across jurisdictions  This change would likely affect compliance for certain guidelines offenses Research Considerations 13

14 Sentencing Guidelines Compliance for Cases with and without a Violation Listed as an Additional Offense FY2009 - FY2013 (Preliminary) Preliminary Analysis 14 Offense Group Compliance for Cases without a Violation Compliance for Cases with a Violation Assault73.2%79.5% Burglary/Dwelling66.2%73.2% Burglary/Other75.7%89.5% Drug Sch. I/II81.8%69.5% Drug Other83.9%66.7% Fraud85.3%73.3% Kidnapping64.5%100%* Larceny82.9%71.0% Murder/Homicide63.3%66.7%* Sexual Assault67.5%42.9%* Rape66.9%80.0%* Robbery63.1%64.3% Traffic81.5%64.0% Miscellaneous74.4%61.7% Weapon/Firearm75.8%63.2% * Less than 10 cases reported

15 Offense Groups Where Compliance for Cases with a Violation is Lower FY2009 - FY2013 (Preliminary) 15 Offense Group Cases without a ViolationCases with a Violation Comp.Mit.Agg.Comp.Mit.Agg. Drug Sch. I/II81.8%10.1%8.1%69.5%13.3%17.1% Drug Other83.9%5.8%10.4%66.7%11.8%21.6% Fraud85.3%9.2%5.5%73.3%18.5%8.2% Larceny82.9%9.3%7.8%71.0%12.8%16.3% Sexual Assault67.5%12.6%19.8%42.9%*14.3%42.9% Traffic81.5%7.3%11.2%64.0%6.5%29.5% Miscellaneous74.4%12.0%13.6%61.7%6.4%31.9% Weapon/Firearm75.8%12.3%11.9%63.2%5.3%31.6% High aggravation rates for some offense groups may be attributable to sentences given for the suspended sentence/probation violation * Less than 10 cases reported Preliminary Analysis

16 Possibilities for addressing the issue(s), continued: ― Multiple steps are necessary in estimating guidelines compliance if the violations are no longer scored as additional offenses. These include:  Calculating what the guidelines recommendation would be if the violations were not scored (across 15 offense groups). –Involves using available data to recalculate the guidelines, including re-scoring offenders who would move from Section C to Section B due to the reduced number of points on Section A.  Extracting the sentence for the violation from the total sentence reported on the guidelines form. Research Considerations 16

17 For sentencing events covered by the guidelines, the total sentence for all offenses included in the event is recorded on the disposition sheet. Research Considerations 17

18 To extract the sentence for the probation/suspended sentence violation from the sentence recorded on the guidelines, staff will attempt to match the guidelines cases to several data sources, including: ― Sentencing Revocation Report (SRR) Database ─Circuit Court Case Management System (CMS) ― Local Inmate Data System (LIDS)  Due to the integration of LIDS into the Department of Correction’s CORIS system this summer, FY2013 LIDS data are not yet available Once the violations have been removed from the guidelines recommendation and the total effective sentence for the event, projected compliance will be computed and presented to the Commission. Research Considerations 18

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