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1 Allen J. Beck & Lawrence A. Greenfeld, Violent Offenders in State Prison: Sentences and Time Served 1 (1992-1994)

handle is hein.death/vostp0001 and id is 1 raw text is: July 1995, NCJ-154632

Violent Offenders in State Prison:
Sentences and Time Served

By
Allen J. Beck, Ph.D.
Lawrence A. Greenfeld
BJS Statisticians
In partnership with State departments
of corrections, the Bureau of Justice
Statistics (BJS) collected information
on sentences and time served by vio-
lent offenders in State prison. For
1992, 1993, and 1994, 49 States and
the District of Columbia provided infor-
mation on violent offenders who were
admitted to or released from prison.

In April 1995, BJS published Prison
Sentences and Time Served for
Violence, which discussed truth in sen-
tencing and the hypothetical impact of
increasing the percentage of sentence
served. Data sources in this report dif-
fer from those in the previous report:
* State-by-State tabulations appear
for the first time in this report
* BJS received totals and averages,
not individual records, from States
* State definitions of violent offenders,
rather than standard BJS definitions,
were used in this report.

Correctional authorities provided the
number of violent offenders admitted
or released, the average total maxi-
mum sentence, the average minimum
time to be served by incoming prison-
ers, and the average time served in
prison and jail by released prisoners.
(See the questionnaire on page 9.)
This information allows the calculation
of percent of sentence served or to be
served - measures of the corres-
pondence between sentence length
and time served. (See Methodology.)

From a previous BJS report -
Prison Sentences and Time Served for Violence
Since the mid-1 970's, legislatures around the Nation have
sought to reduce discretion in both the sentencing proc-
ess and the determination of when the conditions of a
sentence have been satisfied. Determinate sentencing,
use of mandatory minimums, and guidelines-based sen-
tencing are illustrations of approaches that limit discretion
and increase the predictability of penalties.
A majority of State prisoners today serve presumptive
sentences - 90% of State inmates can estimate their
probable 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 prisons had served an indeterminate sentence, and
a parole board decided their release. In 1992, by con-
trast, 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 sen-
tence imposed upon those sent to prison and the time
actually served prior to prison release.
The report was based on BJS definitions of violent offend-
ers and individual-level records or interviews. Data drawn
from the annual National Corrections Reporting Program
revealed that released violent offenders had served about
half their sentence in confinement and admitted violent
offenders were expected to serve about 60% of their sen-
tence before release. Data from a national survey of
State inmates indicated that violent prisoners believed
that they would serve nearly 50% of their sentence.

U.S. Department of Justice
Office of Justice Programs

Bureau of Justice Statistics
Selected Findings

State Inmates, 1992-94

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