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50 Fed. Probation 17 (1986)
Felony Probation and Recidivism: Replication and Response

handle is hein.journals/fedpro50 and id is 319 raw text is: Felony Probation and Recidivism:
Replication and Response
BY GENNARO F. VITO, PH.D.
Associate Professor, School of Justice Administration, College of Urban
and Public Affairs, University of Louisville*

N JANUARY 1985, the Rand Corporation
published a report (Petersilia and others,
1985b) which presented data on over 16,000
felons convicted in California's superior court during
1980, as well as recidivism data on a subsample of
1,672 felony probationers from Los Angeles and
Alameda counties. Almost immediately, this report
attracted a great deal of attention and rekindled
public interest in the effectiveness of probation super-
vision at a time when incapacitation and punishment
of offenders has become the dominant sentiment in
corrections and overcrowding plagues our penal in-
stitutions. Summaries of this study have been
published in three different locations (Petersilia,
1985a, 1985b, and Petersilia et al. 1985a). It has been
hailed by one corrections expert (Conrad, 1985b: 71)
as the most important criminological research to be
reported since World War II. This article presents
recidivism data on a sample of felony probationers
from Kentucky and provides, on a much smaller
scale, several points of comparison with the Rand
study. In this fashion, responses to conclusions con-
tained in the Rand report will also be discussed.
Previous Research on Probation Recidivism
In the Rand report, the authors (Petersilia et al.,
1985b: 2) state that their study constitutes the first
systematic research on felony probation. A more
accurate assertion is that the Rand study represents
the first large-scale analysis of felony probation. In
fact, probation supervision has long been a target of
criminological research. For example, a recent Na-
tional Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal
Justice-sponsored report on the state of the art in
probation (Allen et al., 1979) contains a thorough
summary of the research on probation supervision
published over a 26-year period. Furthermore, since
these studies focused on probationers convicted of
felonies (ranging from Internal Revenue Service
violations to property crimes like forgery and
burglary), they represent the pre-Rand study status
of probation recidivism research.
As summarized by Latessa (Allen et al., 1985: 261),
these studies did suffer from some basic
methodological weaknesses, the most glaring of
which was the failure to define a base... against
which to compare findings in order to support a claim

that probation is an effective alternative for
rehabilitating offenders. The 10 studies summarized
in this report generated failure rates defined in
various ways (i.e., arrests, convictions, revocation)
over different followup periods (ranging from 6
months to 12 years). The recidivism rates took the
following forms (Allen et al., 1985: 260): arrest (29.6
percent), arrest and/or conviction (30 and 41.5 per-
cent), conviction (16.4 and 17.7 percent) and revoca-
tion of probation and incarceration (22.5 to 55 per-
cent). Latessa concluded that these studies provide
a rule of thumb that probation can be considered
to be effective, and that a failure rate above 30 per-
cent indicates that it is not effective.
Despite the flaws in these studies and their basic
lack of comparability, they do provide a benchmark
for research on probationer recidivism. Yet, the Rand
focus upon felony probationers was a sound basis for
a policy study since these offenders, in the absence
of probation supervision, would go to prision. The
report should serve as a point of comparison for fur-
ther study of this subject. As Conrad (1985: 71) has
written, replication of the Rand study in some
dissimilar settings, may show the way at last to
a rational sentencing system and eventually to the
substantial reduction of public fright.
*A version of this article was presented at the Probation and
Parole panel of the Western Society of Criminology meetings in
Newport Beach, California, February 28, 1986.
This article is drawn from data collected for a larger study con-
ducted by the Kentucky Criminal Justice Statistical Analysis
Center (SAC). The SAC is funded by the Bureau of Justice
Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice, Grant No. 84-BJ-CX-0013.
The Kentucky SAC is housed in the Office of the Attorney General
and is operated by the Urban Studies Center at the University of
Louisville. Points of view or opinions expressed in this document
are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the of-
ficial position or policies of the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the
Kentucky Office of the Attorney General, or the University of
Louisville.
The author wishes to acknowledge the valuable assistance pro-
vided by the following persons which made this study possible:
Jack B. Ellis, Tony Biggs, and Al Nash of the Urban Studies
Center, Robert H. Rhea, Doug Sapp, Danny Yeary, Jerry Nichter,
Scott Ward, and C. L. Watts of the Department of Community
Services of the Kentucky Corrections Cabinet, Dr. Ronald M.
Holmes of the School of Justice Administration, and Joan Peter-
silia for her thoughtful comments on an earlier draft of this article.

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