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Showing posts with label Stats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stats. Show all posts

Sunday, December 18, 2016

Latinos in the CJ System

Study: Latinos under-counted in criminal justice system
John C Moritz , USA Today Network 11:25 a.m. CST December 15, 2016


The Urban Institute's Justice Policy Center says the data means Latinos are short-changed on rehabilitation services.

AUSTIN – Latinos in the criminal justice system — from the point of arrest, through their incarceration and during their time on parole or probation — are often categorized as white on official records, which shortchanges the nation's largest minority population when it comes to targeted reforms to reduce recidivism, a new study finds.

The report by the Urban Institute's Justice Policy Center shows that many of the nation's most diverse states undercount Latinos in the criminal justice system, making it appear that the disparity between black and white offenders is more narrow than it  is.

“Leaving Latinos out when documenting the consequences of the American criminal justice system means our data tells an incomplete story,” said Ryan King of the Urban Institute. “As a result of that missing, inaccurate, or insufficient data, their voices are absent from the conversation when policy reforms are developed.”

The study, done in cooperation with the advocacy groups Latino Justice and the Public Welfare Foundation, surveyed the 50 states and the District of Columbia about demographic information on people who have entered the criminal justice system. While many states, including Texas, Oregon, Oklahoma and Alaska, compile publicly accessible data on how many Latinos have entered the system, several others have little or no data on their websites, the study found.

The report, titled "The Alarming Lack of Data on Latinos in the Criminal Justice System," is scheduled for release Thursday when it will be posted on the Urban Institute website. The USA Today Network obtained the completed draft on Wednesday.

According to the report, only Alaska has accessible data on the number of Latinos arrested, in prison, on probation or parole and breaks down race and ethnic numbers for each offense category. Texas, Idaho, Oregon and Oklahoma have numbers for Latinos who have been arrested, incarcerated and placed parole or probation.

Thirteen states, including Florida, Maryland, Louisiana and New Mexico, do not have any accessible recently reported numbers for Latinos in their criminal justice systems, according to the report. Twenty-nine states keep Latino-specific numbers for between one and three of the categories.

Juan Cartagena, who heads Latino Justice, said the undercount means that the needs of specific ethnic groups are not been adequately addressed.

"This affects how we look at programs to help with re-entry (from prison to the community). And that impacts recidivism," Cartagena said. "And what about how we look at sentencing disparities — who gets prison and who gets probation? We need to get a good handle on this."

John C. Moritz covers Texas government and politics for the USA Today Network in Austin. Contact him at John.Moritz@caller.com and follow him on Twitter @JohnnieMo.

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#Latinos Undercounted in #CriminalJustice System @JohnnieMo @callerdotcom @USATODAY 12/16 http://www.caller.com/story/news/local/texas/state-bureau/2016/12/14/study-latinos-under-counted-criminal-justice-system/95430624/ #tweetcite #VBWResearchNet

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Juvenile Court Statistics 2013


Juvenile Court Statistics 2013
Download: PDF (OJJDP)

"OJJDP-Sponsored, July 2015. This report draws on data from the National Juvenile Court Data Archive to profile nearly 1.1 million delinquency cases and 109,000 petitioned status offense cases handled in 2013 by U.S. courts with juvenile jurisdiction. 114 pages."

Tweet Notes | @vbehindw

Analyses of 749,722 automated case records & court-level #stats

1st Juvenile Court Statistics #report published 1929 by @USDOL of cases from 42 courts in 1927

In 2013 archive data pulled from 2,400 courts 84% jursidiction of juve population

Report describes #statusoffense cases handled between 1995-2013 109,000 cases petitioned disposed in 2013

In 2013 courts handled estimated 1,058,500 juvenile delinquency cases

31 million youth under #juvenile court jurisdiction in 2013 79% (10-15 years of age) 12% (16) 9% (17)

Between 1985-2013 case rates increased 54% for #druglaw violations

In 2013 total delinquency case rate for #black juveniles 74.3% was more than double the rate for #white juveniles 27.4%

Between 1985 and 2013 #lawenforcement agencies were primary source of #delinquency referrals 82% referred by law enforcement in 2013

The number of #delinquency cases involving #detention peaked in 2002 and decreased 44% through 2013

#Statusoffense is an act that is illegal because the person committing them are of #juvenile status

5 major status offense categories #runningaway #truancy #curfew law violations #ungovernability or incorigibility #liquorlaw violations

The number of petitioned #statusoffense cases decreased 13% between 1995-2013

American Indian juveniles had the highest rate for #liquorlaw violations in each year 1995-2013 #statusoffense

Schools referred 56% of petitioned #truancy cases in 2015

Source of referral for #statusoffense includes #lawenforcement #schools #relatives #socialservice #probation #victims

Citation
Hockenberry, Sarah, and Charles Puzzanchera. Juvenile Court Statistics 2013. Rep. no. NCJ 249164. Pittsburgh: National Center for Juvenile Justice, 2015. OJJDP Statistical Briefing Book. Web. <http://www.ojjdp.gov/ojstatbb/publications/StatBB.asp>.

Keywords + Tag = juvenile | juvenile court | National Center for Juvenile Justice | NCJJ | statistics | report | archive | National Juvenile Court Data Archive | Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention | OJJDP | U.S. Department of Justice | DOJ | Barbara Tatem Kelley | data collection | National Juvenile Court Data Archive | NCJDA | status offense