larry sherman how criminology can save the states from bankruptcy

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Less Prison + More Policing = Less Crime How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy Lawrence W. Sherman Jerry Lee Centers of Criminology Universities of Cambridge and Pennsylvania April 21, 2010

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Less Prison + More Policing = Less Crime How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

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Page 1: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Less Prison + More Policing = Less Crime

How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Lawrence W. ShermanJerry Lee Centers of Criminology

Universities of Cambridge and Pennsylvania

April 21, 2010

                                                                                                                                                                                  

Page 2: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Summary

If criminal justice policy were based only on current evidence of its cost-effectiveness, we would have

• Less money spent on prison• More money spent on police• Fewer Serious Crimes, Less Total Harm• Fewer states threatened with bankruptcy

Page 3: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Cost-Effectiveness of Prison? 1. General Deterrence? Unknown

2. Specific Deterrence? Unknown (Weak evidence of No Effect, or Net Increase)

3. Incapacitation: Wasted on Many.• Most people want “Willie Hortons” in prison• Relatively few people in prison are “Willie Hortons” • Many “Willie Hortons” get probation, parole• Only Virginia has adopted risk-based sentencing• Even Virginia fails to use seriousness as key factor

Page 4: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Cost-Effectiveness of Police?

• General Deterrence: Hot Spots Patrols (displacement debate)Traffic and minor crime enforcementPossibly total N of police

• IncapacitationSerious Repeat Offenders

• Situational Crime Prevention: POP • Specific Deterrence: More diversion, less court

Page 5: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Less Crime?

Lock Up The Worst, Manage the Rest• Lock Up The Worst: Less Serious Crime• Manage the Rest: More Surveillance by Police with

probation & parole • Criminal Events vs. People Who Commit Crime

1. Individuals Events in Hot Spots2. Police presence deters events 3. POP alters causal structure of events

• Crime Victims Prefer Diversion, Also Reducing Crime

Page 6: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Criminologists at Work

Daniel Nagin Joan Petersilia

Richard Berk David Weisburd

Frank Cullen Anthony Braga

Kate Bowers Chris Koper

Page 7: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Outline

1. Premises2. Key Concepts

--“Push-button” Policy Systems-- Crime Harm Index (CHI)-- Risk-Based Policies --A General Theory of Crime, Prisons & Police

3. Evidence on Prisons4. Evidence on Policing5. Who Can Push the Buttons? How?

Page 8: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

1. Premises: What Criminal Justice Needs

People Need Criminal Justice to 1. Protect them from loss of liberty to be secure2. Hold offenders accountable for their crimes3. Cost taxpayers as little as possible

This Requires a System of Criminal Justice thata. Produces consequences for every decision that areb. Predictable, based on good evidence, and c. Chosen democratically, by managing the system

Page 9: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

2. Key Concepts

A. “Push-Button” Policy Systems

B. Crime Harm Index: CHI

C. Risk-Based Policies

D. General Theory of Crime, Prisons & Police

Page 10: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

2. a. “Push-Button” Policy Systems

Page 11: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Contrast

Before Keynes

• Case Studies• Trends • Histories• Explanations• Micro-level studies• Little intervention• No “buttons” to push• Economy beyond control

After Keynes

• Government has key buttons

• Pushing can help a lot• Which ones to push?• When to push them?• What effect predicted?• How do buttons affect

each other?

Page 12: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Push-Button Criminology

• Case-by-case crime policy now “Laissez-Faire”• Interventionist policy: more control of trends• Key buttons to push: prisons, police, probation

& parole• Pushing wrong buttons, case-by-case: research

evidence shows--Too much prison for too little benefit --Not enough optimizing of police

• Pushing right buttons requires system policy• Guided by a general theory

Page 13: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

A General Theory

1. Macro-economics:--societies as the unit of analysis--not individuals--not transactions

2. Rates across societies:--Independent variables

(causes)--Dependent variables

(effects)Money Employment

Page 14: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Neo-Keynesian Economics

Causes (Independent)

• Money supply• Interest Rates• Tariffs • Taxation• Deficits

Effects (Dependent)

• Employment• GDP • Gross National Happiness

(Bhutan):--crime--disease--mortality--inequality

Page 15: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Macro-Criminology

Causes (Independent)

• Prison

• Police

• Probation/Parole

Effects (Dependent)

• Crime

• Detection Rates

• Crime Harm Index (CHI)

Page 16: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

2.b. Crime Harm Index ( CHI )?• Not UCR Index—Challenge to BJS! (US Senate) • Like Consumer Price Index (CPI)• CHI Elements weighted according to formula• Sum of each (Crime X Cost = Cost per event)

Divided by Population (CHI per person)• Murder = $5 million, Burglary = $1,000 • British Crime Survey uses some costs of crime• Could also be based on public opinion data• Limited to reliably counted categories

Page 17: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Beyond Neo-Classical Deterrence

Assumptions that• All crimes cause equal harm• All offenders commit crimes of equal harm• All prisons prevent equal harm per inmate • All police deter equal numbers of crimes• General, not specific, deterrence rules most• Punishment never escalates crime, just deters

Page 18: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

BAD “Push-Button Criminology”

Page 19: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Total Incarceration Rate

Page 20: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Non-Police Data: Different Trend(BJS—NCVS)

Page 21: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Police Count Crime Count

Page 22: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Not Complex Enough for CHI

• Prisoners vary highly in risk of “Willie Horton” crimes• Incapacitation effects on Crime Harm Index vary by risk

level of people imprisoned• Imprisonment effects on CHI vary by age, first offense,

etc. • Police impact on CHI varies highly by what they do • Especially vary in allocating time by risk level to

1. places2. offenders3. victims

• Theories of CHI Must Focus on Risk of Serious Harm

Page 23: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

2.c. Risk-Based Policies

• Police

• Prosecutors

• Sentencing; Prisons

• Parole and Probation

Page 24: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Peaks and Valleys of Crime(Distribution of Violent Offenses in Tokyo)

Page 25: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

A “Hockey Stick” Cumulative Curve:

The “Power Few”

Page 26: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Normal Distribution

Page 27: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

The Willie Horton Problem: Over-Prediction of High Risk

• Extreme cases put low-risk people in prison• “Just in case”• No Prediction More False Positives----------------------------• Response Assumes Normal Curve • Increases dosage for all, not few• Rising Prison Rates• Not needed if responding to the “power few”

Page 28: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Risk-Based Policy:Foundation of Cost-Effectiveness

• Pew Trust Report• RAND 1982 Report on Selective Incapacitation• Idea rejected by 1986 NAS Report on Error• False positives too high for values• But prison rate has tripled• False positives are embedded in sentencing• Actuarial Risk could get them out, not put

them in

Page 29: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Since 1986: New Generation of Risk Forecasting

• Based only on Prior Charges, Residence, Age, Sex—no PSR• Nothing qualitative• More like a short-term weather forecast • Based on huge samples• E.g., 30,000 in Philadelphia • Journal Royal Statistical Society, Series A, 2009

Richard Berk

Page 30: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Clinical vs. Statistical Forecasts

• Since Meehl 1954 Clinical Versus Statistical Prediction

• Statistical Prediction beats Clinical • Most contests before statistical learning• Cheap supercomputers• “Data mining” that assays every possible

pattern of precursors• Identifies best prediction combinations

Page 31: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

2-Dimensional Risk—or More?

Seriousness Low High

Low 1 2Frequency*

High 3 4

*Not probability (prevalence)

Page 32: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

High Risk (2%)

Neither High nor Low Risk (38%)

Low Risk (60%)

Geoffrey Barnes (2007) 2-Year Berk Forecast Test,

Philadelphia APPD Cases

Page 33: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

High Risk 2% vs. Bottom 60%

Two Years From Forecast Date

Charges for Any Offence 8 X more

Charges Serious Offence 10 X more

Charges Murder or Attempt 75 X more

Page 34: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

High

Neither

Low

Group Average Number of Charges for ANY Offense Within Two Years of Probation Start

Page 35: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

High

Neither

Low

Average Number of Charges for SERIOUS Crimes Within Two Years of Probation Start

Page 36: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

High

Neither

Low

Average Charges for MURDER or Attempted Murder Within Two Years of Probation Start

Page 37: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Total Charges:High Risk 2% Over 2 Years

For every 100 Offenders:

--37 charges of murder or attempted murder

--318 charges of serious crime (murder, rape, robbery)

--1800 charges for all crimes

Page 38: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

2.d. A General Theory of Crime, Prisons & Police

1. The higher the proportion of inmates who are high-frequency and high-harm, the more cost-effective prisons will be in lowering CHI.

2. The higher the proportion of police time spent on high-risk places, victims and offenders, the more cost-effective police will be in lowering CHI.

3. The more low-risk offenders police hold accountable for their crimes without using prison, the more cost-effective police at reducing CHI.

Page 39: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

1. Prisons

The higher the proportion of inmates who are high-frequency and high-harm, the more cost-effective prisons will be in lowering CHI.

NB: Prisons would have to have many fewer inmates to become more cost-effective

Page 40: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

2. Police Time

The higher the proportion of police time on high-risk places, victims and offenders, the more cost-effective police will be in lowering CHI.

NB: a. Just adding police is not predicted to cause less crime or harmb. Reductions in crime harm could come with even fewer police, depending on their focus

Page 41: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

3. Police Dispositions

The more low-risk offenders police hold accountable for their crimes without using prison, the more cost-effective police will be at lowering CHI.

NB: If police stop using arrest and prosecution where tested alternatives are available, they will be more cost-effective without spending more money.

Page 42: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

My Title is Not Quite Right• Less prison, more police = less crime?• Not necessarily• Easier to say it that way• But risk-based policy is crucial• Theory of cost-effective CHI effects depends on it• Thus, conditional on optimizing risk-based

allocations, • More prison could, with More Police = Less Crime• But More Prison would not Cost Effectiveness

Page 43: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Taking Cost Into Account

• Prison rate hits diminishing returns quickly

• Very few offenders per 100 seem worth locking up

• Look at the evidence: prisons and police

Page 44: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

3. Evidence on Prisons

If we use risk analysis,

• Who Goes to Prison?• Who Doesn’t?

Preliminary analysis in Philadelphia suggests

• half of all sentenced to prison are low-risk, yet • half of all high-risk offenders not given prison

Page 45: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Nagin and Cullen, 2009Crime and Justice Vol. 38

Daniel Nagin Frank Cullen

“Special” Effects of Imprisonment on the Imprisoned:• 5 Experimental studies of custody more crime• 11 Matching studies juvenile custody more crime• Propensity Score Matching mixed effects

Page 46: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

4. Evidence on Police:Clear effects, More on Costs Needed

a. Places1. Hot Spot Patrols 2. Problem-Oriented Policing3. Displacement

b. OffendersHigh-frequency, high-harm

c. DispositionsYouth offendersDomestic ViolenceRestorative Justice

Page 47: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Campbell Collaboration

• Systematic Reviews• Many with meta-analyses• Peer-Reviewed• NIJ support (UK, Holland, Canada, Sweden)• Chinese and English versions • Norwegian Government website:

www.campbellcollaboration.org

Page 48: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

a. Policing Places

1. Anthony Braga review: Increasing police in high risk places reduces crime & disorder there

2. Koper & Mayo-Wilson: policing gun crime places less gun crime

3. Weisburd, et al: Problem-Oriented Policing POP less crime & disorder

4. Displacement: Weisburd, Bowers, others

Page 49: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

b. Policing High-Risk Offenders

Two Randomized Controlled Trials:

Police Foundation (Washington)

RAND (Albuquerque, NM)

Page 50: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

c. Detection, Dispositions, Accountability

Campbell Reviews:

• Juvenile Prosecution: Petrosino et al 2010• Domestic Violence: NIJ experiments • Restorative Justice: UK, Australia, US • Shapland, et al 2008Cost effectiveness on RJ in UK = 8 to 1 return

Page 51: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Grounded Theory of Crime, Police and Prisons

• Police and prisons may cause crime as well as prevent it

• Effects of police and prisons on crime depend on who is treated how

• In general, prison does more harm than policing• In general, police do more good than prisons• Precise decisions needed to reduce harm,

increase prevention.

Page 52: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

5. Who Can Push the Buttons? How?

1. Governors and State Legislatures--Sentencing Guidelines--Parole Violations (less stick?)--Bigger carrot: State funding more local police with prison

savings 2. County Prosecutors & Judges

--Diversion from prosecution , Based on risk--Incentives of more police in their county

3. Local Police Chiefs --Hot spot patrols--Problem-Oriented Policing (POP)--Restorative solutions

4. Federal Leadership: --showing the way --funding more police, as incentives to states

Page 53: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Bankrupting States

NY Times: Schwarzenegger Seeks Shift From Prisons to Schools (by Jennifer Steinhauer Jan 6, 2010 )

• State Constitutional Amendment• Referendum• No more money to prisons than to U of Calif. • But how to do it?• Privatization? Probably not.

Page 54: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

HOW? Political Evidence

• Reducing prison by early release may backfire

• IF Money appears to be only motive

• No analysis of public safety

• No claim that less prison could less crime

Page 55: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Front-End Beats Back-End

• Arrest• Prosecution• Sentencing Guidelines• Risk Analysis at each step—before prison. • “These people were not sent to prison

on purpose!”• Why? Because it would have wasted your

money. They weren’t dangerous enough.

Page 56: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

UK Early Release

• 14 Days before sentence to end• 2007-2010• Many crimes committed 2 weeks after release• But same would be true after full term• No evidence that net crime went up• But no randomized trial to test that theory• Result: Labour Prime Minister blamed

Page 57: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

The Politics of Early Release

Page 58: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Emergency Release--US

• NY Times: (Monica Davey, March 4, 2010)

“Safety Is Issue as Budget Cuts Free Prisoners”

• Oregon suspends program—radio ads• Illinois program a “big mistake.”• Colorado—$14 million savings lost• Michigan—big drop, big challenges

Page 59: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Carrots and Sticks

• Cost-saving is a stick, at front end or back

• More police is a carrot

• Cohen’s national data show people prefer to spend more money on police than prisons

• Use some savings on prison budgets to hire more police

Page 60: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

A Federal Carrot?

• Plan A: Federal program could match local funds invested in policing out of less prison for low-risk offenders.

• Plan B: Federal program could match local funds invested in policing high-harm targets

• Plan C: Both A and B• Federal buttons to lower Crime Harm Index

Page 61: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Federal Leadership:Research and Development

1. More support for automated risk forecasting 2. More Randomized trials, COST-EFFECTIVENESS,

• Risk-Based Policing • Risk-Based Charging• Risk-Based Sentencing• Risk-Based Parole Release• Risk-Based Parole Revocation

Page 62: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

Beyond a Crisis

• Bankruptcy is a bad reason to do this.• But it is a good opportunity.• If the result is less crime, cost issues may fade• The Obama administration has made history in

health care• Can we now make history in criminal justice as well?

My answer: Yes we can.

Page 63: Larry Sherman How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy

THANK YOU

Lawrence W. ShermanJerry Lee Centers of Criminology

Universities of Cambridge and Pennsylvania

April 21, 2010