Risk and Needs Assessment in the Federal
Prison System
Nathan James
Analyst in Crime Policy
July 10, 2018
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R44087
Risk and Needs Assessment in the Federal Prison System
Congressional Research Service
Summary The number of people incarcerated in federal prisons increased dramatically over the past three
decades. While the number of inmates in the federal prison system has decreased since FY2013,
the federal prison population remains substantially larger than it was three decades ago.
Concerns about both the economic and social consequences of the country’s reliance on
incarceration have led to calls for reforms to the nation’s criminal justice system, including
improving the federal prison system’s ability to rehabilitate incarcerated offenders by better
assessing their risk for recidivism and addressing their criminogenic needs. “Criminogenic
needs,” are factors that contribute to criminal behavior that can be changed and/or addressed
through interventions.
There have been legislative proposals to implement a risk and needs assessment system in federal
prisons. The system would be used to place inmates in appropriate rehabilitative programs. Under
the proposed system some inmates would be eligible for earned time credits for completing
rehabilitative programs that reduce their risk of recidivism. Such credits would allow inmates to
be placed on prerelease custody earlier. The proposed system would exclude inmates convicted of
certain offenses from being eligible for earned time credits.
Risk and needs assessment instruments typically consist of a series of items used to collect data
on offender behaviors and attitudes that research indicates are related to the risk of recidivism.
Generally, inmates are classified as being at a high, moderate, or low risk of recidivism.
Assessment instruments are comprised of static and dynamic risk factors. Static risk factors do
not change (e.g., age at first arrest or gender), while dynamic risk factors can either change on
their own or be changed through an intervention (e.g., current age, education level, or
employment status). In general, research suggests that the most commonly used assessment
instruments can, with a moderate level of accuracy, predict who is at risk for violent recidivism. It
also suggests that of the most commonly used risk assessments none distinguishes itself from the
others when it comes to predictive validity.
The Risk-Needs-Responsivity (RNR) model has become the dominant paradigm in risk and needs
assessment. The risk principle states that convicted offenders need to be placed in programs that
are commensurate with their risk level; in other words, provide more intensive treatment and
services to high-risk offenders while low-risk offenders should receive minimal or even no
intervention. The need principle states that effective treatment should also focus on addressing the
criminogenic needs that contribute to criminal behavior. The responsivity principle states that
rehabilitative programming should be delivered in a style and mode that is consistent with the
ability and learning style of the offender.
There are several issues policymakers might contemplate should Congress choose to consider
legislation to implement a risk and needs assessment system in federal prisons, including the
following:
Is there the potential for bias in the use of risk and needs assessment?
Should certain inmates be ineligible for earned time credits?
Should prison programming focus on inmates at high risk of recidivism?
Should risk assessment be incorporated into sentencing?
Should there be a decreased focus on long prison sentences?
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Congressional Research Service
Contents
An Overview of Risk and Needs Assessment ……………………………………………………………………… 3
Risk and Needs Factors ………………………………………………………………………………………………. 3 Can Risk and Needs Assessment Instruments Accurately Predict Risk? ……………………………. 4
Risk-Needs-Responsivity (RNR) Principles ……………………………………………………………………….. 4
Risk Principle ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 5 Needs Principle …………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 5 Responsivity Principle ……………………………………………………………………………………………….. 6 “Central Eight” Risk and Needs Factors ……………………………………………………………………….. 6 Empirical Basis for the RNR Principles ………………………………………………………………………… 7
Select Issues for Congress ………………………………………………………………………………………………… 8
Concerns About Bias in Risk and Needs Assessment ……………………………………………………… 8 Should Certain Inmates Be Excluded from Receiving Time Credits? ………………………………. 11 Should Priority Be Given to High-Risk Offenders? ………………………………………………………. 15 Should Risk and Needs Assessment Be Used in Sentencing? …………………………………………. 16 Should There Be a Decreased Emphasis on Long Prison Sentences? ………………………………. 17
Tables
Table 1. Major Risk and Needs Factors: The “Central Eight”………………………………………………… 6
Table 2. Conviction Offenses for Inmates Held in BOP Facilities at the End of FY2014…………. 13
Contacts
Author Contact Information ……………………………………………………………………………………………. 18
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he number of people incarcerated in federal prisons increased dramatically over the past
three decades. The total number of inmates in the federal prison system increased from
approximately 25,000 in FY1980 to over 219,000 in FY2013.1 Since the peak in FY2013,
the number of inmates in the federal prison system decreased each subsequent fiscal year, falling
to approximately 186,000 inmates in FY2017.2 However, even with the recent decrease in the
number of federal prison inmates, the federal prison population is more than seven times larger
than it was three decades ago.
While research indicates that the expanded use of incarceration during the 1980s and 1990s
contributed to the declining crime rate, the effect was likely small,3 and it has likely reached the
point of diminishing returns.4 Concerns about both the economic and social consequences of the
country’s burgeoning prison population have resulted in a range of organizations including the
American Civil Liberties Union, Right on Crime, and the American Conservative Union’s Center
for Criminal Justice Reform calling for reforms to the nation’s criminal justice system. Congress
also formed the Charles Colson Task Force on Federal Corrections to examine the growth of the
federal prison population and provide recommendations for reforms.5
There are two, not mutually exclusive, methods to reduce the number of incarcerated individuals
in the United States: send fewer people to prison (e.g., placing offenders on probation or in a
diversion program like a drug court) and/or shorten prison sentences (e.g., allowing inmates to
serve a portion of their prison sentence on parole or granting them early release by allowing them
to earn time off their prison sentence). While diverting “low-level drug offenders” from prison or
granting nonviolent offenders early release have been popular proposals to reduce the prison
population, the crime someone is convicted of is not the best proxy for the risk that person might
pose to the community. For example, an offender who has no history of violence and who poses a
low risk for future violence might be convicted of what is legally defined as a violent crime (e.g.,
illegal gun possession or driving the get-away car for someone who committed an armed
robbery).6 On the other hand, an offender with a history of violence might be sentenced to prison
for a nonviolent crime or have a violent offense downgraded to a nonviolent offense as a result of
a plea deal.7
The assessment of offender risk was originally a matter of professional judgment. Prison staff,
based on their own experience and training, would typically determine at intake which offenders
were more or less likely to be a safety or security risk. These assessments would then be used to
assign inmates to the appropriate institution or unit based on their risk determination. Over time,
1 Data on the number of federal prison inmates can be found online at https://www.bop.gov/about/statistics/
population_statistics.jsp.
2 In FY2013, the number of inmates under BOP’s jurisdiction was 219,298, in FY2014 it was 214,149, in FY2015 it
was 205,723, in FY2016 it was 192,170, and in FY2017 it was 185,617. At the time this report was updated, FY2017
was the most recent fiscal year for which federal prison population data were available.
3 Research by the Brennan Center for Justice and the New York University School of Law estimates that 0%-7% of the
decline in crime in the 1990s can be attributed to increased incarceration, while 0%-1% of the decrease in crime since
2000 can be attributed to increased incarceration. Oliver Roeder, Lauren-Brooke Eisen, and Julia Bowling, What
Caused the Crime Decline?, Brennan Center for Justice, New York, NY, February 12, 2015, p. 6.
4 Anne Morrison Piehl and Bert Useem, “Prisons,” in Crime and Public Policy, ed. Joan Petersilia and James Q.
Wilson, 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), p. 542.
5 See P.L. 113-76 and the joint explanatory statement to accompany P.L. 113-76, printed in the January 15, 2014,
Congressional Record, p. H514.
6 Leon Neyfakh, “OK, So Who Gets to Go Free?,” Slate, March 4, 2015, http://www.slate.com/articles/
news_and_politics/crime/2015/03/prison_reform_releasing_only_nonviolent_offenders_won_t_get_you_very_far.html.
7 Ibid.
T
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the limitations of using professional judgment alone were increasingly recognized and beginning
in the 1970’s actuarial tools to assess risk were developed and implemented in correctional
settings. Subsequent research on these tools revealed that they were better at predicting future
criminal behavior than professional judgment alone. Since then, a variety of risk assessment tools
have been developed and implemented incorporating important advances suggested by research,
including adding factors because they are theoretically relevant (versus adding factors that are
simply available in correctional data systems), adding factors that are changeable (e.g., dynamic
factors), and conducting risk assessment in the context of a risk and recidivism reduction model.8
Because courts and correctional officials make decisions every day about who can safely be
diverted from incarceration or granted early release, they may benefit from tools that can help in
this process. Actuarial risk assessment tools may serve this purpose. Needs assessments could
also help correctional officials make determinations about which offenders need higher levels of
supervision and/or match them to the appropriate rehabilitative programming.
The use of risk and needs assessment in the criminal justice system is not without controversy,
however. Proponents of assessment assert that the tools used to measure the risk and needs of
inmates are better than the independent judgment of courts and corrections officials alone, and
that research on the tools have demonstrated their ability to make relevant distinctions between
high- and low-risk offenders.9 Nonetheless, risk and needs assessment is not 100% accurate. Two
experts in the field note that “[a]lthough statistical risk assessment reduces uncertainty about an
offender’s probable future conduct, it is subject to errors and should be regarded as advisory
rather than peremptory. Even with large data sets and advanced analytical techniques, the best
models are usually able to predict recidivism with about 70% accuracy—provided it is completed
by trained staff.”10
Legislation has been introduced in the current Congress that would require the Bureau of Prisons
(BOP) to implement a risk and needs assessment system.11 Currently, BOP utilizes a classification
and designation tool to make determinations about inmates’ security and custody classification.12
However, BOP’s classification and designation system is only validated to predict institutional
misconduct.13 In addition, BOP staff use their discretion to determine the rehabilitative programs
in which inmates will be placed.14 While the process involves evaluations by a psychologist and
subsequent assessments by a case manager, BOP does not use a validated assessment instrument
8 James Bonta and D.A. Andrews, “Risk-Need-Responsivity Model for Offender Assessment and Rehabilitation, 2007-
06,” Public Safety Canada, https://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/rsrcs/pblctns/rsk-nd-rspnsvty/index-en.aspx#a3
9 Pew Center on the States, Risk/Needs Assessment 101: Science Reveals New Tools to Manage Offenders, issue brief,
September 2011, http://www.pewtrusts.org/~/media/legacy/uploadedfiles/pcs_assets/2011/
PewRiskAssessmentbriefpdf.pdf, (hereinafter, “Risk/Needs Assessment 101”)
10 Edward J. Latessa and Brian Lovins, “The Role of Offender Risk Assessment: a Policy Maker Guide,” Victims and
Offenders, vol. 5, 2010, p. 212 (hereinafter “The Role of Offender Risk Assessment”).
11 See, for example, S. 1917, S. 1994, and H.R. 3356.
12 BOP makes determinations based on a review and coding of sentencing material, including the presentence report,
provided by the sentencing court, the Office of Probation and Pretrial Services, and the U.S. Marshals. Factors that can
affect an inmate’s security and custody classification include criminal history, prior substance abuse, education level,
public safety factors, and program needs. For more information see U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons,
Inmate Security Designation and Custody Classification, Program Statement 5100.08, http://www.bop.gov/policy/
progstat/5100_008.pdf.
13 Charles Colson Task Force on Federal Corrections, Transforming Prisons, Restoring Lives: Final Recommendations
of the Charles Colson Task Force on Federal Corrections, January 2016, p. 32.
14 Ibid.
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to place inmates in rehabilitative programs.15 The system that would be established by legislation
before Congress would evaluate inmates and be used to determine appropriate levels of
supervision and place them in rehabilitative programs and productive activities that match their
needs. Under the proposed system, some inmates would be eligible for earned time credits for
participating in rehabilitative programs that reduce their risk of recidivism. Such credits would
allow inmates to be placed in prerelease custody earlier than under their original sentences.
This report provides information on the use of risk and needs assessment instruments. It starts
with an overview of risk and needs assessment. This includes a discussion of the Risk-Needs-
Responsivity principles, which has become the dominant paradigm for reducing the likelihood of
recidivism among convicted offenders. The report concludes with a discussion of the issues
policymakers might consider if they debate legislation to expand the use of risk and needs
assessment in the federal prison system.
An Overview of Risk and Needs Assessment A risk and needs assessment instrument measures offenders’ criminogenic16 risk factors and
specific needs that if addressed will reduce the likelihood of future criminal activity.17 Assessment
instruments typically consist of a series of questions that help guide an interview with an offender
in order to collect data on behaviors and attitudes that research indicates are related to the risk of
recidivism.18 Data collected during the interview is typically supplemented with information from
an official records check, such as a criminal history records check.19 The risk and needs
assessment instrument generates a total score that places the offender into a risk category
(typically “low,” “moderate,” or “high”).
Risk and Needs Factors
Generally speaking, risk and needs assessment instruments consist of both static and dynamic risk
factors. Static risk factors do not change over time. Examples include age at first arrest, gender,
past problems with substance or alcohol abuse, prior mental health problems, or a history of
violating terms of supervision (e.g., parole or probation).20
Dynamic risk factors, also called “criminogenic needs,” change and/or can be addressed through
interventions. Examples include current age, education level, marital status, employment status,
current substance use, and residential stability.21
15 Ibid.
16 “Criminogenic” is commonly understood to mean factors that can contribute to criminal behavior.
17 Risk/Needs Assessment 101, p. 2.
18 Ibid.
19 Ibid.
20 James Austin, “The Proper and Improper Use of Risk Assessment in Corrections,” Federal Sentencing Reporter, vol.
16, no. 3, February 2004, p. 5 (hereinafter “The Proper and Improper Use of Risk Assessment in Corrections”).
21 “The Proper and Improper Use of Risk Assessment in Corrections,” p. 4.
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Can Risk and Needs Assessment Instruments Accurately
Predict Risk?
In general, research indicates that most commonly used risk and needs assessment instruments
can, with a moderate level of accuracy, predict who is at risk for recidivism.22 It also indicates
that of the most commonly used risk and needs assessments, no one instrument is superior to any
other when it comes to predictive validity.23 One group of researchers concluded that “[o]verall,
our results showed that all of the nine tools predicted violence at above-chance levels, with
medium effect sizes, and no one tool predicting [sic] violence significantly better than any other.
In sum, all did well, but none came first.”24
Two scholars have posited two explanations for why well-validated risk and needs assessment
instruments have similar levels of performance. First, some evidence suggests that there is a
“natural limit” to the predictive utility of instruments.25 Simply stated, there is a limit to how
accurately recidivism can be predicted given the current level of knowledge about the causes and
correlates of criminal behavior. Second, well-validated instruments may show similar levels of
performance because they are tapping “common factors” or shared dimensions of risk, even
though the instruments utilize different items or have different approaches.26 For example,
research has found that assessment instruments typically gauge four overlapping dimensions:
criminal history, persistent antisocial lifestyle, psychopathic personality, and alcohol/mental
health issues.27
Risk-Needs-Responsivity (RNR) Principles The Risk-Needs-Responsivity (RNR) model is one of the most dominant paradigms in the risk
and needs assessment field. It has emerged as a prominent framework for guiding offender
assessment and treatment because it is one of the few comprehensive theories of how to provide
effective recidivism reduction interventions to offenders. Experts in the field of risk and needs
assessment assert that assessment systems should adhere to the RNR model. As the Vera Institute
of Justice notes, “[u]nderlying the development of evidence-based practices in the criminal justice
system are the risk, need, and responsivity principles” [emphasis original].28
22 The National Center for State Courts provides an overview of some of the most commonly used risk and needs
assessment instruments in their report on using risk and needs assessment in sentencing. See Pamela M Casey, Roger
K. Warren, and Jennifer K. Elek, Using Offender Risk and Needs Assessment Information at Sentencing: Guidance for
Courts from a National Working Group, Appendix A, National Center for State Courts, Williamsburg, VA, 2011
23 Public Safety Canada, Predicting Violent Recidivism, Research Summary, vol. 12, no. 3, May 2007,
http://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/rsrcs/pblctns/prdtng-rcvds/index-eng.aspx; Mary Ann Campbell, Sheila French, and
Paul Gendreau, “The Prediction of Violence in Adult Offenders; A Meta-Analytic Comparison of Instruments and
Methods of Assessment,” Criminal Justice and Behavior, vol. 36, no. 6, June 2009, pp. 567-590; Min Yang, Stephen
C.P. Wong, and Jeremy Coid, “The Efficacy of Violence Prediction: A Meta-Analytic Comparison of Nine Risk
Assessment Tools,” Psychological Bulletin, vol. 136, no. 5, 2010, pp. 740-767.
24 Min Yang, Stephen C.P. Wong, and Jeremy Coid, “The Efficacy of Violence Prediction: A Meta-Analytic
Comparison of Nine Risk Assessment Tools,” Psychological Bulletin, vol. 136, no. 5, 2010, p. 757.
25 John Monahan and Jennifer L. Skeem, “Risk Redux: The Resurgence of Risk Assessment in Criminal Sanctioning,”
Federal Sentencing Reporter, vol. 26, no. 3, February 2014, p. 162 (hereinafter “Risk Redux”).
26 Ibid.
27 Daryl G. Kroner, Jeremy F. Mills, and John R. Reddon, “A Coffee Can, Factor Analysis, and Prediction of Antisocial
Behavior: The Structure of Criminal Risk,” International Journal of Law and Psychology, vol. 28, 2005, pp. 360-374.
28 Vera Institute of Justice’s Center of Sentencing and Corrections, Risk and Needs Assessment, memorandum to the
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The RNR model of risk and needs assessment and offender treatment incorporates evidence-
based practices for reducing recidivism.29 As the name implies, the model has three main
principles: assessing risk, addressing criminogenic needs, and providing treatment that is
responsive to the offender’s abilities and learning style.30
The RNR model is based on the social psychology of offending, which posits that individuals and
social/situational factors intersect to create values, cognitions, and personality orientations that
are conducive to criminal conduct.31 These ways of thinking and responding are learned and
become reinforced through feedback, and eventually result in individual differences in the
propensity for criminal behavior.32
Many other theories of criminal behavior focus on the social causes of criminal behavior, factors
that cannot be addressed through individual-level treatment. On the other hand, the RNR model
focuses on the proximate causes of criminal behavior, which can be the targets of evidence-based
correctional treatment.
Risk Principle
The risk principle has two aspects: (1) the risk of criminal behavior can be predicted, and (2) the
level of intervention should be matched to the risk level of the offender.33 The risk principle states
that high-risk offenders need to be placed in programs that provide more intensive treatment and
services while low-risk offenders should receive minimal or even no intervention.
Needs Principle
The needs principle states that effective treatment should focus on addressing criminogenic
needs, that is, dynamic risk factors that are highly correlated with criminal conduct.34 Also,
according to the needs principle, effective treatment should not focus on addressing
Delaware Justice Reinvestment Task Force, October 12, 2011, p. 2, https://ltgov.delaware.gov/taskforces/djrtf/
DJRTF_Risk_Assessment_Memo.pdf (hereinafter “Vera Institute of Justice’s memorandum re: risk and needs
assessment”).
29 Pamela M Casey, Roger K. Warren, and Jennifer K. Elek, Using Offender Risk and Needs Assessment Information at
Sentencing: Guidance for Courts from a National Working Group, National Center for State Courts, Williamsburg,
VA, 2011, p. 5.
30 There are several principles other than risk, needs, and responsivity that are a part of the RNR model. These include
three overarching principles: delivering services with respect for people, basing programs on psychological theory, and
reducing criminal victimization. In addition to the risk, needs, and responsivity principles, there are several other core
principles, including introducing human services in order to reduce recidivism, targeting more criminogenic needs
relative to noncriminogenic needs, assessing offenders’ strengths to enhance prediction and specific responsivity
effects, using structured assessments, and only using professional discretion for very specific reasons. There are also
three organizational principles: a preference for community-based services, services are enhanced when delivered by
therapists and staff with high-quality relationships skills in combination with high-quality structuring skills, and
management should closely oversee the provision of services. For a more detailed overview of all of the principles of
the RNR model, see Chapter 2 of D.A. Andrews and James Bonta, The Psychology of Criminal Conduct, 5th ed. (New
Providence, NJ: Anderson Publishing, 2010) (hereinafter “The Psychology of Criminal Conduct”).
31 Francis T. Cullen and Cheryl Lero Jonson, “Rehabilitation and Treatment Programs,” in Crime and Public Policy,
ed. James Q. Wilson and Joan Petersilia, 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), p. 319.
32 Ibid.
33 The Psychology of Criminal Conduct, p. 47.
34 The Role of Offender Risk Assessment, p. 209.
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noncriminogenic needs, because changes in noncriminogenic needs are not associated with
reduced recidivism.35
Responsivity Principle
The responsivity principle states that rehabilitative programming should be delivered in a style
and mode that is consistent with the ability and learning style of the offender.36 The responsivity
principle is further divided into two elements. The general responsivity principle states that
cognitive-behavioral and social learning therapies are the most effective form of intervention.37
The specific responsivity principle states that treatment should consider the relevant
characteristics of the offender (e.g., the offender’s motivations, preferences, personality, age,
gender, ethnicity, and cultural identification, along with other factors).
“Central Eight” Risk and Needs Factors
The developers of the RNR principles identified what they deem the “central eight” risk and
needs factors. These risk and needs factors include the “big four,” which they believe to be the
“major predictor variables and indeed the major causal variable in the analysis of criminal
behavior in individuals.”38 The remaining four risk and needs factors are referred to as the
“moderate four.” The “central eight” risk and needs factors are presented in Table 1.
Even though antisocial behavior is the most prominent of the “central eight” risk and needs
factors, a common mistake in risk assessment is conflating past antisocial behavior with current
antisocial behavior. The seriousness of the current offense is not a risk factor.39 A history of
antisocial behavior is what is correlated with the risk of future offending.
Table 1. Major Risk and Needs Factors: The “Central Eight”
Risk/Need Factor Indicator Target for Intervention
The Big Four
History of Antisocial Behavior This includes early involvement in any
number of a variety of antisocial
activities. Major indicators include
being arrested at a young age, a large
number of prior offenses, and rule
violations while on conditional
release.
History cannot be changed, but
targets for change include developing
new noncriminal behaviors in high-
risk situations and building self-
efficacy beliefs supportive of prosocial
behavior.
Antisocial Personality Pattern People with this factor are impulsive,
adventurous, pleasure-seeking,
involved in generalized trouble,
restlessly aggressive, and show a
callous disregard for others.
Building skills to address weak self-
control, anger management, and poor
problem-solving.
35 The Psychology of Criminal Conduct, p. 49.
36 Ibid., p. 49.
37 Ibid., pp. 49-50.
38 Ibid., p. 55.
39 Ibid., p. 60.
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Risk/Need Factor Indicator Target for Intervention
Antisocial Cognition People with this factor hold attitudes,
beliefs, values, rationalizations, and
personal identity that is favorable to
crime. Specific indicators include
identifying with criminals, negative
attitudes towards the law and justice
system, beliefs that crime will yield
rewards, and rationalizations that
justify criminal behavior (e.g., the
“victim deserved it”).
Reducing antisocial thinking and
feelings through building and
practicing less risky thoughts and
feelings.
Antisocial Associates This factor includes both association
with procriminal others and isolation
from anticriminal others.
Reduce association with procriminal
others and increase association with
anticriminal others.
The Moderate Four
Family/Marital Circumstances Poor-quality relationships between
the child and the parent (in the case
of juvenile offenders) or spouses (in
the case of adult offenders) in
combination with either neutral or
procriminal expectations.
Reduce conflict, build positive
relationships, and enhance monitoring
and supervision.
School/Work Low levels of performance and
involvement and low levels of
rewards and satisfaction.
Enhance performance, involvement,
rewards, and satisfaction.
Leisure/Recreation Low levels of involvement in and
satisfaction from noncriminal leisure
pursuits.
Enhance involvement in and
satisfaction from noncriminal leisure
activities.
Substance Abuse Problems with abusing alcohol and/or
other drugs (excluding tobacco).
Current problems with substance
abuse indicate a higher risk than past
substance abuse problems.
Reduce substance abuse, reduce the
personal and interpersonal supports
for substance-oriented behavior, and
enhance alternatives to substance
abuse.
Source: Adapted from Table 2.5 in D.A. Andrews and James Bonta, The Psychology of Criminal Conduct, 5th ed.
(New Providence, NJ: Anderson Publishing, 2010).
Empirical Basis for the RNR Principles
Research on the risk principle suggests that targeting high-risk offenders for programs where they
receive intensive levels of services have the greatest effect on recidivism.40 In some instances,
research also found that low-risk offenders who were placed in intensive treatment programs
actually had an increased likelihood of recidivism.41 This could be because placing low-risk
offenders in intensive programming interrupts support structures or self-correcting behaviors that
already exist, or because it exposes low-risk offenders to high-risk offenders who may have a
negative influence on low-risk offenders’ thoughts or behaviors.42
40 Ibid., p. 48.
41 Ibid.
42 Vera Institute of Justice’s memorandum re: risk and needs assessment, p. 2.
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Research suggests that programs that adhere to the RNR principles are more effective at reducing
recidivism.43 Specifically, the more RNR principles a treatment program adheres to, the greater
the reduction in the risk of recidivism. Research also indicates that treatment can be more
effective when provided in a community setting, though treatment that adheres to the RNR
principles can still be effective when provided in a custodial setting (i.e., prison or jail).
The developers of the RNR principles argue that research on risk assessments reveal that the
“central eight” risk and needs factors are the best predictors of future criminal behavior. A review
of the research on the relationship between certain risk and needs factors and criminal behavior
found that both the “big four” and the “moderate four” risk factors were statistically significant
predictors of future offending.44
Select Issues for Congress There is legislation before Congress (see, for example, S. 1917, S. 1994, and H.R. 3356) that
would establish a risk and needs assessment system in BOP. This section of the report discusses
some of the issues that might arise if Congress considers legislation related to risk and needs
assessment.
Concerns About Bias in Risk and Needs Assessment
An overarching issue policymakers might consider is whether BOP should use risk and needs
assessment to classify offenders by risk level and identify the criminogenic needs that might be
addressed by prison programming. Research suggests that assessment instruments can make
distinctions between high-, medium-, and low-risk offenders with some degree of accuracy.
Furthermore, the latest research suggests that assessment systems and offender programming that
adhere to the RNR principles are more effective at reducing recidivism than those that do not.
Implementing an assessment system and offender programming regime that adheres to the RNR
principles in federal prisons is, based on the current research, an evidence-based way to better
match inmates with the rehabilitative programming they need, and when combined with earned
time credits for some inmates who complete rehabilitative programs and productive activities, it
might provide a means for reducing the federal prison population without increasing the risk to
public safety.
However, risk and needs assessment systems are not flawless. There will likely be some false
positives (e.g., inmates who are identified as high-risk but who do not recidivate) and false
negatives (e.g., inmates who are identified as low-risk but go on to commit new crimes). Even
though the predictive accuracy of instruments has improved over the years with more research
into the correlates of crime, the recognition that the assessments need to be validated on the
population they are being used for, and the development of a theory of criminal behavior and
effective rehabilitation (i.e., the RNR model) that serves as a guiding framework for building an
effective correctional system, under the best conditions, risk assessment correctly predicts
recidivism 70% of the time.
One prominent concern is that the widescale use of risk and needs assessment might exacerbate
racial disparities in the nation’s prison systems. While there might be concern about what effect
43 James Bonta and D.A. Andrews, Risk‒Need‒Responsivity Model for Offender Assessment and Rehabilitation, Public
Safety Canada, June 2007, pp. 9-12, http://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/rsrcs/pblctns/rsk-nd-rspnsvty/index-eng.aspx,
hereinafter, “RNR Model for Offender Assessment and Rehabilitation.”
44 The Psychology of Criminal Conduct, pp. 64-65.
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risk and needs assessment could have on other racial and ethnic minorities, females, or members
of the lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, and transgender (LGBT) community, research on potential
discriminatory effects of risk and needs assessment has largely focused on blacks, especially
black men, because of disproportionate representation in the criminal justice system and past
concerns about whether the criminal justice system discriminates against them. Research by
investigative journalists and data scientists with ProPublica45 on risk classifications generated by
the Correctional Offender Management Profiling for Alternative Sanctions (COMPAS)
instrument in Broward County, FL, has heightened the debate about racial disparities in risk and
needs assessment.46 ProPublica found that among defendants who did not go on to reoffend, black
defendants were assessed as being medium- or high-risk for recidivism at twice the rate of white
defendants.47 However, the company that sells COMPAS, Northpointe, argues that the instrument
is racially neutral because black and white defendants with similar risk scores reoffended at
roughly the same rate.48 What explains these contradictory results? In short, algorithms used in
risk assessment cannot meet both ProPublica’s (minimizing error rates) and Northpointe’s
(predictive parity49) definition of fairness.50 Researchers at Stanford University who re-examined
the data from ProPublica’s study found the following:
Within each risk category (“low” and “medium-high”), the proportion of
defendants who reoffend was approximately the same regardless of race
(Northpointe’s definition of fairness).
The overall recidivism rate for black defendants was higher than for white
defendants (52% compared to 39%).
Black defendants were more likely to be classified as medium- or high-risk (58%
compared to 33%).
Black defendants who did not reoffend were more likely to be assessed as
medium- or high-risk than white defendants who did not reoffend (ProPublica’s
criticism of the algorithm).51
These researchers note that
[i]f the recidivism rate for white and black defendants is the same within each risk category,
and if black defendants have a higher overall recidivism rate, then a greater share of black
defendants will be classified as high risk. And if a greater share of black defendants are
classified as high risk, then … a greater share of black defendants who do not reoffend will
also be classified as high risk. If Northpointe’s definition of fairness holds, and if the
45 ProPublica is an “independent, nonprofit newsroom that produces investigative journalism with moral force.” For
more information, see ProPublica, About Us, https://www.propublica.org/about/.
46 Julia Angwin, Jeff Larson, and Surya Mattu, et al., “Machine Bias: There’s Software Used Across the Country to
Predict Future Criminals. And it’s Biased Against Blacks.,” ProPublica, May 23, 2016.
47 Julia Angwin and Jeff Larson, “Bias in Criminal Risk Scores Is Mathematically Inevitable, Researchers Say,”
ProPublica, December 30, 2016.
48 Ibid.
49 “Predictive parity” can be understood as developing an algorithm that generates equally accurate forecasts for all
racial groups.
50 Avi Feller, Emma Pierson, and Sam Corbett-Davies, “A Computer Program Used for Bail and Sentencing Decisions
Was Labeled Biased Against Blacks. It’s Actually Not That Clear.,” Monkey Cage (blog), Washington Post, October
16, 2016.
51 Ibid.
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recidivism rate for black defendants is higher than for whites, the imbalance ProPublica
highlighted will always occur.52
Another study re-examined the data ProPublica used in their research and found no evidence of
racial bias in the COMPAS instrument.53 Among several criticisms of ProPublica’s methodology,
the authors of the study assert that ProPublica did not test for bias within excepted standards (i.e.,
the Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing). Their examination of the data,
conducted using published standards, showed that
black defendants were more likely to be rearrested, both for any reason and for
violent offenses;
low-, medium-, and high-risk black defendants were more likely to be rearrested
(both for any arrest and for violent arrests) than similarly assessed white
defendants;
COMPAS was a good predictor of both types of arrest and it predicted outcomes
equally well across both races;
COMPAS did not predict outcome differently across groups of black and white
defendants; in other words, a given COMPAS score translated into roughly the
same likelihood of recidivism, regardless of race.
These researchers also offer the following critique of the main finding of the ProPublica research:
While it is problematic that they collapsed medium- and high-risk defendants into one
category that was then compared against the low-risk defendants, more problematic is their
interpretation of what information COMPAS scores provide. Just as medicine uses
actuaries to inform patient prognoses and the auto insurance industry uses actuaries to
inform probabilities of risky driving behavior, the COMPAS is based on an actuary
designed to inform the probability of recidivism across its three stated risk categories. To
expect the COMPAS to do otherwise would be analogous to expecting an insurance agent
to make absolute determinations of who will be involved in an accident and who won’t.
Actuaries just don’t work that way.54
Some policymakers might be concerned that inmates of color will be assessed as being at a higher
risk for recidivism and this will result in detrimental outcomes (e.g., being incarcerated for longer
periods). This is a valid concern. Even in instances where a risk and needs assessment instrument
is shown to have no inherent racial biases, the application of an instrument can have a disparate
racial effect.55 However, while there might be concerns about racial bias in risk and needs
assessment instruments, it is argued that utilizing actuarial rather than clinical (i.e., professional
judgment alone) risk assessment makes the process more objective and less susceptible to rater
bias. As mentioned earlier, before the use of actuarial assessments, decisions about who was to be
assigned to which treatment program and who was to be released on parole were left to criminal
justice professionals who made assessments based on their own experiences and sets of standards,
which might have been influenced by overt or subconscious biases.
52 Ibid.
53 Anthony W. Flores, Kristin Bechtel, and Christopher T. Lowenkamp, “False Positives, False Negatives, and False
Analyses: A Rejoinder to ‘Machine Bias: There’s Software Used Across the Country to Predict Future Criminals. And
it’s Biased Against Blacks.,” Federal Probation Journal, vol. 80, no. 2, September 2016, pp. 38-46.
54 Ibid., p. 45.
55 Jennifer Skeem and Christopher T. Lowenkamp, “Risk, Race, and Recidivism: Predictive Bias and Disparate
Impact,” revised June 14, 2016, p. 36, https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2687339.
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Policymakers might be interested in steps that can be taken to reduce the potential for bias in risk
and needs assessment. The Council of State Governments identifies three things that can be done
to reduce bias in assessments:
Validate the assessment instrument using an independent third party, and assess
the instrument’s predictive accuracy by race and gender.
Assess if the instrument is being administered properly. This includes
determining whether any assessed bias is the result of the instrument itself (e.g.,
certain items are weighted in a way that is contributing to unintentional bias) or if
it is a result of assessor error (e.g., assessors are not scoring the instrument
according to established guidelines), and conducting inter-rater reliability
exercises and focus groups to review how scoring protocols are being utilized.
Develop a plan to address any bias in the risk and needs assessment instrument
resulting from the instrument itself or the way it is being used. This includes
monitoring how the instrument is being administered, providing regular booster
training to assessors, or using another instrument, if necessary.56
The recommendations of the Council of State Governments are consistent with requirements in
legislation before Congress that would require DOJ to validate the proposed risk and needs
assessment instrument on the federal prison population, use the best available research on risk
and needs assessment when developing the proposed risk and needs assessment system, make
regular adjustments to the system to ensure that it does not result in any unwarranted disparities,
train assessors on how to properly use the system, and monitor and assess the use of the system
and periodically audit the its use in BOP facilities.
Should Certain Inmates Be Excluded from Receiving Time Credits?
One issue policymakers might consider is whether certain inmates should be excluded from
receiving earned time credits for participating in rehabilitative programs and productive activities.
Legislation before Congress would, among other things, exclude inmates who were convicted of
certain offenses (e.g., violent or sex offenses, drug offenses, and fraud offenses) from earning
additional time credits for participating in rehabilitative programming. Research suggests that
inmates should be assessed for risk and needs, and decisions about programming and supervision
should be based on those assessments regardless of the inmate’s current offense. However, many
still argue that inmates who are convicted of certain offenses, such as violent or sex offenses,
should be ineligible for early release, regardless of what they do to reduce their risk of recidivism
and prepare for life outside of prison.
A related issue that policymakers might consider is whether excluding inmates convicted of
certain offenses would have a disparate effect on racial or ethnic minorities. Given the statistics
presented later, some policymakers might be concerned that excluding inmates convicted of
certain offenses from being eligible to receive additional time credits under the proposed
assessment system might mean that, all else being equal, inmates of color would serve longer
prison sentences. However, this would only be true to the extent that inmates of color are more
likely to be convicted of offenses that would make them ineligible for earned time credits.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), through its Federal Criminal Case Processing Statistics
program, publishes data on defendants sentenced in federal courts and inmates held in federal
prisons. The data can be used to examine things such as the offense for which inmates were
56 Council of State Governments, Three Things You Can Do to Prevent Bias in Risk Assessment, July 20, 2016,
https://csgjusticecenter.org/jr/posts/three-things-you-can-do-to-prevent-bias-in-risk-assessment/.
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incarcerated and inmates’ race/ethnicity (see Table 2). However, the most recent year for which
data are available is FY2014. The data published by BJS do not allow for an examination of the
implications of all of the proposals before Congress (for example, data is not available on how
many inmates are repeat offenders), so the following discussion is meant to provide a sense, not
an exact prediction, of what proportion of inmates might not be eligible to receive earned time
credits under the proposed legislation.
Legislation before Congress would make most inmates convicted of violent or sex offenses
ineligible to receive earned time credits. Data from BJS is not detailed enough to assess the
implications of some of the exclusions outlined in the three bills with a high level of specificity,
but it can provide insight into the characteristics of the federal prison population by the offense
type for which they were incarcerated. Most inmates held in federal prisons at the end of FY2014
were incarcerated for something other than a violent or sex offense; inmates convicted of violent
or sex offenses accounted for 11% of the federal prison population. Although a relatively small
percentage of federal prison inmates were incarcerated because of a conviction for a violent or
sex offense, there are large differences in their races/ethnicities. At the end of FY2014, 24% of
white inmates, 7% of black inmates, 3% of Hispanic inmates, 60% of Native American inmates,
and 9% of Asian/Pacific Islander inmates were incarcerated for a violent or sex offense. These are
the inmates that would be ineligible for earned time credits because they were incarcerated for a
violent or sex offense. In contrast, of the total federal prison population at the end of FY2014,
white inmates accounted for 27%, black inmates 35%, Hispanic inmates 35%, Native American
inmates 2%, and Asian/Pacific Islander inmates 1%. Thus, relative to their proportion of the
federal prison population, Native American and Asian/Pacific Islander inmates are
disproportionately represented among inmates convicted for violent and sex offenses and are the
racial groups that would be disproportionately impacted if inmates incarcerated for these offenses
were ineligible for earned time credits.
Other proposals would prohibit inmates incarcerated for a drug offense from eligibility for earned
time credits. While a policy that prohibits inmates incarcerated for a violent or sex offense from
eligibility for earned time credits would exclude 11% of federal inmates, excluding inmates
convicted of drug offenses would prohibit a much larger percentage of the federal prison
population, given that half of all inmates held in BOP facilities at the end of FY2014 were
incarcerated for drug offenses, especially drug trafficking offenses. Some bills would make
certain drug offenders (i.e., those convicted manufacturing or distributing a controlled substance
where use resulted in death or serious bodily injury, and those with a third or subsequent drug
trafficking offense) ineligible for earned time credits. Inmates who would be ineligible to earn
additional time credits under the legislation before Congress are a subset of all drug offenders in
federal prison, and since data on the race of this subset of all drug offenders is unavailable, it
cannot be determined whether this exclusion would have a disproportionate effect on inmates of
color.
Some legislation before Congress would make inmates convicted of certain fraud offenses
ineligible to receive earned time credits, while other legislation would also make inmates
convicted of a federal fraud offense for which they were sentenced to more than 15 years
imprisonment ineligible to receive earned time credits. Some bills would also make inmates
convicted of bribery, racketeering, and racketeering influenced and corrupt organizations (RICO)
ineligible for receiving earned time credits. BJS provides data on the proportion of inmates
convicted for fraud (5%), bribery (less than 1%), and racketeering and extortion (3%), but these
figures likely include some inmates who would be eligible to receive earned time credits.
However, publicly available data from BJS cannot be used to determine whether the exclusions
related to fraud, bribery, racketeering, and RICO offenses would have a disproportionate effect on
inmates of color.
CRS-13
Table 2. Conviction Offenses for Inmates Held in BOP Facilities at the End of FY2014
White Black Hispanica Native American
Asian/Pacific
Islander
Offense Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent Total
Violent offenses 3,406 6% 4,029 6% 1,141 2% 1,402 39% 114 4% 10,093
Murder/negligent manslaughter 335 1% 296 <1% 155 <1% 566 16% 22 1% 1,374
Assault 213 <1% 189 <1% 128 <1% 721 20% 17 1% 1,268
Robbery 2,605 5% 3,323 5% 576 1% 94 3% 48 2% 6,646
Kidnapping 232 <1% 211 <1% 281 <1% 21 1% 27 1% 772
Threats against the president 21 <1% 10 <1% 1 <1% 0 0% 0 0% 32
Sex offenses 9,648 18% 813 1% 1,001 1% 768 21% 129 5% 12,359
Sexual abuse 293 1% 105 <1% 76 <1% 683 19% 8 <1% 1,165
Other sex offenses 9,355 18% 708 1% 925 1% 85 2% 121 4% 11,194
Property offenses 5,636 11% 4,027 6% 1,906 3% 160 4% 439 16% 12,168
Fraudulent 4,722 9% 3,564 5% 1,668 2% 55 2% 389 14% 10,398
Fraud 4,341 8% 3,313 5% 1,592 2% 45 1% 374 13% 9,665
Forgery 58 <1% 26 <1% 13 <1% 0 0% 1 <1% 98
Counterfeiting 200 <1% 209 <1% 40 <1% 6 <1% 8 <1% 463
Embezzlement 123 <1% 16 <1% 23 <1% 4 <1% 6 <1% 172
Other offenses against property 914 2% 463 1% 238 <1% 105 3% 50 2% 1,770
Burglary 94 <1% 27 <1% 6 <1% 40 1% 1 <1% 168
Larceny 318 1% 246 <1% 96 <1% 19 1% 31 1% 710
Motor vehicle theft 38 <1% 26 <1% 18 <1% 7 <1% 1 <1% 90
Arson and explosives 111 <1% 26 <1% 6 <1% 22 1% 8 <1% 173
Transportation of stolen
property
67 <1% 14 <1% 19 <1% 0 <1% 2 <1% 102
CRS-14
White Black Hispanica Native American
Asian/Pacific
Islander
Offense Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent Total
Other property offenses 286 1% 124 <1% 93 <1% 17 <1% 7 <1% 527
Drug offenses 21,283 40% 37,495 55% 37,091 55% 622 17% 1,413 51% 97,906
Drug trafficking 21,258 40% 37,471 55% 36,550 54% 615 17% 1,412 51% 97,308
Drug possession/other drug offenses 25 <1% 24 <1% 541 1% 7 <1% 1 <1% 598
Regulatory offensesb 1,599 3% 709 1% 503 1% 25 1% 111 4% 2,947
Weapon offenses 7,865 15% 17,644 26% 4,560 7% 433 12% 305 11% 30,808
Immigration felonies 676 1% 269 <1% 19,170 28% 24 1% 13 <1% 20,152
Public order offenses 2,397 4% 2,666 4% 2,042 3% 73 2% 232 8% 7,410
Tax law violations 315 1% 112 <1% 25 <1% 2 <1% 19 1% 473
Bribery 32 <1% 13 <1% 30 <1% 0 <1% 3 <1% 78
Perjury, contempt and intimidation 49 <1% 24 <1% 9 <1% 1 <1% 5 <1% 88
National defense 110 <1% 48 <1% 29 <1% 0 0% 19 1% 206
Escape 77 <1% 80 <1% 66 <1% 18 <1% 2 <1% 243
Racketeering and extortion 1,731 3% 2,357 3% 1,863 3% 43 1% 183 7% 6,177
All other public order offensesc 83 <1% 32 <1% 20 <1% 9 <1% 1 <1% 145
Missing/Unknown 793 1% 353 1% 261 <1% 103 3% 36 1% 1,546
Total 53,303 100% 68,005 100% 67,675 100% 3,610 100% 2,792 100% 195,389
Source: CRS presentation of data downloaded from the Bureau of Justice Statistics’ Federal Criminal Case Processing Statistics website. Last accessed July 2017.
Notes: Column percentages have been rounded to the nearest percentage point. Due to rounding, column percentages might not sum to 100%.
a. “Hispanic” includes anyone who identified their ethnicity as Hispanic, regardless of race.
b. “Regulatory offenses” includes convictions for agriculture, antitrust, food and drug, transportation, civil rights, communications, customs laws, postal laws, and other
regulatory offenses.
c. “All other public-order offenses” includes convictions for gambling, wildlife, environmental, felony traffic, liquor, and other (undefined) public order offenses.
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Congressional Research Service 15
Should Priority Be Given to High-Risk Offenders?
Policymakers might consider whether the proposed risk and needs assessment system should
focus on high-risk inmates. The RNR principles state that high-risk individuals should be the
focus of rehabilitative programming.
Research on the risk principle suggests that the greatest improvements in recidivism can be made
when the focus is on placing high-risk offenders in programs where they receive intensive levels
of evidence-based services.57 In some instances, research has also found that low-risk offenders
who were placed in intensive treatment programs actually had an increased likelihood of
recidivism.58 This could be because placing low-risk offenders in intensive programming can
interrupt support structures or self-correcting behaviors that already exist, or because it exposes
low-risk offenders to high-risk offenders who may have a negative influence on low-risk
offenders’ thoughts or behaviors.59
Some legislation before Congress is silent as to whether high-risk inmates should be the primary
target of rehabilitative programming.60 The legislation would require BOP to make rehabilitative
programming and productive activities available to all inmates, but it would give BOP several
years to do so, and the requirement is subject to the availability of appropriations. This might
raise a few issues that policymakers could consider.
Will BOP have the resources it needs to expand evidence-based rehabilitative
programming and productive activities so that they can be offered to all inmates?
Legislation before Congress would require the Department of Justice (DOJ) to
use savings realized by implementing the risk and needs assessment system and
placing inmates in lower cost prerelease custody earlier to help expand
rehabilitative programming and productive activities. But what if those savings
are not adequate to fund the needed expansion of these programs? BOP might not
be able to realize any significant savings in their operating expenses until the
prison population decreases enough that they can start to close prisons and reduce
staff. In addition, there is an argument to be made that BOP has been
underfunded for several years. Therefore, any near-term reductions in the prison
population might only get BOP to the point where they can start to provide an
adequate level of services.61
If evidence-based rehabilitative programming and productive activities cannot be
expanded at an adequate rate, should BOP be required to give priority to high-
risk inmates? As noted above, targeting high-risk offenders for intensive levels of
treatment and services has the greatest effect on recidivism, and low-risk inmates
should receive minimal or even no intervention.
Should low-risk inmates be placed in prerelease custody earlier to help free up
spots for moderate- and high-risk inmates? It could be argued that if BOP cannot
expand the capacity of its rehabilitative programming at a quick enough rate, it
57 The Psychology of Criminal Conduct, p. 48.
58 Ibid.
59 Vera Institute of Justice’s memorandum re: risk and needs assessment, p. 2.
60 S. 1917 does state that “[the risk and needs assessment system] shall provide guidance on the kind and amount of
recidivism reduction programming or productive activities appropriate for each prisoner.”
61 For a more in-depth discussion of issues related to BOP’s budget, see CRS Report R42486, Appropriations for the
Bureau of Prisons (BOP): In Brief.
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Congressional Research Service 16
might make sense to place inmates at low-risk of recidivism in the community
earlier if doing so would allow BOP to provide high-quality rehabilitative
programming to medium- and high-risk inmates.
Should an agency like the National Institute of Corrections (NIC) be required to
conduct regular process evaluations to ensure that rehabilitative programs are
being implemented with fidelity to the program model? As previously mentioned,
research indicates that rehabilitative programming that closely adheres to the
RNR principles is the most effective at reducing recidivism. Legislation before
Congress would only require NIC to evaluate recidivism reduction programs to
“determine whether such programming or activities may be certified as evidence-
based and effective at reducing or mitigating offender risk and recidivism.”62
Should Risk and Needs Assessment Be Used in Sentencing?
Another issue policymakers might consider is whether risk and needs assessment should be used
in sentencing to help identify low-risk offenders who could be diverted to community supervision
rather than incarcerated. As discussed previously, research suggests that low-risk offenders should
not be subjected to intensive treatment (and some research indicates that it might be
criminogenic) and that they could be effectively supervised in the community. Legislation before
Congress would require BOP, to the extent practicable, to house low-risk inmates together, which
might mitigate some of the criminogenic effects of placing low-risk offenders in prison. The
legislation would also provide ways to place some inmates in prerelease custody earlier (e.g.,
allowing inmates to earn additional time credits that would allow them to serve a greater
proportion of their sentence in a Residential Reentry Center, in home confinement, or on
supervised release in the community). However, if the purpose of the legislation is to reduce the
federal prison population and save money without negatively affecting public safety, it is
significantly cheaper to place low-risk offenders on community supervision than incarcerate
them.63
While some scholars have argued for integrating risk assessment into sentencing guidelines to
help judges determine the appropriate sentences for offenders,64 research suggests that if risk
assessments were to be integrated into sentencing, it might be best to use it as a way to screen-out
low-risk offenders from prison. 65 However, if risk assessment were integrated into sentencing
decisions there is a risk of false negatives, which would mean that an offender who is assessed to
be at low risk for recidivism might be diverted from incarceration to some form of community
supervision but still go on to recidivate.
During the Obama Administration, DOJ, while acknowledging the important role evidence-based
programs and practices play in the effective rehabilitation and reentry of inmates, raised concerns
62 See S. 1917 and S. 1994.
63 The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts reports that in FY2016, the average annual cost of probation
supervision was $4,392 per probationer, compared to $34,770 to house an inmate in a federal prison. Administrative
Office of the U.S. Courts, “Incarceration Costs Significantly More than Supervision,” August 17, 2017,
http://www.uscourts.gov/news/2017/08/17/incarceration-costs-significantly-more-supervision.
64 Jordan M. Hyatt, Mark H. Bergstrom, and Steven L. Chanenson, “Follow the Evidence: Integrate Risk Assessment
into Sentencing,” Federal Sentencing Reporter, vol. 23, no. 4, April 2011, pp. 266-268.
65 Seena Fazel, Jay P. Singh, and Helen Doll, “Use of Risk Assessment Instruments to Predict Violence and Antisocial
Behaviour in 73 Samples Involving 24,827 People: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis,” BMJ: British Medical
Journal, vol. 345, July 24, 2012, http://www.bmj.com/content/bmj/345/bmj.e4692.full.pdf.
Risk and Needs Assessment in the Federal Prison System
Congressional Research Service 17
about making risk assessment a part of determining sentences for federal offenders.66 DOJ echoed
previously mentioned concerns that risk assessment bases individual-level decisions on group
dynamics and that determining someone’s risk of reoffending on, in part, static risk factors might
place certain groups of offenders at a disadvantage (e.g., being denied pre-trial release or being
incarcerated for longer periods for factors that can never be changed). DOJ also argued that using
risk assessment in determining sentences would erode certainty in sentencing, something
Congress attempted to address when it passed the Sentencing Reform Act (P.L. 98-473), which
eliminated parole for federal inmates and established a determinate sentencing structure under the
federal sentencing guidelines. DOJ also argued that sentencing should primarily be about holding
offenders accountable for their criminal behavior and not about the likelihood of future offending.
Should There Be a Decreased Emphasis on Long Prison Sentences?
If Congress were to consider legislation to implement risk and needs assessment in the federal
prison system, policymakers might consider whether implementing a policy of making decisions
based on an offender’s risk level is compatible with the desire of many for long prison sentences
for certain offenders. Legislation before Congress would exempt inmates convicted of certain
crimes from being eligible for earned time credits. This would mean that offenders convicted of
certain offenses would be required to serve a greater proportion of their sentences in prison even
if they are deemed to be at a low risk for recidivism. As discussed previously, it is an offender’s
past history of antisocial behavior, among other factors, and not the offender’s current offense,
that is indicative of a risk for recidivism. Therefore, the policy of requiring certain offenders to
serve most of their sentences in prison might undermine the potential effectiveness of a risk and
needs assessment system.
Recent research has explored the effectiveness of incarceration as a way to reduce crime. It
suggests that while incarceration contributed to lower violent crime rates in the 1990s, there are
declining marginal returns associated with ever-increasing levels of incarceration.67 The
diminishing level of return resulting from higher levels of incarceration might be explained by the
fact that continued increases in incarceration are likely to include more offenders who are either
at the end of their criminal careers or who are not committing crimes at a high rate.68 Another
possible reason for diminishing marginal returns might be that more of the individuals
incarcerated over the past three decades have been incarcerated for crimes where there is a high
level of replacement.69 For example, if a street-level drug dealer is incarcerated and there is no
decrease in demand for drugs in the drug market, it is possible that someone will step in to take
that person’s role; therefore, few or no further crimes would be averted by incarcerating the
street-level dealer. It is also possible that being imprisoned with other offenders will have a
criminogenic effect, especially for low-risk offenders for whom prison may serve to increase their
risk of recidivism rather than reduce it.70
66 Letter from Jonathan J. Wroblewski, Director, Office of Policy and Legislation, Criminal Division, U.S. Department
of Justice, to The Honorable Patti B. Saris, Chair, U.S. Sentencing Commission, July 29, 2014.
67 Anne Morrison Piehl and Bert Useem, “Prisons,” in Crime and Public Policy, ed. Joan Petersilia and James Q.
Wilson, 2nd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), p. 542.
68 Doris Layton MacKenzie, “Reducing the Criminal Activities of Known Offenders and Delinquents: Crime
Prevention in the Courts and Corrections,” in Evidence-based Crime Prevention, ed. Lawrence W. Sherman, David P.
Farrington, Brandon C. Welsh, and Doris Layton MacKenzie (New York: Routledge, 2002), p. 337.
69 Bert Useem and Anne Morrison Piehl, Prison State: The Challenge of Mass Incarceration (New York: Cambridge
University Press, 2008), p. 74.
70 The Psychology of Criminal Conduct, p. 433.
Risk and Needs Assessment in the Federal Prison System
Congressional Research Service 18
Research on the psychology of punishment also provides insight into why incarceration might
provide a limited deterrent effect. For punishment to be successful at suppressing behavior it
requires
the immediate delivery of a punishment,
catching and punishing criminals for every offense,
not allowing the offender to be able to escape from the consequences of the
behavior,
making the intensity of the punishment associated with the behavior greater than
the intensity of the rewards, and
the punishment be consistent with the characteristics of the offender.71
However, “the necessary conditions for effective punishment are virtually impossible to meet for
the criminal justice system. Police cannot be everywhere to ensure the certainty of detection, the
courts cannot pass sentence quickly without violating due process, and correctional officials have
difficulties ensuring adequate supervision and monitoring.”72
There is also an argument to be made about the purpose of incarceration. While there might be a
minimal general deterrent effect associated with incarceration, it does provide for incapacitation,
which can reduce the number of crimes an incarcerated offender can commit. Sentencing
someone to prison for several years, or even decades, could also be viewed as a way for society to
say that there are certain behaviors that will not be tolerated, and those who commit such
transgressions must be severely punished.
Author Contact Information
Nathan James
Analyst in Crime Policy
[email protected], 7-0264
71 Ibid., pp. 443-447.
72 Ibid., p. 451.