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1 Lawrence A. Greenfeld, Prison Sentences and Time Served for Violence 1 (1995)

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Prison Sentences and

April 1995, NCJ-153858

Time Served for Violence

By Lawrence A. Greenfeld
BJS Statistician
Since the mid-1 970's, legislatures around the Nation have
sought to reduce discretion in both the sentencing process
and the determination of when the conditions of a sentence
have been satisfied. Determinate sentencing, use of man-
datory minimums, and guidelines-based sentencing are il-
lustrations of approaches that limit discretion and increase
the predictability of penalties.
A majority of State prisoners today serve presumptive sen-
tences - 90% of State inmates can estimate their prob-
able release date, and their discharge from prison is less
likely than in the past to be determined by a parole board
decision. In 1977, 72% of those released from State pris-
ons had served an indeterminate sentence, and a parole
board decided their release. In 1992, by contrast, less than
40% of prison releases were determined by a parole board.
Interest in truth-in-sentencing reflects continued attention
to discretion and to the relation between sentences and
time served. Truth-in-sentencing is generally meant
to describe a close correspondence between the sentence
imposed upon those sent to prison and the time actually
served prior to prison release.
Data collected from States by the Bureau of Justice Statis-
tics (BJS) indicate that violent offenders released from
State prisons in 1992 served 48% of the sentence they had
received - an average of 43 months in confinement, both
jail and prison, on an average sentence of 89 months. The
Violent offenders are persons convicted of homicide, kidnaping,
forcible rape, sexual assault, robbery, assault, or other crimes
involving the threat or imposition of harm upon the victim, in-
cluding extortion, intimidation, reckless endangerment, hit-and-
run driving with injury, or child abuse.

finding that just under half the sentence will be served in
confinement was confirmed through analysis of self-reports
of a national sample of State prisoners. An examination of
prison release practices for violent offenders in 31 States
reveals wide disparity across the States in sentence length
but substantially less disparity and greater consensus on
the duration of time spent in confinement.
These findings are drawn from BJS data collection pro-
grams, including the annual National Corrections Reporting
Program (NCRP) and the 1991 sample survey of State
prisoners. (See Sources of data, page 3.)
Admissions, releases, and prisoners present
Prison releases
Participating NCRP States, representing about 8 out of 10
violent offenders released from prisons nationwide in 1992,
provided sufficient information to examine the relationship
between the sentence received and time served prior to
first release.
Released violent offenders In 1992 served
48% of their sentence
Average  Percent of
Average    time     sentence
Type of offense  sentence  served*  served
All violent     89 months  43 months  48%
Homicide      149         71        48
Rape          117         65        56
Kidnaping     104         52        50
Robbery        95         44        46
Sexual assault  72        35        49
Assault        61         29        48
Other          60         28        47
*Includes jail credit and prison time.

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