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The History of Parole

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Title: The History of Parole


1
Chapter 3
  • The History of Parole Mandatory Release

2
Parole
  • The conditional release of a convicted offender
    from a correctional institution, under the
    continued custody of the state, to serve the
    remainder of their sentence in the community
    under supervision

3
Release Types
  • Mandatory release offenders enter the community
    automatically when their maximum term expires
    minus credited time off for good behavior.
  • Mandatory release is decided by legislative
    statute or good-time laws.
  • Discretionary release offenders enter the
    community when members of a parole board decide
    they have earned the privilege of release while
    remaining under supervision

4
The Origins of Parole
  • Parole is derived from the French parole
    dhonneur, meaning word of honor
  • Parole originated in Europe with
  • Manuel Montesinos, a Spaniard, in 1835
  • Georg Michael Obermaier, a German, in 1842
  • Alexander Maconochie, an Englishman, in
    1837

5
Marks System
  • Implemented in 1840 by Alexander Maconochie,
    superintendant of the English penal colony on
    Norfolk Island
  • Duration of sentence determined by prisoners
    industry good conduct
  • Prisoners earned daily marks based on their
    conduct labor
  • The more marks prisoners earned, their
    privileges increased poor conduct led to a
    reduction in marks
  • Good marks led to conditional release and
    eventually freedom to leave the island
  • Maconochies system was very successful, but the
    public was skeptical. He was dismissed in 1844,
    ending his experiment

6
The Irish System
  • Modeled after Norfolk Island by Sir Walter
    Crofton in 1854, based on
  • Strict imprisonment
  • Indeterminate sentence
  • Ticket-of-leave
  • Prisoners released under the Irish System were
    supervised by police in rural areas and an
    inspector in Dublin.

7
Development of Parole in the U.S.
  • Parole was first implemented at the New York
    Elmira Reformatory in 1876
  • Federal parole began in 1910
  • Four concepts justified parole in the U.S.
  • Reduction in the length of incarceration as a
    reward for good conduct
  • Supervision of the parolee
  • Imposition of the indeterminate sentence
  • Reduction in the rising cost of incarceration

8
Medical Model
  • Based on rehabilitation, it was the primary
    philosophy dominating corrections from 1930-1960
  • Assumed criminal behavior rooted in environmental
    psychological aspects of offenders life
    could be corrected
  • Parole the indeterminate sentence were major
    parts of this philosophy
  • Judge sentences offender to an indeterminate
    sentence
  • Parole board determines release date based on
    when the offender is ready to be responsible

9
Just Deserts or Justice Model
  • Replaced the medical model indeterminate
    sentencing in the 1970s because of
  • Increasing crime rates
  • The perceived failure of rehabilitation programs
  • The perception that parole boards were incapable
    of making predictive judgments about offenders
    future behavior

10
Just Deserts Model
  • In contrast to the rehabilitative idea, it
    changed the focus from the offender to the
    offense.
  • Embraced determinate sentencing the abolition
    of parole
  • Took the position that indeterminate sentencing
    was vague, leading to disparities in sentencing
    based on race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status,
    place of conviction.

11
From Discretionary Parole to Mandatory Release
  • As of 2001, 15 states had abolished parole
    another 5 abolished discretionary release for
    violent offenses.
  • Because of the trend toward determinate
    sentencing abolishing discretionary release,
    between 24 to 39 of prisoners are released via
    discretionary release, whereas mandatory release
    numbers have increased.

12
Arguments for Discretionary Release
  • Parole boards can impose prisoner participation
    in treatment programs
  • Parole guidelines have improved methods of
    objective open decisions
  • Victims can attend parole hearings
  • Automatic release decisions are made by computer
  • Abolishing discretionary release does not
    necessarily increase public safety

13
Characteristics of Paroles
  • Nearly 820,000 people were on parole in 2007
  • The Southern region had the highest incarceration
    rates, yet the lowest parole rates.
  • The Northeast region had the opposite situationa
    higher rate of parole a lower rate of
    incarceration per 100,000 residents.
  • Since 2000, 12 of parolees are women
  • Parole success rates are lower than for
    probation about 44 of all parolees successfully
    complete parole
  • About 3 out of 10 parolees are removed from
    parole for too many rule violations 1 out of 10
    for new crimes

14
Contemporary Functions of Parole
  • Parole is tasked primarily with protecting the
    public from released offenders. This goal is
    accomplished in 3 general objectives
  • Enforcing restrictions controls on parolees in
    the community
  • Providing services that help parolees integrate
    into a noncriminal lifestyle
  • Increasing the publics level of confidence in
    the effectiveness responsiveness of parole
    services
  • Parole as population control
  • In some states, parole also functions as the back
    doorkeeper a safety valve to relieve overcrowded
    prisons

15
Saving Medical Costs
  • Medical parole, or compassionate release, is the
    conditional release of prisoners with a terminal
    illness who are not risks to the publics safety.
  • Medical parole is not popular with the public
    only about 300 people are released nationwide on
    medical parole.

16
Medical Parole in California
  • In 2010, California passed a medical parole law
    that would allow the paroling authority to
    release prisoners who are permanently medically
    incapacitated require 24 hour care but are no
    longer a threat
  • If the parolees condition should unexpectedly
    improve, he or she can be sent back to prison
  • Death row life without parole inmates are not
    eligible

17
Release on California Medical Parole
  • Steven Martinez 42 years old, serving 157 years
    for rape kidnapping
  • 3 years into his prison sentence he was stabbed
    in the spine, is a quadriplegic, cannot perform
    the simplest tasks. He care costs about
    625,000/year
  • Martinez was the first prisoner to be considered
    for medical parole in California
  • His application was denied

18
Texas Board of Pardons ParoleAnnual Report 2010
  • MEDICALLY RECOMMENDED INTENSIVE SUPERVISION
    (MRIS)
  • Upon review of any eligible offender who
    qualifies for release to Medically Recommended
    Intensive Supervision (MRIS), the MRIS panel
    bases its decisions on the offenders medical
    condition and medical evaluation, and whether the
    offender constitutes a threat to public safety.
  • Offenders shall comply with the terms and
    conditions of the MRIS program and abide by a
    Texas Correctional Office for Offenders with
    Mental or Medical Impairments (TCOOMMI) approved
    release plan. Offenders remain under the care of
    a physician and in a medically suitable
    placement.
  • MRIS Data Comparison
  • YEAR 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
  • Screened 1,600 941 1,319 1,318 1,443
  • Presented 401 290 438 337 428
  • Approved 161 101 103 59 106
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