Pubdate: Sun, 14 Mar 2004 Source: Daily Press (VA) Copyright: 2004 The Daily Press Contact: http://www.dailypress.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/585 Author: Adrienne Schwiso /Associated Press Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) MORE PEOPLE SENT TO PRISON FOR BREAKING PROBATION RULES RICHMOND, Va. -- An increasing number of people on probation or parole who have not committed new crimes are being sent to prison for breaking their release conditions, according to a new state report. Officials said the upswing illustrates a national trend of states using scarce prison space for people who break the rules that govern their freedom. As states grapple with rising prison populations, many, including Virginia, are taking careful inventories of prison populations to determine who really needs to be there. "There's some thought out there that if you just leave a lot of these people alone, you'll never see them again. They may not be model citizens or members of the Rotary Club. They'll likely be a drain on society in some respects, but they won't be a danger to the public," said Richard Kern, director of the Virginia Criminal Sentencing Commission. "We need to be able to determine who that population is." The number of people sent to prison in Virginia without new criminal convictions climbed 47 percent from 1998 to 2002, to 1,551 people, about a tenth of the total number of people imprisoned that year, according to a survey by the commission, which monitors sentencing practices in the state. During the five years, 6,269 criminals being monitored by probation and parole officers were returned to prison for breaking their release conditions in ways that did not involve new convictions--offenses known as technical violations. Most often they repeatedly skipped appointments with their officers, failed drug tests or just disappeared without permission. In 1990, Chris Olsen was convicted of burglary and forging checks--crimes he says he committed for drug money. A judge put him on probation and gave him a suspended prison sentence, which he didn't have to serve unless he broke his probation rules. Four years later he was sent to prison after getting caught using cocaine and forging more checks. He was released on parole in 1998, then sent back again on a technical violation of disappearing _ changing addresses without telling his probation officer, Olsen said. Now 38, working for a concrete company in Harrisonburg and attending weekly meetings at a halfway house, Olsen said the state should do more to prepare inmates for parole. "They can't really teach you all the things you need to know while you're in there, and then they just push you out and say, 'now do it,"' Olsen said. "You can't imagine how hard it is." Of the people who had their probation or parole revoked in 2002 in Virginia, 63 percent lost their freedom because of technical violations, a rate consistent with nationwide figures. "There's a gross imbalance between what these people did and their punishment. The misconduct that has sent them to prison is not even, by definition, a crime," said Jeremy Travis, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute in Washington, D.C. But probation and parole officers say they need to be able to threaten people with prison time. People are more likely to behave if they know they could be locked up, said S. Dean Hahn, president of the Virginia Probation and Parole Association. "There have been a lot of creative and effective sentencing alternatives and I applaud those, but the bottom line is, for us to have any validity, we have to be able to send people back to the parole board or a judge," said Hahn, deputy chief of probation and parole in Loudoun, Fauquier and Rappahannock counties. "We can't just keep giving them bites of the apple," he said. A variety of factors has led to the rising numbers of imprisoned technical violators. More people than ever are under supervision, and they often face tougher scrutiny. Probation and parole offices across the country are providing closer supervision and immediate punishment, as well as using technology that allows better detection of drug use. After Virginia abolished parole in 1995, felons were required to serve at least 85 percent of their sentences, and the state often had little control over the prisoners after their release. So judges began building suspended prison time into sentences. In addition, "There's a risk-aversion mentality in the world of supervision," Travis said. "No one wants to be the parole officer whose parolee does something bad, so the officers end up violating them more often." Despite declines in crime and arrest rates, the Virginia Department of Corrections expects the state's prison population to grow slightly more than 4 percent annually through 2009, when the state could be responsible for nearly 45,000 criminals. The state held 35,249 prisoners in 2003, at an average cost of more than $20,000 per inmate. "We're getting this stacking effect, first because the average length of time people are spending in prison is longer and second because the number of technical violators going to prison is increasing," said Barry R. Green, Virginia's deputy secretary of public safety. Led by Texas, states recently have been paring back the number of imprisoned technical violators before prison growth becomes unmanageable. "There's a lot of innovation either under way or in development across the country," Travis said. "It's really because of the fiscal crisis states are facing. The bottom line is, it's really, really difficult to pay for prisons." A study last year in California found that two-thirds of that state's parolees end up back in prison. California is preparing to cut the number with home detention, electronic monitoring and additional drug treatment. Illinois wants to develop halfway houses where people on parole and probation can go instead of prison, and legislation in Washington state would cap at 60 days the prison time a parolee could get on a technical violation. A New Jersey panel has recommended a similar move. The Virginia study is part of the Criminal Sentencing Commission's 2003 Annual Report and is the first time since the state abolished parole that the commission has closely analyzed violations by people on probation or who have been released from prison. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager