Justice Reinvestment in Kansas (House Bill 2170) Kansas BIDS Conference October 8 & 9, 2015

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Justice Reinvestment in Kansas (House Bill 2170) Kansas BIDS Conference October 8 & 9, 2015 Carl Reynolds, Senior Legal Advisor Council of State Governments Justice Center & Ebo Browne, Research Analyst Kansas Sentencing Commission

Presentation overview The CSG Justice Center Justice Reinvestment in Kansas Kansas Sentencing Commission Data on H.B. 2170 2

The Council of State Governments and the Justice Center CSG is a national non-profit, nonpartisan membership association of state government officials, and works with members of all three branches of state government The CSG Justice Center provides practical, nonpartisan advice informed by the best available evidence 3

The Justice Center s Texas office is closely tied to state and national work on indigent defense. Council of State Governments Justice Center 4 1999-2001 Executive Sessions on Indigent Defense at Harvard 2002-Present Led Taskforce on Indigent Defense s strategic planning 2005-2012 Former Executive Director of Office of Court Administration

Our indigent defense evaluation showed Houston/Harris County assigned counsel system allows overloading attorneys on the wheel. 5 255 Attorneys on Wheel 20,847 Assigned Cases Paid 10% Of attorneys 18% Attorneys (45) were paid for assignment to more than 150 felonies 10% Of attorneys 10% Of attorneys 10% Of attorneys 10% Of attorneys 10% Of attorneys 10% Of attorneys 30% Of attorneys 30% Of Cases 20% Of Cases 17% Of Cases 12% Of Cases 8% Of Cases 6% Of Cases 4% of Cases 3% of Cases 9,302 Cases with an attorney whose caseload exceeded 150 felonies

Harris County Public Defender has better defense outcomes -- higher proportion of dismissals and lower proportion of convictions. 6 372 Public Defender Clients, February 2011 June 2011 28 Pilot Study Clients, October 2010 January 2011 119* Match Clients, October 2010 January 2011 40% Misdemeanor A 60% Misdemeanor B 31% Misdemeanor A 69% Misdemeanor B 27% Misdemeanor A 72% Misdemeanor B 451 Misdemeanor Cases (1.2 cases per client) 32 Misdemeanor Cases (1.3 cases per client) Client Outcomes 140 Misdemeanor Cases (1.1 cases per client) 102 (27%) All Cases Dismissed 262 (70%) Total Convicted 8 (2%) Deferred 2 (7%) All Cases Dismissed 26 (93%) Total Convicted (0%) Deferred 6 (5%) All Cases Dismissed 110 (92%) Total Convicted 2 (2%) Deferred Public Defender Data system records and JIMS Records rom Harris County * Parts do not sum to total because 1 person had other outcome (fugitive)

Another system evaluation shows attorney outcomes hired v. appointed vary after controlling for bond effect. 7 Outcomes for Clients with Felony as Highest Charge by Bond and Attorney Type 100% Hired attorneys for those out on bond get 1.8 times as many all dismissed as the second highest 90% Bond Jailed Bond Jailed Bond Jailed Bond Jailed 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Bond 61% 53% 44% 29% 32% 27% 27% 15% 18% 21% 21% 12% 13% 7% 8% All Dismissed Guilty on All Guilty Some, Dismissed Some Deferred Felony Hired - Bond Felony Appointed - Bond Felony Hired - No Bond Felony Appointed - No Bond 14% Jailed

Our work also tracks and influences developments in felony sentencing. (1) New Framework: American Law Institute Model Penal Code - comprehensive sentencing sections (2) Old Debate: Determinate v. indeterminate (3) New Debate: [T]he idea of sentencing defendants based on risk factors may help to reduce the prison population, but in certain circumstances it may run the risk of imposing drastically different punishments for the same crimes. [AG Holder] (4) Old and New Case law: developments on topics such as right to a jury, inherent judicial authority to sanction, due process for sanctions and for financial obligations, sentencing based on risk factors, etc. (5) New Research: on components and scoring of criminal history. 1. Authorized Dispositions of Offenders -Deferred Prosecution -Deferred Adjudication -Probation -Economic Sanctions -Collateral Consequences 2. Authority of Sentencing Commission 3. Sentencing Guidelines 4. Authority of the Court in Sentencing 5. Research and Evaluation 6. Prison Release and Post-release Supervision

Justice reinvestment is the most visible work of the Justice Center. Justice Reinvestment a data-driven approach to reduce corrections spending and reinvest savings in strategies that can decrease recidivism and increase public safety. Council of State Governments Justice Center 9

JR project partners enable two phases of technical assistance to states. 1 2 Analyze Data Engage System Stakeholders Phase I 6 9 months 3 Develop Policy Options & Estimate Impacts 4 5 Implement New Policies Target Reinvestment Strategies & Monitor Key Measures Phase II 12 24 months Council of State Governments Justice Center 10

Nationwide, states are using data, technology, and evidencebased practices to undertake meaningful reform. WA NH MT VT OR ID SD WI NV UT NE IN MI OH PA RI CT KS KY WV DE AK AZ TX OK AR MS AL GA SC NC CSG JR States Pew JR States HI Council of State Governments Justice Center 11

National Academy of Sciences just published our 9 lessons learned in justice reinvestment work. 1) Intensive work 2) Solutions need investments 3) Few sentence reductions 4) Non-violent debate 5) Race not explicit 6) Indigent defense neglected 7) Data is key 8) Implementation is key 9) Champions needed Compared with a person without effective counsel, a defendant represented effectively is more likely, following his or her arrest, to have the charges dismissed, to be released on pre-trial supervision, or to receive a sentence to probation instead of to prison. Similarly, a person who is effectively represented and convicted of a crime that carries a prison sentence is more likely to receive a shorter sentence than someone with a similar conviction who does not receive effective representation.

North Carolina s justice reinvestment policies and reinvestments were robust and bested projections of decreased incarceration. 45,000 Outcomes Prison Population at JRA Passing June 2011 41,030 Baseline Projected Prison Population 43,220 $560m averted costs and savings by FY2017 10 prisons closed since 2011 40,000 35,000 30,000 2005 Actual Prison Population 36,663 June 30, 2014 Actual Prison Population: 37,665 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Council of State Governments Justice Center JRA Projected Prison Population 38,264 8% drop in prison population 41% drop in releases w/o supervision 50% drop in probation revocations Fiscal Year 175 new probation officers in FY2014 & FY2015 11% drop in crime between 2011-2013 13

Pressure on North Carolina s prison system was linked to failures on probation. Problem 35,000 30,000 Admissions to Prison Up 30%... Lack of effective sanctioning options led to reliance on prison 25,000 20,000 15,000 10,000 5,000 53% of adms = prob revs 75% of prob revs were for conditions violations 0 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 Source: Council of State Governments Justice Center, Justice Reinvestment in North Carolina: Analysis and Policy Framework to Reduce Spending on Corrections and Reinvest in Strategies to Increase Public Safety, April 2011 Council of State Governments Justice Center 14

Swift and limited sanctions show declining arrests, time spent in jail, and prison population. Hawaii HOPE Intensive, random drug testing with swift, certain, and brief jail sanctions to supervision violations. Arrested Georgia POM Prompt sanctions to correct behavior of troublesome probationers. Days in Jail North Carolina Swift and certain dips of brief jail sanctions and dunks of prison sanctions in response to violations. Prison Admissions Status Quo - 55% Status Quo 2011-74% - 51% 47% HOPE 31 Days 15,188 2014 21% POM 8 Days 7,440 Source: An Evaluation of Georgia s Probation Options Management Act, Applied Research Services, October 2007; Managing Drug Involved Probationers with Swift and Certain Sanctions: Evaluating Hawaii s HOPE, Hawken, Angela and Mark Kleiman, December 2009. Council of State Governments Justice Center 15

Graduated sanctions plus targeted programs and supervision are best for addressing violation behavior. Ineffective Practice 12 months incarceration Unlikely to receive programs in prison to reduce risk No supervision upon release to monitor risk & mitigate ~0% recidivism reduction $25,500 cost per person Effective Practice 3 months incarceration 3 month program in the community ~18 months remaining on supervision ~20% recidivism reduction $13,800 cost per person Council of State Governments Justice Center 16

Presentation Overview The Work of the Justice Center Justice Reinvestment in Kansas Kansas Sentencing Commission Data on H.B. 2170 17 17

The Kansas prison population was projected to grow 23% between 2012 2022. 12,000 Kansas Prison Population 10,250 9,181 9,370 11,484 Up 23% from 2012 to 2022 8,500 6,750 8,610 9% increase from July 2009 through June 2012. Cost of projected increase exceeds $125 M 5,000 Sources: Kansas Sentencing Commission, 2013 Prison Population Projection, August 2012 Council of State Governments Justice Center 18

Probation revocations to prison had increased 20% between 2009 2012. 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 1,780 1,551 1,862 After a decline in revocations from FY07 to FY09, they have since risen by 20%. 0 Sources: Kansas Sentencing Commission, Felony Sentencing Case Data, and 2013 Prison Population Projection, August 2012 Only one-quarter of Community Corrections revocations involve presumptive prison or border box offenders. Council of State Governments Justice Center 19

Most probationers revoked to prison were identified as having behavioral health needs. 1,200 1,000 800 600 400 200 0 FY 2011 Probation Revocations to Prison Indicating BH Needs 993 58% of adms Sources: Kansas Dept. of Corrections, Prison Admissions and Inmate Assessment Case Data. 291 SA Score 4+ MH Score 3+ SA Scores range from 0 to 9 and are based on nine questions within the substance abuse domain within the LSI-R risk assessment. (A score of 4 means that four of the nine questions were answered in the affirmative.) 17% of adms MH Scores range from 1 to 7 and are based on a continuum of MH programming intensity. 1. Not currently requiring MH 2. Receives time-limited mental health services 3. Receives on-going mental health services that may include medication management 4. Receives special needs treatment monitoring 5. Placed in mental health structured reintegration program at LCF-TRU 6. Placed in intensive mental health placement at LCMHF or TCF-MHU 7. Hospitalization at LSSH Of FY 2011 Probation Revocations 58% had SA score of 4 or higher 17% had MH score of 3 or higher 12% had both For comparison, only 16% of the successfully terminated CC probationers had an SA score of 4 or higher. Council of State Governments Justice Center 20

H.B. 2170 covered three major policy areas. Prison Population Reinvestments Public Safety Probation Supervision Establish a violation response sanction to replace the current revocation process Require that people who are incarcerated for a probation revocation be subsequently released to PRS (post-release supervision) Prison Sanctions Implement 120-day and 180- day incarceration responses in lieu of revocations for technical condition violators Behavioral Health Services Improve community-based responses to individuals with mental illnesses who have become involved in the criminal justice system Increase access to communitybased programming for people sentenced to felony probation who are at higher risk of re-offending Jail Sanctions Develop swift and certain responses for people under felony supervision who commit technical violations Early Probation Discharge Allow probation officers to reduce the length of supervision time for successful, lower risk probationers Council of State Governments Justice Center 21

H.B. 2170 was projected to avert cost and reduce bed demand. Policy Options: Projections FY 2014 FY 2018 Costs Averted $53 million averted in operations costs* $1.5 million averted in construction costs by FY 15 Reinvestment of $2 million in Behavioral Health Bed Savings 800+ beds reduction from projected growth by FY 18 Still anticipated to be 400+ beds over capacity by FY 18 Will not prevent need for some expansion *Source: KSDOC JRI Bill Implementation HB 2170 July updated ppt provided by Secretary Roberts Council of State Governments Justice Center 22

H.B. 2170 graduated sanction options include quick dips in jail and longer prison sanctions in lieu of full revocation. Court 22-3716(8)-(9) -Modify -Sanction -Revoke 120 Day Prison Sanction 22-3716(c)(1)(C) -One Time -One Previous Dip Quick Dip 22-3716(c)(1)(B) -2 or 3 days -Total < 18 days 180 Day Prison Sanction 22-3716(c)(1)(D) -One Time -One Previous Dip CSO/CCO 21-6604(s)-(t) 22-3716(b)(4) -Waiver -Court Permits Revocation 22-3716(c)(8) -Absconding -New Crime Revocation 22-3716(c)(8) -Absconding -New Crime Revocation 22-3716(c)(9) -Public Safety -Offender Welfare Revocation 22-3716(c)(1)(e) -Previous Prison Sanction

Presentation Overview The Work of the Justice Center Justice Reinvestment in Kansas Kansas Sentencing Commission Data on H.B. 2170 24 24

Key Public Safety and Corrections Trends since H.B. 2170 Enactment (July 2013 August 2015) 12,000 11,000 10,000 Prison Population when Justice Reinvestment (JR) Policies Enacted (June 2013) 9,581 Baseline Projected Prison Population 10,819 24 judicial districts receiving behavioral health investments 9,000 8,000 7,000 9,046 Actual Prison Population as of 8/31/15: 9,721 JR Projected Prison Population 9,808 6,000 2-day and 3-day sanctions issued 6,000 5,000 4,000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Fiscal Year 5% drop in crime between 2011-2013 Source: Projections were provided by the Kansas Sentencing Commission (2012)). Actual prison population totals can be found in the Kansas DOC s annual reports and represent FY populations. Council of State Governments Justice Center 25

Most individuals will violate at least 1-3 times before sustaining compliance with the terms of supervision. # Offenders Probation 180 Pilot Project: Riley County, KS (n = 73) 25 23 20 17 15 12 10 8 5 5 5 0 1 1 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 # Violations

Approximately 6,000 quick dips in jail have been issued. Quick Dip 22-3716(c)(1)(B) -2 or 3 days -Total < 18 days Total Number of Administrative Responses Issued July 2013 August 2015 Total = 5,982 2,987 2,995 2-day 3-day Council of State Governments Justice Center 27

Use of 120- and 180-day prison sanctions continues to fall well short of projections. 120 Day Prison Sanction 22-3716(c)(1)(C) -One Time -One Previous Dip 180 Day Prison Sanction 22-3716(c)(1)(D) -One Time -One Previous Dip 250 200 150 100 50 0 FY15 Actual Prison Sanctions vs. Projected Projected Sanction Use 185 136 21 29 25 21 26 21 23 22 24 16 16 14 32 38 40 47 24 17 30 32 33 29 43 35 Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun 180-day Sanction 120-day Sanction Council of State Governments Justice Center 28

Admissions to prison for conditions violators greatly exceeding projections. FY15 Actual Probation Condition Violator Admissions vs. Projected Revocation 22-3716(c)(8) -Absconding -New Crime 140 120 100 122 115 130 113 99 127 100 120 98 101 119 Revocation 22-3716(c)(9) -Public Safety -Offender Welfare 80 60 40 77 Revocation 22-3716(c)(1)(e) -Previous Prison Sanction 20 0 15 15 Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Condition Violator Admissions Projected Probation Revocation Admissions Council of State Governments Justice Center 29

Absconding and public safety threat cited as justification for revocation only 13% of time. Reasons Cited for Imposing Full Revocation FY 2015 Other Reason Cited 1,308 Failure to Report 794 Revocation 22-3716(c)(8) -Absconding -New Crime Failed Drug Test Failure of Program/Treatment Absconder/Escape 414 635 596 Revocation 22-3716(c)(9) -Public Safety -Offender Welfare Allegation of New Crime Public Safety Threat 148 381 0 200 400 600 800 1,000 1,200 1,400 Note: multiple reasons can be cited for one revocation event. Council of State Governments Justice Center 30

86% of revocations were not preceded by a graduated sanction. 1,788 (86%) had no previous sanctioning 2,084 177 Jail Sanctions 55 Prison Sanctions 20 Jail + prison sanctions Full technical revocations The continuum of graduated responses Note: Several individuals had sanctioning events not issued in standard progression. Based on an analysis of Prophet data and TOADS Interventions data from July 2013 December 2014 Council of State Governments Justice Center 31

These violators continue to cost the state an additional $13 million each year. 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 FY 15 Actual Probation Condition Violator Admissions vs. Projected 122 115 130 113 99 127 77 15 100 120 98 101 119 Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Condition Violator Admissions Projected Probation Revocation Admissions By the Numbers (FY15): 1,141 eligible probationers received full revocations rather than 120- or 180-day sanctions 11.5 Months = Average Length of Stay for a Full Revocation $69 / day = Cost per day for the state to incarcerate one person $13 million = Additional spending in FY15 as the result of fully revoking individuals who were eligible for JRI sanctioning options

Admissions for technical probation revocations remain much higher than projected, costing the state millions of dollars. Actual Sanctioning Practices w/ Partial Implementation of H.B. 2170 (FY14): Average Length of Stay 63% Full Revocations (= 1,178) $28 million 11.5 months 37% 180-day 120-day 2.3 months 1.5 months This approach translated into over $13 million in additional state spending in FY14 % of Violators

North Carolina has experienced consistent and widespread utilization of intermediate sanctions since 2011. Since FY2011, probation revocations decreased by 50%. In FY2011, probation revocations accounted for 52% of prison admissions Probation Revocations* In FY2014, probation revocations accounted for 33% of prison admissions In FY2014, probation revocations and 90- day JRI sanctions (CRVs) accounted for 43% of prison admissions 15,118 2,274 7,491 *includes both felony and misdemeanor probation revocations FY2011 FY2014 Probation Revocations CRVs

Why is Kansas not experiencing similar savings? Projected Sanctioning Practices w/ Full Implementation of H.B. 2170 (FY14): Average Length of Stay 93% 120-day 2.5 months 180-day 3.5 months 7% Full Revocations (= 180) $4 million 11.5 months % of Violators

Possible areas of discussion... How are so many full revocations occurring without a justification under the law? Are their practical barriers, from a defense perspective, to using prison sanctions in lieu of full revocation? Are there concerns about the sanction regimen that have surfaced as a result of this presentation?

Contact Information Carl Reynolds creynolds@csg.org Ebo Browne ebob@sentencing.ks.gov