Title: What Works with the High Risk Drug Offender
1What Works with the High Risk Drug Offender?
Quality Systems and Evaluation Services
Unit http//www.co.multnomah.or.us/dcj/evaluation.
shtml
Multnomah County Department of Community
Justice 501 SE Hawthorne Blvd. Suite
250 Portland, OR 97214
- Services, Sanctions and Supervision
Prepared by Charlene Rhyne, PhD
Lailah Hamblin, MS
2Background
- The High Risk Drug Unit began in spring of 2005,
after the federal grant funding for Clean Court
ended. - HRDU retained the Clean Court model of using
counselors in conjunction with PPOs to supervise
offenders. - HRDU supervises those who are high risk to
reoffend and have been convicted of a PCS, DCS or
MCS charge.
3Methodology
- This study looked at a sample of offenders under
HRDU supervision in September 2005 through March
2007 (19 months).
4Dosage DCJ Contacts
- Home visits
- Office visits
- Phone contacts
- Face-to-face contacts
- Monthly contact rate derived for each contact
category for each offender - Offender days on abscond, in jail, transferred to
another office not counted
5Monthly Average Dosage
Controlling for time in the community
6Dosage by Risk LevelTotal Average Monthly
Contacts
- High risk 2.83
- Medium risk 2.78
- Low/limited risk 3.86
7PPO Sanction Patterns
- 174 offenders received a sanction while under
supervision - 84 of those who received a sanction received
jail at least once - 43 of sample received no sanction
- 25 received one
- 14 received two
- 18 received three
8Treatment
- 132 offenders received treatment (43)
- Most commonly received treatment was for
substance abuse - Average length of stay in treatment was 218 days
9Treatment episode exits
252 referrals
217 entrances
57 successful exits
117 unsuccessful exits
10Needs assessment data
- 107 offenders had two assessments during this 19
month period - Average length of time between assessments 256
days - 51 decreased needs from pre to post
- 49 increased needs from pre to post
11Needs Descriptives by Group
12Needs Descriptives by Group
13Recidivism
- 120 offenders arrested one year pre-HRDU
supervision, 313 arrests - 57 offenders arrested one year post-HRDU
supervision, 98 arrests - 53 reduction in offenders arrested
- 69 reduction in total number of arrests
14Reduction in drug crimes
15Findings
- Significant correlation between total number of
sanctions and the need change score. Positive
relationship between sanctions and need (plt.05).
16Findings
- Arrests by race pre supervision whites .69,
blacks 2.07 - Arrests by race post supervision whites .18,
blacks .80 - Both findings significant at the .001 level
- 14 of whites recidivated
- 38 of blacks recidivated
- Significant at the .001 level
17Findings
Age Race Gender Supervision Level Total of
sanctions Total of PO contacts Total LOS in
treatment
Total post arrests
18Findings
- Blacks significantly more likely to be
re-arrested 1 year post - Significant positive relationship between total
number of sanctions received and total number of
arrests one year post - The more sanctions an offender received, the more
times they were arrested 1 year post
19Recommendations
- Develop culturally specific programming
- Monitor PPO contact with low/limited clients
- CJM monitor all sanctions