1 / 29

RAPID INTERVENTION COMMUNITY COURT

RAPID INTERVENTION COMMUNITY COURT. Enhancing public safety by addressing the root causes of criminal behavior Presentation at VT Law School November 15 th 2013. PUBLIC SAFETY OR INSANITY?. “ Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results ” -Benjamin Franklin.

oksana
Download Presentation

RAPID INTERVENTION COMMUNITY COURT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. RAPID INTERVENTION COMMUNITY COURT Enhancing public safety by addressing the root causes of criminal behavior Presentation at VT Law School November 15th 2013

  2. PUBLIC SAFETY OR INSANITY? • “Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results” • -Benjamin Franklin

  3. What exactly is Rapid Intervention Community Court? (AKA RICC)

  4. RICC The mission of RICC is to provide immediate services that address the root causes of criminal behavior.

  5. Defining the Problem • Department of Corrections budget $140 million • Recidivism rate: 43% (VT. DOC facts and figures FY2012) • Total DOC population: 10,743 • Total cost per inmate per citizen: $192 • Total misdemeanor convictions: 9,058 • More than 40% of first time entrants into DOC are under 25 • 74.6% of female inmates receive mental health services

  6. DEFINING THE PROBLEM • Cost of one year in prison: $58,110 • Total expenditures for in state prison costs: $91,929,918 • Total expenditures for out of state prison costs: $13,920,906 • Vermont spends $114 million on jail. Is this a good use of criminal justice dollars? • Can we do better? Can we do something different?

  7. RICC Necessary components to be successful: • Use science to determine eligibility. • Have a clear incentive for participation. • Consistent compliance monitoring. • Link to community-based partners.

  8. Evidence-Based Methodology ORAS: Ohio Risk Assessment System • Evaluates level of risk for recidivating by identifying dynamic risk factors to guide and prioritize appropriate and effective programmatic intervention • Criminogenic factors include: Criminal history; education; employment; family & social support; neighborhood problems; substance abuse; peer associations; criminal attitudes and behavioral patterns

  9. Evidence-Based Methodology Program staff incorporate Motivational Interviewing where possible when enrolling individuals into the program. Motivational Interviewing and Thinking for Change are both utilized in RICC/Burlington Community Justice Center’s Retail Theft Awareness and Prevention Class.

  10. Evidence-Based Methodology Program partners all employ promising practices or evidence-based interventions OR are themselves evidence-based programs. For example: • Turning Point Center’s Recovery Coaching is based on Making Alcoholics Anonymous Easier. • Lund, HowardCenter, and Spectrum all utilize Motivational Interviewing.

  11. Incentive Important question to consider before starting program: What motivation will someone have to complete a program that requires them to accept responsibility and address the risk factors in their lives?

  12. Incentive • RICC is optional and voluntary. Someone can choose to still go through the traditional criminal justice system. • Carrot/Stick approach: • Carrots: • 90 days = shorter process than going through courts • Avoid fees, Prosecution, Lengthy Court Process, Charge, Conviction, Corrections etc. • Stick: Prosecution of their case will happen if they’re not compliant with their contract.

  13. Community Partnership “This program represents a philosophical change – that Community Justice Centers and social service providers are equal partners in crime prevention.” TJ Donovan

  14. Community Partnership • Community Justice Centers (Burlington, Essex, S. Burlington, Williston, & Winooski) and Chittenden County-based Reparative Boards • Lund • Spectrum Youth Services • HowardCenter • Mercy Connections • Turning Point Center • VT Works for Women • Private Substance Abuse Counselors

  15. Community Partnership Burlington Community Justice Center: close working partner with RICC -- Restorative Justice Panels -- Retail Theft Awareness and Prevention Class -- Assists with ORAS screening -- Consultant role -- Advisory Committee For questions about the BCJC’s role with RICC, please contact Karen Vastine: 802-865-7185

  16. Community Partnership Community Justice Centers – continued -- Individuals meet with members of the community and the victim at their restorative justice panel meeting -- Collaboratively designed restorative contract -- Can assist with restitution collection -- Staff and panel provides ‘case-management’ to assist with successful completion of program -- Constant two-way communication vis-à-vis updates on cases etc.

  17. Community Partnership Lund Family Services, Spectrum Youth & Family Services and HowardCenter -- Depending on demographics, individuals can be served by these programs for mental health and substance abuse assessment and counseling.

  18. Community Partnership Turning Point Center • Recovery Coaches assist people in accessing housing, job training, community services, and networks of community support. • Peer Support • Volunteering • Additional Programing in a safe, sober environment

  19. Community Partnership Mercy Connections -- Programs, predominantly for women, that nurture self sufficiency through education, mentoring and community involvement. -- Getting Ahead in a Just-Gettin’-By World: Aha! Process Inc

  20. Compliance • Dedicated staff person to monitor compliance: appointment reminders, contract check-ins, works with community partners. • Non compliance with recommended plan results in Flash Cite i.e. cited into court on the following Tuesday or Thursday. • Simultaneous Citation/Contract End Date • Failures are tracked by SA office.

  21. Key Components • Screening appropriate pre-charge cases • Determine risk/needs by employing Ohio Risk Assessment System tool (ORAS) . • Divert case by linking individual to the appropriate community based organization. • Compliance: 90 day threshold • Completion-no charge filed • Failure-flash cite to court for following Tues or Thurs

  22. RICC Present & Future

  23. DOES RICC WORK? • What was the post-program behavior of program participants? • Outcome Evaluation • Conducted by Vermont Center for Justice Research700 participants September of 2010 to December of 2012. • Success = No conviction for any criminal offense

  24. THE RESULTS 18% less recidivism = 18% less CJ services

  25. NUMBER OF CRIMES FOR WHICH RECIDIVISTS WERE CONVICTED

  26. HOW DO YOU EXPLAIN THE RESULTS? Completed RICC Failed to Complete NO MEASURABLE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE GROUPS: THE PROGRAM PROBABLY MADE THE DIFFERENCE

  27. READ THE FULL REPORT WWW. VCJR. ORG

  28. HOW DO WE MEASURE SUCCESS? • Duty of prosecutors is to keep our communities safe. To do justice. • Are we enhancing public safety by addressing the root causes of criminal behavior? • Are we reducing recidivism? • What is the proper measure for public safety? • Are we fulfilling our duty?

  29. Opportunities for Improvement • Increasing Transparency • Creating an active advisory committee • Increasing communication • Using a more sophisticated database to track client details.

More Related