Pubdate: Tue, 21 Jan 2003 Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) Copyright: 2003 Richmond Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.timesdispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/365 Author: Frank Green TECHNICAL VIOLATORS MOUNT Inmates Are Released, Then Reimprisoned Roughly 10 percent of Virginia's prison population are criminals who were released but who committed what authorities call "technical" violations of their probation or post-prison release rules. That's an estimated 3,000 inmates - enough to fill several state prisons - who were initially sent to prison for crimes that occurred after the sentencing reforms of 1995. They are reimprisoned, on average, for 22 months at a cost of nearly $21,000 per prisoner a year. Technical violations of release rules may still involve criminal conduct - usually drug use detected by a test - but they are not the result of a new criminal conviction. According to Larry Traylor, spokesman for the Virginia Department of Corrections, typical reasons for such violations are substance abuse, failure to attend required treatment programs, absconding and failure to follow required instructions. The number of such violators entering Virginia prisons is climbing. In 1997, there were about 400, while in 2001, there were about 1,500. In addition, in 2001, there were 255 technical parole violators returned to prison. "It clearly is a dramatic number, and it represents a major share of the people we're housing in prison," said Rick Kern, director of the Virginia Criminal Sentencing Commission. This type of inmate has become an issue that Virginia and other states are beginning to grapple with in light of tight state budgets, he said. Virginia Gov. Mark R. Warner's proposed budget would have the commission develop sentencing guidelines for judges handling such offenders in the hope many could be diverted into punishment and treatment programs that are much less expensive than prison. The overriding concern of such guidelines, however, would be the maintenance of public safety, presumably making it difficult for violent offenders to qualify. Barry Green, of the secretary of public safety's office, said one of the reasons behind the effort is that even though crime was down and arrests were not up, prison admissions were still going up. "A lot of that had to do with probation violators," he said. Virginia ended parole for crimes committed on or after Jan. 1, 1995. Inmates who committed crimes before that date are paroled from prison. Probation is when a judge suspends all or some of a prison sentence provided the criminal abides by the probation rules. In addition, prison inmates released with convictions for crimes that occurred after Jan. 1, 1995, are on post-release supervision, which also has rules which can be violated. The Parole Board determines whether a parole violator is reimprisoned, while a judge determines whether a probationer or someone on post-release will be sent to prison. Virginia is not the only state with the problem. In California, for example, 17 percent of that state's 160,000 inmates are technical parole violators, according to the California Department of Corrections. The average annual cost of an inmate there is $26,000. Most parolees there who violate drug rules are now sent for treatment instead of back to prison. Kern said the most common reason for a technical violation is testing positive for drug use, often marijuana. Those inmates might be the best candidates for programs that are alternatives to locking them up. Part of the issue is that judges may get upset with probationers who may not be dangerous but who have not used their freedom to straighten out their lives, Kern said. The length of time these inmates are serving has increased from about one year, before the ending of parole in 1995, to nearly two years now. One of the contributing factors has been the Virginia Department of Corrections' "Operation Consequences" program. Under the program, the department does surprise drug testing on parolees and probationers in different parts of the state. Since 1996, it has led to 1,166 arrests, according to the department. Marijuana and cocaine are the drugs most often detected. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom