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Report

Counting Down: Paths to a 20-Year Maximum Prison Sentence

Capping sentences for the most serious offenses at 20 years and shifting sentences for all other offenses proportionately downward, including by decriminalizing some acts, is a vital decarceration strategy to arrive at a system that values human dignity and prioritizes racial equity.

Related to: Sentencing Reform, Incarceration

Young man standing in front of a glowing orange background

Executive Summary

As the United States marks 50 years of mass incarceration, dramatic change is necessary to ensure another 50 do not follow.1 In no small part due to long sentences, the United States has one of the world’s highest incarceration rates, with nearly two million people in prisons and jails.2 The destabilizing force of mass incarceration deepens social and economic inequity – families lose not only a loved one, but income and childcare. By age 14, one in 14 children in the United States experience a parent leaving for jail or prison.3 Individuals returning to the community face profound barriers to employment and housing.4 Meantime the communities most impacted by crime – poor communities and communities of color – disproportionately bear the burden of incarceration’s impacts. Long sentences affect young Black men disproportionately compared to every other race and age group.5 Twice as many Black children as white children have experienced parental incarceration.6 Mass incarceration entrenches cycles of harm, trauma, and disinvestment and consumes funds that might support investment in interventions that empower communities and create lasting safety.7

In the United States, over half of people in prison are serving a decade or longer and one in seven incarcerated people are serving a life sentence.8 To end mass incarceration, the United States must dramatically shorten sentences. Capping sentences for the most serious offenses at 20 years and shifting sentences for all other offenses proportionately downward, including by decriminalizing some acts, is a vital decarceration strategy to arrive at a system that values human dignity and prioritizes racial equity.

This report begins by examining the evidence in support of capping sentences at 20 years. Countries such as Germany and Norway illustrate that sentences can be far shorter without sacrificing public safety. A wealth of criminological evidence makes clear that unduly long sentences are unnecessary: people age out of crime, and even the general threat of long term imprisonment is an ineffective deterrent.

The Sentencing Project recommends the following seven legislative reforms to cap sentences at 20 years and right-size the sentencing structure:

  1. Abolish death and life without parole (LWOP) sentences, limiting maximum sentences to 20 years.9
  2. Limit murder statutes to intentional killings, excluding offenses such as felony murder, and reduce homicide penalties.
  3. Eliminate mandatory minimum sentences and reform sentencing guidelines to ensure that judges can use their discretion to consider mitigating circumstances.
  4. Provide universal access to parole and ensure timely review.
  5. Eliminate consecutive sentences and limit sentence enhancements, including repealing “truth-in-sentencing” and “habitual offender” laws.
  6. Create an opportunity for judicial “second look” resentencing within a maximum of 10 years of imprisonment, regardless of an individual’s offense.
  7. Shift all sentences downward, including by de-felonizing many offenses and decriminalizing many misdemeanors.

Finally, this report offers ideas for how stakeholders can take steps toward shrinking sentences today. Prosecuting attorneys can use their discretion to limit sentences to 20 years when charging and plea bargaining, as well as engage in sentence review. Judges can impose lower sentences where possible. And communities can invest in interventions that prevent long sentences by keeping people from entering or reentering the criminal legal system altogether. Limiting maximum terms to 20 years need not be the end goal of criminal legal reform – 20 years is still an extraordinary length of time in prison – but it is an essential step toward a fair and proportionate justice system.

Introduction

As the United States marks 50 years since the era of mass incarceration began, it is a moral imperative to take a hard look at the mindset, laws, and policies that have created and sustained it.

Fifty years ago, the imprisonment rate stood at 93 imprisoned people per 100,000 residents in the general population.10 But as the United States started its sharp, upward climb over the following four decades, imprisonment rates eventually grew 700%. Though crime both increased and decreased over these decades, prison populations continued to grow until 2009. In the subsequent decade, the prison population declined at an annual rate of 1% – a pace that would require more than 50 years just to cut the prison population in half.11 Ending mass incarceration will require investing heavily in effective alternatives to limit reliance on incarceration and decreasing the length of time people spend in prison.12

Laws and policies that lengthen prison sentences, enhance time-served requirements, and limit parole have combined to lengthen prison stays dramatically. In Georgia, for example, the typical sentence imposed for voluntary manslaughter in 1990 was just under 13 years and those convicted were released, on average, after five years. By mid-2022, the typical sentence for the same crime was nearly 20 years and the average time served was just over 11 years.13 Time in prison for this crime more than doubled in about 20 years.

A number of state and federal policymakers have begun to pursue reforms to stem prison growth, but thus far, most decarceration strategies have focused on people convicted of relatively low-level, nonviolent crimes. These efforts are worthwhile, but leave excessively long sentences largely untouched.14 It is virtually impossible to end mass incarceration without addressing long sentences, which are typically applied in response to violent crimes.15 The Sentencing Project recommends capping all prison sentences at 20 years to address the societal harms caused by mass incarceration while still protecting public safety.

The Case for 20 Years

A 20-year sentence cap would align the U.S. with many western democratic nations. In countries such as Norway and Germany, criminal sanctions balance accountability with proportionality while protecting human dignity. As a result, most periods of imprisonment do not exceed 20 years, and sentences for lesser offenses reflect this general cap.16 Prison time is dedicated to programming, therapy, self-improvement, and education to improve odds of remaining crime-free after release. It is well understood that this period should last no longer than 20 years, and typically takes far less time.

Evidence shows lengthy prison terms do not have a significant deterrent effect on crime,17 but they do divert resources from effective investments in public safety.18 This reasoning implies, then, that a 20-year sentence cap could promote public safety. Long sentences also exacerbate many of the pains of imprisonment, including accelerated declines in health for which people receive substandard health care.19

Criminal sentences that foreclose a meaningful likelihood of release are cruel and merciless. Most criminal careers are under 10 years20 and as people age, they usually desist from crime. Even people who engage in chronic, repeat offending that begins in young adulthood usually desist by their late 30s.21 A 20-year sentence cap would mean ceasing to incarcerate many people who have aged out of crime.

Implementing a 20-year sentence cap would prioritize reforms that shift all sentences underneath this cap downward. The Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that over half the people in prison are serving a decade or longer.22 The Sentencing Project’s research finds that one in seven incarcerated people is serving a life sentence.23 A prospective and retrospective 20-year sentence cap would have an immediate and significant influence on prison populations and give hope to those experiencing some of its greatest cruelties.

Lastly, a sentence cap of 20 years would advance racial justice. Though overrepresentation of Black and Latinx Americans and other people of color plagues the criminal legal system from beginning to end, the disparity grows more evident as sentence lengths increase.24 In 2019, Black people represented 14% of the total U.S. population, 33% of the total prison population, and 46% of the prison population who had already served at least 10 years. One in five Black men in prison is serving a life sentence and two thirds of all people serving life are people of color.25 Higher levels of engagement in violent crime explain only some of this disproportionality. As an abundance of scholarship demonstrates, racial and ethnic bias drives harsher sentencing outcomes because of race.26

Charting a Path to 20 Years

Rolling back decades of increasingly punitive sentencing structures will be difficult, but all jurisdictions can begin to rein in the local drivers of extreme sentences. The following recommendations offer paths toward a 20-year sentencing cap. Legislative reform strategies should target the statutes and practices that drive extreme sentences while taking account of local political considerations.

  1. Abolish death and life without parole sentences
    The path to capping sentences at 20 years should begin with eliminating, prospectively and retroactively, the most extreme sentences: the death penalty and life without parole (LWOP). Those who are already serving such sentences should be allowed to appear before a judge to receive a new sentence, and the courts should no longer have the option to impose such sentences. While the use of the death penalty continues to decline across the United States, death sentences remain legal in half of the country. As of November 2022, over 2,400 people were facing active death sentences.27 Continued use of the death penalty has met significant international condemnation.28As of 2020, 55,945 people in the U.S. were serving LWOP sentences. All states except for Alaska currently permit LWOP sentences,29 and U.S. courts thus far have not ruled LWOP unconstitutional wholesale. The United States’ frequent use of LWOP distinguishes it from other western democracies. International human rights standards reject the use of LWOP, which is also increasingly referred to as “death by incarceration.”30 Though few countries have outlawed it outright, many have never adopted it and among those who have, its use is extremely rare.31 For example, the Canadian Supreme Court unanimously ruled that LWOP was cruel and therefore unconstitutional in 2022, eliminating its use both retroactively and prospectively.32There is reason to believe that efforts to eliminate LWOP will eventually succeed. In recent years its use has become increasingly curtailed for people who were under 18 at the time of their crime, which provides an opening for additional categories of individuals to challenge its application.33 For example, the Washington Supreme Court ruled that LWOP is unconstitutional for young adults under 21 years old.34 The Michigan Supreme Court held that mandatory life without parole for 18-year-olds violates the state’s constitution.35 Massachusetts courts are also currently assessing the constitutionality of mandatory LWOP sentences for individuals under 21.36 Illinois passed similar legislation in 2019 that allowed those who committed crimes when they were younger than 21 to apply for parole after 10 years.37Some states that had eliminated parole-eligible life sentences are also beginning to contemplate reinstating them.38 In 2021, following the advocacy of the Massachusetts Campaign to End Life Without Parole, lawmakers considered H1797, a bill that would have ended LWOP by making all individuals eligible for parole after 25 years of incarceration.39 While that bill did not succeed, it offers an example of how states can begin to eliminate the most extreme sentences. Likewise, in 2022, the Maine legislature established a commission to examine reinstatement of parole, which was abolished in 1976.40 If its recommendations result in a successful legislative proposal to reinstate parole, Maine will join the rest of the Northeast region in having this release mechanism.  
  2. Limit murder liability and lower homicide sentences 
    Homicide causes unique, irreparable harm, and in turn is typically punished with the longest prison sentences. Murder convictions are disproportionately responsible for 20-plus year sentences. In Illinois, for instance, more than two thirds of those serving sentences of 20 years or more, including those with life sentences, have been convicted of a homicide.41Homicide statutes often criminalize a broad swath of conduct with widely varying degrees of culpability – from intentional, premeditated murder to “felony murder.” Felony murder laws treat people who were involved in a felony that resulted in a death as if they intentionally committed the resulting homicide. Such laws disproportionately affect people of color, young people, and women.42 This population includes people like Tevin Louis, who was convicted of felony murder when a police officer killed his friend Marquise Sampson after the teens committed a robbery, even though Louis was not present when Sampson was shot.43 Felony murder laws do not decrease the likelihood of the commission of felony crimes nor deadly felony crimes.44 Leading scholars in the field recommend their full abolition.45 Reform is underway in some jurisdictions: in 2022, the District of Columbia, for example, passed a bill eliminating accomplice liability for felony murder.46 Similarly, eliminating drug-induced homicide (DIH) laws would reduce sentences that exceed 20 years. DIH laws punish the act of providing someone with an illicit substance which unintentionally results in a fatal overdose as homicide. DIH laws were introduced in the 1980s and spread to 23 states, the District of Columbia, and the federal system.47 In response to the overdose epidemic, some prosecutors have dramatically increased the rate of DIH prosecutions in their jurisdictions.48 Research shows, however, that DIH laws fail to curb overdoses.49 DIH laws also discourage people from calling for help in the case of an emergency – one study found that media reports of DIH prosecutions were associated with an increase in overdose deaths50 and only four states offer immunity from DIH if a person calls 911 during an overdose.51 And DIH laws often criminalize bereaved loved ones48 and disproportionately yield longer sentences for people of color.53Beyond limiting the reach of unintentional homicide liability, jurisdictions can also lower homicide sentences without endangering public safety. As discussed above, in countries such as Germany and Norway, periods of incarceration rarely exceed 20 years, including for homicide offenses. Research shows that, while very serious, committing homicide is typically an isolated offense. When individuals who commit homicides return to the community, their likelihood of committing another homicide is extremely low, typically 1-3%.54 The majority of individuals convicted of homicide will never violently recidivate.55 And individuals convicted of homicide have far lower rates of overall recidivism than individuals convicted of other crimes. 56 Jurisdictions can safely lower the maximum sentence for homicide to 20 years and reinvest savings earned from less imprisonment towards making communities safer, while still holding individuals accountable.
  3. Eliminate mandatory minimums and reform sentencing guidelines
    Mandatory minimums do not improve public safety.57 They do, however, increase racial disparities,58 incarceration rates,59 and coercive plea bargains.60 Public sentiment is growing against mandatory minimums,61 and there are bipartisan calls for their repeal.62 Judges often denounce the ways in which mandatory minimums constrain their discretion.63 Among many other organizations, the Judicial Conference of the United States, the American Law Institute’s Model Penal Code, and the American Bar Association call for their elimination.64 All 50 states currently retain many mandatory minimums,65 although many state codes provide for a “safety valve” to allow judges to depart from the minimum in special circumstances.66 Reforms to mandatory minimums have been modest, but in 2022, the District of Columbia Council took a significant step by passing a bill eliminating all mandatory minimums with the sole exception of those imposed for first degree murder.67The impact of mandatory minimums is particularly stark in the federal system. As of January 2022, 62% of individuals in federal prisons had been convicted of an offense carrying a mandatory minimum, although nearly a quarter were sentenced below that minimum because they qualified for relief.68 Homicide convictions are rare in the federal system; instead, many of the most extreme sentences stem from drugs, firearms, and convictions for crimes of a sexual nature carrying mandatory minimums. In turn, more than half of people serving life sentences in federal prison have been convicted of a nonviolent drug crime.69 Nearly three quarters of those convicted of crimes of a sexual nature were convicted of an offense carrying long mandatory minimums, and most remain subject to a mandatory minimum at sentencing, yielding an average sentence of over 21.5 years for those who did not receive relief.70The federal sentencing guidelines have also shaped long sentences, acting much like mandatory minimums in practice.71 Though advisory as of 2005 following United States v. Booker,72 the guidelines urge higher sentences than those typically imposed by judges and contribute to the high federal prison population.73 The National Research Council, a nonpartisan body of crime policy experts and criminologists, wrote that the federal guidelines “greatly increased both the percentage of individuals receiving prison sentences and the length of sentences for many offenses.”74Many states have followed the federal model and adopted their own sentencing guidelines with the goal of limiting the extent to which a sentence can be reduced after sentencing.75 While some of these state guidelines are mandatory, some are advisory, and the core rules that shape the guidelines vary significantly, all place limitations on judges’ discretion to sentence below the guidelines.76 In particular, a common feature of state guidelines is that a prior record requires an increased sentence. Such rules can significantly contribute to increased incarceration, racial disparities, and extreme sentences with minimal public safety benefits.77 To reduce those harms, both states and the federal system should eliminate mandatory minimums and reform sentencing guidelines to not only permit, but encourage lower sentences.
  4. Expand access to timely parole review
    In response to federal funding incentives included in the notorious 1994 Crime Bill, most states passed laws in the 1990s requiring individuals convicted of violent offenses to spend 85% to 100% of their sentence in prison.78 So-called “truth-in-sentencing” laws have no public safety benefit. In fact, by denying individuals the opportunity to earn early release, they remove a common incentive for participation in rehabilitative programming. Limitations on parole dramatically increase time served, and can play a crucial role in overall incarceration rates. For example, Louisiana’s extraordinarily high incarceration rate reflects, in part, the elimination of parole for life sentences. Today Louisiana imposes a mandatory LWOP sentence for both first and second degree murder, but Louisiana’s life sentences were not always so harsh. In 1926, Louisiana codified a term of 10.5 years to equal a life sentence, with the presumption that release would be earned through good behavior at this time. Early release mechanisms such as this were not uncommon – life sentences in other states often did not require more than 15 years in prison.79 Following the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court death penalty moratorium,80 Louisiana passed a law requiring life sentences for murder to carry a 20-year minimum before parole eligibility.81 Three years later, the legislature raised the minimum to 40 years. Finally in 1979, lawmakers abolished parole eligibility for anyone serving a life sentence.82 Louisiana’s incarceration rate is now the second highest in the nation.83Likewise, as Tennessee has increasingly embraced truth-in-sentencing provisions over the last 30 years, its incarceration rate has steadily climbed.84 In 1995, Tennessee imposed an 85% time served requirement for several violent offenses in order to qualify for federal incentive funding under the 1994 Crime Bill.85 The state legislature also increased the length of time required for parole eligibility for a life sentence from 25 years to 60 years.86 Tennessee’s latest truth-in-sentencing law, passed in 2022, requires 100% time served for individuals convicted of several serious offenses and 85% for a broader array of crimes.87 The Tennessee Department of Corrections projects that the ensuing increases in incarceration – which apply only to those convicted on or after July 1, 2022–will cost $80 million over the next 8 years.88 Some individuals will serve three times as long as they would have had they been convicted under prior law.89The United States’ experiment with limiting parole to improve public safety has failed: we now know that lengthening incarceration does not make communities safer.90 Reinstating parole, however, is far from a panacea to decreasing incarceration; parole boards will also need significant reforms, such as requiring parole commissioners to focus on the current risk to the community, rather than the facts of the underlying offense, even if statutory barriers to parole are removed.91 A holistic reenvisioning of parole – from when individuals become eligible, to the standards employed by parole boards, to the length of parole, the conditions imposed, the services provided, and the grounds for revocation – is ultimately vital to decrease incarceration and improve public safety.
  5. Restrict consecutive sentences and limit sentence enhancements
    In 2013, 21-year-old Atdom Mikels Patsalis was charged with committing a string of 22 burglaries over a three-month period.92 Most of the burglaries involved breaking into sheds or garages, no one was physically harmed, and the total value of stolen goods was under $5,000. Patsalis was convicted and sentenced for each crime individually, not collectively. The sentences for each offense ranged from 15 years to 3 years and 9 months. Given his prior record, the court elected to impose those sentences consecutively instead of concurrently, sentencing him to a total of 298 years in prison – a punishment on par with aggravated murder. He challenged his sentence on the grounds that it was a cruel and unusual punishment. Although the appellate court’s decision was split, the majority ruled that he did not receive a “grossly disproportionate” sentence.93 Although Patsalis’s sentence is a particularly egregious example, consecutive sentencing – requiring individuals to serve multiple terms of imprisonment one after the other for multiple offenses committed at the same time – is common and has contributed to the build-up of excessive sentences. Canada’s model suggests an alternative. Canadian judges could not impose consecutive sentences at all until 2011, and now can only impose them in murder cases.94 Jurisdictions in the U.S. should likewise consider limiting consecutive sentences to the most serious cases, legislating a presumption that even in such circumstances sentences will be concurrent unless substantial justice dictates otherwise, and capping total sentences at 20 years. Sentencing enhancements, provisions within the criminal code or sentencing guidelines that impose increased sentences based on certain conditions, can similarly inflate prison time. Sentencing enhancements often stack additional mandatory minimums on top of an existing sentence based on the possession or use of a weapon, alleged gang affiliation, or prior criminal history.95 “Habitual offender” laws, for example, increase sentences based on prior criminal conduct. Louisiana’s criminal code illustrates this approach by permitting sentences to be increased from 20 years to LWOP upon a fourth felony conviction, even if the offense does not include violence.96Sentence enhancements based on one’s previous convictions, however long ago, entrench racial disparities given the disparities at every stage of the criminal legal process from arrest to sentencing.97 Among those serving LWOP in Mississippi, 74% of those sentenced under the state’s habitual offender law between 1986 and 2018 are Black.98 Analysis of LWOP sentencing data over the same period in North Carolina reveals similar disproportionality: 81% of those sentenced to LWOP using the state’s habitual offender statute are Black. “Three strikes” laws often serve as the most severe form of habitual offender statute – mandating a life with parole or LWOP sentence for a third offense, not necessarily violent in nature. Three strikes laws gained popularity in the mid-1990s, with 23 states and the federal government passing such laws.99 Judges have criticized such statutes for restraining discretion and producing overly long prison sentences, noting that they also disparately impact people of color and dramatically increase incarceration.100 And despite the prevalence of three strikes laws, their public safety benefit is negligible: 10 years after their enactment, crime rates in states with strike laws fared no better than those without.101 Given the limited value of such enhancements, and their tremendous human cost, jurisdictions should explore other less carceral avenues to decrease recidivism and improve public safety.
  6. Give everyone a second look
    Extending relief to all those serving sentences over 20 years will require more than piecemeal statutory reform. The American Bar Association recommends that jurisdictions implement universal second look policies that allow all individuals to go before a judge once again after 10 years to assess the appropriateness of the original sentence, given their rehabilitation and risk to the community.102 Some jurisdictions are already exploring second look laws. In 2022, U.S. Senator Cory Booker and Representative Karen Bass reintroduced the Second Look Act, a bill which would offer all individuals incarcerated for federal crimes a second look after 10 years.103 The District of Columbia created a second look mechanism in 2019 for individuals who committed crimes while under age 18, allowing them to petition the court for resentencing after 15 years, then expanded the provision by raising the
    age limit to 25.104 The D.C. Council then passed a bill expanding that provision to allow any person, regardless of their age at the time of the offense, to petition the court for review of their sentence after 20 years.67 Some jurisdictions are also creating second look mechanisms for narrower categories of offenses. For example, New York’s Domestic Violence Survivor Justice Act (2019) created sentencing reductions and resentencing opportunities for qualified survivors of domestic violence.106 Regardless of their form, second look laws that give second chances to people serving long sentences are fiscally prudent, offer hope to families and incarcerated people, and are an invaluable tool for decarceration.107
  7. Shift all sentences downward
    When sentences for the most serious offenses are capped at 20 years, the sentences for lesser offenses must be recalibrated as well. The severity of extreme sentences exerts an upward pull on sentences lower down the scale. Even 10 years in prison is often far longer than public safety concerns justify. Most criminal careers typically end within approximately 10 years and recidivism rates fall measurably after about a decade of imprisonment.108 Yet, more than half of people in U.S. prisons have been incarcerated for over 10 years.109 Lowering that figure prospectively through statutory reforms and retroactively via “second look” mechanisms, parole, and commutations should accompany 20-year sentencing cap reforms. Here, efforts to address sentencing for nonviolent crimes also come into play. Jurisdictions can begin to lower sentences by de-felonizing many offenses and decriminalizing non-public safety misdemeanors – including all simple possession of controlled substances. The increase in the felony charging rate per arrest over the last 30 years has been a key contributor to the rise of mass incarceration.110 California, Connecticut, Oklahoma, and Utah have reclassified all drug possession from a felony to a misdemeanor, with positive outcomes.111 California’s Proposition 47 raised the minimum felony threshold for various property crimes and reduced prison spending by $68 million in the first year alone111 without in reoffending.113 Similarly, some jurisdictions have explored non-prosecution for a wide array of misdemeanors associated with poverty. In Boston, research found that such non-prosecution reduced recidivism – a reflection of the criminogenic impact of even low-level criminal legal involvement.114 Moving low level offenses out of the criminal legal system altogether has the potential to not only decrease jail populations, but make communities safer. A number of studies have shown that community supervision produces better public safety outcomes than short terms of imprisonment.115 Jurisdictions should also implement checks on prosecutorial discretion such as interventions that improve prosecutorial transparency in plea bargaining, disincentivize overcharging, and protect the adversarial process.116

Addressing exceptional cases

While the vast majority of individuals, regardless of conviction offense, will age out of criminal behavior,117 a small percentage of persons may still present a risk to public safety at the conclusion of 20 years in prison. This small percentage of cases may include individuals with a history of chronic and serial violent recidivism and individuals who commit mass killings.118 To address such cases other countries use preventative detention, a legal mechanism to prevent future offending by individuals perceived to be a high reoffense risk. The specifics differ by country. For example, Canada uses an indeterminate sentence with a review process, while Belgium, France, and Germany extend incapacitation using either determinate or indeterminate sentencing. In these countries, preventative detention is typically part of the original criminal sentencing which extends the period of confinement beyond the original sentence length.119

In the U.S., preventative detention, a civil court process, is used in the form of civil commitment for crimes of a sexual nature, which allows for the indefinite confinement of persons beyond the term of their court-ordered sentence. Published estimates indicate the U.S. confines at least 6,300 individuals using civil commitment.120 Those who are detained are rarely released or die while confined, living in prison-like conditions, which equates the facilities that hold them to “shadow prisons,” a prison under another guise.121 Expanding the use of this form of preventative detention in the U.S. is not recommended because of the current lack of criminal due process safeguards and high probability of de facto lifetime confinement without legitimate opportunities for relief. The deep flaws in its current use underline the need to explore alternative solutions to civil detention in order to promote public safety, rehabilitation and fair treatment. Given the history of mass incarceration in the U.S., whatever structure is implemented to address this potential small group of outliers must guard against recreating the harms of extreme sentencing.

Were the U.S. to implement a system of preventative detention for this small outlier population, the following principles should shape its structure to avoid a replication of current extreme sentencing while maintaining appropriate safeguards for public safety. The principles are far from an exhaustive set of guidelines for preventative detention, rather they represent a potential set of limits to restrict its abuse.

  • Preventative detention at the end of a 20 year sentence should be statutorily limited to the most extreme offenses in combination with a current high or very high violent recidivism risk score. Recidivism risk scores should be derived from scientifically-validated risk assessment tools. Such tools should account for dynamic factors (e.g., participation in rehabilitation), not solely static factors (e.g., criminal history).122 In practice, the majority of serious offenses are unlikely to fulfill both of these criteria. Even those classified as “high risk” will rarely be high risk forever.123 Desistance is the norm.
  • All individuals statutorily eligible for preventative detention should receive an initial adversarial hearing as they approach the end of their 20 year sentence to assess whether they pose a continuing immediate danger to public safety and yearly hearings thereafter to assess the appropriateness of continuing preventative detention.
  • The correctional agency should be mandated to provide intensive rehabilitative treatment and programming for individuals with statutorily eligible offenses from the time of their original sentencing to reduce their risk of being assessed as posing a high risk of violent recidivism at the end of their 20 year sentence. Compliance with that mandate should be assessed through regular independent oversight.
  • All individuals, regardless of their offense or evaluated risk, should be subject to a presumption of release at their detention hearings – the burden to prove that an individual poses a high risk of violent recidivism and a continuing immediate danger to the community should fall on the prosecution or fact finder.
  • At all detention hearings, individuals should retain their full due process rights – including the right to legal counsel and the right to cross-examination.
  • At such hearings, the court should require the government to provide a detailed plan for rehabilitation, with the ongoing goal of returning the individual to the community.
  • Preventative detention should incorporate multiple levels of custody, for example correctional facilities where individuals can leave during the day to work and visit loved ones,124 electronic monitoring, intensive supervised release,125 or placement in a reentry court. The court should be required to impose the least restrictive form of custody necessary to protect public safety.
  • Similarly, individuals should not be detained in facilities resembling current U.S. prisons. Conditions of detention should not be punitive, rather they should be as unrestrictive as possible while protecting public safety. For example, facilities should embrace the correctional principle of “normalization” as modeled in some German, Dutch, and Norwegian prisons, where daily life within the prison resembles daily life in the community as much as practically possible.126
  • Robust and wraparound reentry supports and services should be available to all individuals, but especially those statutorily eligible for preventative detention.

In short, preventive detention should be subject to an array of mandates and restrictions that ensure that it is imposed as little as possible, for as short a period of time as possible, in the most humane way possible. It is unwise both morally and fiscally to incarcerate individuals indefinitely on the basis of unlawful acts they might commit in the future. This negates human capacity for change as well as our fundamental rights to due process of law. Desistance is the norm and occurs far sooner than current sentencing structures acknowledge.

Moving Toward a 20-Year Cap with Existing Tools

The road to capping sentences at 20 years will be incremental, but meaningful change can begin immediately.

Even without legislative reform, judges can take steps to move sentences toward a 20-year maximum. When legally permitted, courts can make more extensive use of downward departures from mandatory minimum sentences or the lower end of sentencing ranges. Likewise, absent statutory bars, judges can impose concurrent rather than consecutive sentences.

Prosecutors have even greater power to move toward a 20-year sentencing cap, as they have wide latitude over charging, plea bargaining, and sentence recommendations. The overwhelming majority of convictions are achieved through plea bargains. Therefore prosecutors have the ability to radically decrease extreme sentences in the absence of legislative reform. They can adopt a policy of charging offenses proportionately and holistically – not merely pursuing the highest charge provable beyond a reasonable doubt – and avoiding, if possible, charges that trigger mandatory minimums. They can also decline to seek sentencing enhancements based on prior criminal history and alleged gang affiliation. They can even adopt a 20-year sentence cap for their offices, by committing to cap plea offers and sentence recommendations at 20 years.

Prosecutors can also tackle extreme sentences retroactively. Using already existing resentencing processes or newly passed laws, some prosecutors have integrated “prosecutor-initiated resentencing” within their offices, often through sentence review units.127 Prosecutor-initiated resentencing empowers prosecutors to review and correct unjustly lengthy sentences, outside the narrow confines of innocence or conviction integrity review. And at minimum, prosecutors can make supporting parole the default, rather than the exception. While legislative reform to cap sentences at 20 years will be a lengthy process, elected prosecutors can begin the process immediately and, by opening their doors to researchers, help strengthen the body of evidence regarding the public safety impact of reducing sentences.

Finally, communities can invest in interventions that prevent extreme sentences by preventing crime and recidivism. Ranging from improving public lighting in crime hotspots, to youth employment programs, to credible messengers who intervene with the young men most at risk for gun violence, an abundance of effective evidence-based responses to violent crime are available.128 Evidence-based reentry services can also decrease recidivism.129

Conclusion

Capping all sentences at 20 years is a challenging but feasible policy goal, as demonstrated by its success in other countries and a project worthy of advocates’ and policymakers’ attention. The path to a 20-year cap will be different in every jurisdiction, but all steps offer vital hope to people serving lengthy sentences and their loved ones. Of course, obtaining a proportional, fair system of justice will take more than just shortening sentences, but it is integral to a wholesale reimagining of public safety that focuses on healthy and empowered communities, transforming prisons, investing in evidence-based prevention, and pursuing restorative alternatives to the carceral system.

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Ghandnoosh, N. & Nellis, A. (2022). How many people are spending over a decade in prison? The Sentencing Project; Nellis, A. (2021). No end in sight: America’s enduring reliance on life imprisonment. The Sentencing Project.

9.

To address the most extreme outlier cases for which 20 years of imprisonment may not suffice, the report recommends highly limited preventative detention with robust due process guarantees. Such detention must be subject to restrictions to avoid the pitfalls of the United States’ already extreme usage of preventative detention for crimes of a sexual nature and fraught history with civil commitment.

10.

Cahalan, M. W. (1986). Historical corrections statistics in the United States, 1850-1984. Bureau of Justice Statistics.

11.

Ghandnoosh, N. (2021). Can we wait 60 years to cut the prison population in half? The Sentencing Project.

12.

Travis, J., Western, B., & Redburn, S. (Eds.) (2014). The growth of incarceration in the United States: Exploring causes and consequences. National Research Council. National Academies Press.

13.

Georgia Department of Corrections (2022, December). Prisoner length of stay (CY) report.

14.

Mauer, M. (2018). Long-term sentences: Time to reconsider the scale of punishment. University of Missouri Kansas City Law Review 87(1), 113-131.

15.

Travis, J., Western, B., & Redburn, S. (Eds.) (2014). The growth of incarceration in the United States: Exploring causes and consequences. National Research Council. National Academies Press

16.

Crewe, B. (2020). Life imprisonment from young adulthood. Palgrave Macmillan; Tonry, M. (1996). Sentencing matters. Oxford University Press; Van Zyl Smit, D. & Appleton, C. (2018). Life imprisonment: A global human rights analysis. Harvard University Press.

17.

Blumstein, A., & Piquero, A. (2007). Restore rationality to sentencing policy. Criminology & Public Policy, 6(4), 679-687; Kazemian, L. (2021). Pathways to desistance from crime among juveniles and adults: Applications to criminal justice policy and practice. National Institute of Justice; Kazemian, L., & Farrington, D. P. (2018). Advancing knowledge about residual criminal careers: A follow-up to age 56 from the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development. Journal of Criminal Justice, 57, 1-10; Piquero, A., Hawkins, J., & Kazemian, L. (2012). Criminal career patterns. In R. Loeber & D. P. Farrington (Eds.), From juvenile delinquency to adult crime: Criminal careers, justice policy, and prevention (pp. 14–46). Oxford University Press.

18.

Durlauf, S., & Nagin, D. (2011). Imprisonment and crime: Can both be reduced? Criminology and Public Policy, 10(1), 13–54; Travis, J., Western, B., & Redburn, S. (Eds.) (2014). The growth of incarceration in the United States: Exploring causes and consequences. National Academies Press.

19.

See Nellis, A. (2022). Nothing but time: Elderly Americans serving Life without Parole. The Sentencing Project.

20.

Piquero, A. R., Hawkins, J. D., & Kazemian, L. (2012). Key issues in criminal career research: New analysis of the Cambridge Study on Delinquent Development. Cambridge University Press.

21.

Nellis, A. (2021). A new lease on life. The Sentencing Project.

22.

Ghandnoosh, N. & Nellis, A. (2022). How many people are spending over a decade in prison? The Sentencing Project. In this study, the authors compare year end prisoner count data for 44 states and observe that three times as many people are spending over a decade in prison in 2019 when compared to prison lengths in 2000.

23.

Nellis, A. (2021). No end in sight: America’s enduring reliance on life imprisonment. The Sentencing Project.

24.

Mitchell, O. & Mackenzie, D. (2004). The relationship between race, ethnicity, and sentencing outcomes: A meta-analysis of sentencing research. U.S. Department of Justice.

25.

U.S. Census Bureau (n.d.) State population by characteristics: 2010-2019; Carson, E. A. (2021). Prisoners in 2020. Bureau of Justice Statistics; Ghandnoosh, N. & Nellis, A. (2022). How
many people are spending over a decade in prison? The Sentencing Project; Nellis, A. (2021). No end in sight: America’s enduring reliance on life imprisonment. The Sentencing Project.

26.

Mitchell, O. & Mackenzie, D. (2004). The relationship between race, ethnicity, and sentencing outcomes: A meta-analysis of sentencing research. U.S. Department of Justice.

27.

Death Penalty Information Center (2022). Facts about the death penalty

28.

United Nations Human Rights Council (2020), Universal Periodic Review – United States of America.

29.

Alaska Statute 12.55.125 requires mandatory 99-year sentences for enumerated crimes and discretionary 99-year sentences in others. After serving half of the sentence, the statute permits the opportunity to apply for modification or reduction of sentence.

30.

Agyepong, T. (2010). Children left behind bars: Sullivan, Graham, and juvenile life without parole sentences. Northwestern Journal of International Human Rights 9(1), 83-102.

31.

van Syl Smit, D., & Appleton, C. (2018). Life imprisonment: A global human rights analysis. Harvard University Press.

32.

R. v. Bisonnette (2022). Canadian Supreme Court. SCC 23.

33.

Steiker, C. & Steiker, J. (2013). Miller v. Alabama: Is death still different? Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law, 11(1): 37-56; Steiker, C. & Steiker, J (2010). Graham lets the sun shine in: The Supreme Court opens a window between two formerly walled-off approaches to Eighth Amendment proportionality review. Federal Sentencing Reporter 3(1): 79-86; Steiker, C. & Steiker, J (2008). Opening a window or building a wall? The effect of Eighth Amendment death penalty law and advocacy on criminal justice more broadly. Journal of Constitutional Law 11(1): 155-205.

34.

In re Pers. Restraint of Monschke and Bartholomew, No. 96772-5 (Wash. Mar. 11, 2021); Schoen, A. (2021). Washington state Supreme Court finds mandatory life without parole sentences unconstitutional for offenders younger than 21. Journal of Law and Social Problems. In 2022, Tennessee’s Supreme Court (Tennessee v. Booker) ruled that mandatory LWP sentences for youth convicted of homicide while under 18 years old were unconstitutional.

35.

People v. Parks, No. 162086, 2022 WL 3008548 (Mich. July 28, 2022).

36.

Becker, D. (2022). Judge bars mandatory life sentences for people under 21 in Mass. WBUR.

37.

Those convicted of some violent crimes must wait at least 20 years into their sentences, and others are not eligible under the law, including those convicted of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child. Section 730 Illinois Compiled Statute 5/5-4.5-115 – Parole review of persons under the age of 21 at the time of the commission of an offense.

38.

Garrett, B., et al.,(2020). Life without parole sentencing in North Carolina. Duke University School of Law.

39.

House Bill 1797, 2021 Regular Session, (Massachusetts, 2021). An Act to Reduce Mass Incarceration. https://malegislature.gov/Bills/192/H1797

40.

Legislative Document 842, 2021 Regular Session, (Maine 2021). 842 An Act to Reestablish Parole. Summary of LD 842.

41.

Illinois Department of Corrections (2022, October). Prison population dataset.

42.

Ghandnoosh, N. (2021). Felony murder: An onramp for extreme sentencing. The Sentencing Project.

43.

Ghandnoosh, N. (2021). Felony murder: An onramp for extreme sentencing. The Sentencing Project.

44.

Ghandnoosh, N.  (2021). Felony murder: An onramp for extreme sentencing. The Sentencing Project.

45.

Binder, G. & Yankah, E. (2022). Police killings as felony
murder. Harvard Law and Policy Review, 17: 1-77. https://digitalcommons.law.buffalo.edu/journal_articles/1044.

46.

District of Columbia (2022). Revised Criminal Code Act of 2022. Legislation passed by the D.C. Council is subject to the review of the U.S. Congress, which may prevent it from going into effect via a joint resolution signed by the president. The Revised Criminal Code Act will undergo congressional review in 2023.

47.

Kung, K., Beletsky, L., Lok, J., & Martin, N. (2019). Drug induced homicide laws [Paper Presentation]. American Statistical Association Virtual Conference, 2020.

48.

Fair and Just Prosecution (2022). Drug-induced homicide prosecutions.

49.

Pew (2018). More Imprisonment Does Not Reduce State Drug Problems

50.

Kung, K., Beletsky, L., Lok, J., & Martin, N. (2019). Drug induced homicide laws [Paper Presentation]. American Statistical Association Virtual Conference, 2020.

51.

Legislative Analysis and Public Policy Association (2021). Good Samaritan Fatal Overdose Prevention and Drug-induced Homicide: State Laws

52.

Fair and Just Prosecution (2022). Drug-induced homicide prosecutions.

53.

Health in Justice Action Lab (2022). Drug induced homicide.

54.

Liem, M. & Tichavsky, L. (2014). Criminal recidivism among
homicide offenders. Journal of Interpersonal Violence.

55.

Studies have shown recidivism rates for violent offenses between 7% and 16%. Liem, M., Zahn, M., & Tichavsky, L.(2014). Criminal recidivism among homicide offenders. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 29(14), 2-22.

56.

Durose, M.R., Cooper, A. D., & Snyder, H. N. (2014). Recidivism of prisoners released in 30 states in 2005: Patterns from 2005 to 2010. Bureau of Justice Statistics.

57.

Mauer, M. (2010). Testimony to the US Sentencing Commission on mandatory minimums. The Sentencing Project; Smith, P., Goggin, C., & Gendreau, P. (2002). The effects of prison sentences and intermediate sanctions on recidivism: General effects and individual differences. Solicitor General of Canada.

58.

Rehavi, M. M. & Starr, S. (2014). Racial disparity in federal criminal sentences. University of Michigan Law School. In this study of federal sentences, results indicate that prosecutors brought charges carrying mandatory minimum against Black defendants 65% as often as comparable whites, resulting in Black individuals spending more time in prison than white people for the same crimes

59.

Mauer, M. (2018). Long-term sentences: Time to reconsider
the scale of punishment. The Sentencing Project.

60.

Caldwell, H. (2012). Coercive plea bargaining: The unrecognized scourge of the justice system. Catholic University Law Review, 61(63), 67–85; Fellner, J. (2013). An offer you can’t refuse: How U.S. federal prosecutors force drug defendants to plead guilty. Human Rights Watch.

61.

The Mellman Group and Public Opinion Strategies (2016). National survey key findings–Federal sentencing and prisons. Pew.

62.

Democratic National Committee (2022). The Biden plan for strengthening America’s commitment to justice; Peters, J. (2014). G.O.P. moving to ease its stance on sentencing. The New York Times.

63.

Johnson, C. (2014). Judge regrets harsh human toll of mandatory minimum sentences. National Public Radio; Martin, R.
(2017). Minimum sentences often don’t fit the crime. National Public Radio.

64.

Judicial Conference of the United States (1990). Reports of the proceedings of the judicial conference of the United States; American Bar Association (2017). ABA opposes mandatory minimum sentences; American Law Institute (2017). Model Penal Code: Sentencing, Proposed final draft.

65.

For example, more than 200 mandatory minimums are in the Virginia criminal code. See, for example: Justice Forward Virginia (2022). Mandatory minimums and racial justice.

66.

FAMM (2013). Turning Off the Spigot: How Sentencing Safety Valves Can Help States Protect Public Safety and Save Money.

67.

District of Columbia (2022). Revised Criminal Code Act of 2022.

68.

U.S. Sentencing Commission (2022). Quick Facts: Federal Offenders in Prison January 2022.

69.

U.S Sentencing Commission (2022). Quick Facts: Federal Offenders in Prison January 2022.

70.

U.S. Sentencing Commission (2022). Quick Facts: Mandatory Minimum Penalties FY2021.

71.

The Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 established the U.S. Sentencing Commission to set national guidelines for federal judges to reduce disparities, provide for non-incarcerative punishments for non-violent first time offenses, and restrain prison populations. These guidelines were originally mandatory, but were later converted to advisory by the U.S. Supreme Court in US v. Booker in 2005. United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220 (2005).

72.

United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220 (2005).

73.

Pew Charitable Trusts (2015). Prison Time Surges for Federal Inmates.

74.

National Research Council (2014). The Growth of Incarceration in the United States: Exploring Causes and Consequences |The National Academies Press. 78.

75.

Mitchell, K. (2017). State Sentencing Guidelines: A Garden Full of Variety. Federal Probation

76.

Mitchell, K. (2017). State Sentencing Guidelines: A Garden Full of Variety. Federal Probation.

77.

U.S. Sentencing Commission (2018). Recidivism Among Federal Offenders Receiving Retroactive Sentence Reductions: The 2011 Fair Sentencing Act Guideline Amendment. Frase, R. (2017). Prior Record Enhancements: High Costs, Uncertain Benefits. Robina Institute.; Frase, R., Roberts, J., Hester, R., & Mitchell, K.(2015). Criminal History Enhancements Sourcebook. University of Minnesota Robina Institute of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice.

78.

Eisen, L.B. (2019). The 1994 Crime Bill and beyond: How federal funding shapes the criminal justice system. The Brennan Center; Ditton, P. M. & Wilson, D. J. (1999). Truth in sentencing in state prisons. Bureau of Justice Statistics.

79.

Seeds, C. (2022). Death by prison: The emergence of life without parole and perpetual confinement. University of California Press.

80.

Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238 (1972).

81.

Schulberg, J. (2022). When a prison sentence of 10 years and 6 months turns into forever. Huffington Post.

82.

Schulberg, J. (2022). When a prison sentence of 10 years and 6 months turns into forever. Huffington Post.

83.

The Sentencing Project (2022). U.S. criminal justice data.

84.

The Sentencing Project (2022). Prison population over time: Tennessee.

85.

Sabol, W. et al (2002). The influences of truth-in-sentencing reforms on changes in states’ sentencing practices and prison populations. The Urban Institute.

86.

An individual could be eligible for review after 51 years with good time credits but this is not guaranteed.

87.

Tamburin, A. (2022), New law will increase prison sentences. Axios. Those offenses are attempted first-degree murder, second-degree murder, vehicular homicide, aggravated vehicular homicide, especially aggravated kidnapping, especially aggravated robbery, carjacking, and especially aggravated burglary.

88.

Stockard, S. (2022). Governor still reviewing truth-in-sentencing legislation. Tennessee Lookout.

89.

Tamburin, A. (2022). New law will increase prison sentences. Axios.

90.

Ghandnoosh, N. (2021). A Second Look at Injustice. The Sentencing Project.

91.

Human Rights Watch/American Civil Liberties Union (2020). Revoked: How Probation and Parole Feed Mass Incarceration in the United States

92.

Brown, J. (2022), Court: 292-year sentence in string of nonviolent burglaries is not excessive. Arizona PBS.

93.

Patsalis v. Shinn, 47 F.4th 1092 (2022).

94.

Protecting Canadians by Ending Sentence Discounts for Multiple Murders Act, S.C. 2011, c. 5.

95.

For example, over 90% of those subject to a gang enhancement in California are Black or Latino. Clayton, A. (2019). 92% black or Latino: the California laws that keep minorities in prison. The Guardian.

96.

Habitual Offender Law, Rev. Stat. 15:529.1, (1956 & rev. 2019).

97.

Frase, R. (2015). Paying for the past: The case against prior record enhancements. Oxford University Press; The Sentencing Project (2018). Report to the United Nations on Racial Disparities in the U.S. Criminal Justice System.

98.

Nellis, A. (2021). Individuals serving life without parole. [unpublished raw data]. The Sentencing Project.

99.

Schiraldi, V, Colburn, J. & Lotke, E. (2004). Three strikes and
you’re out an examination of the impact of strikes laws 10 years after their enactment. Justice Policy Institute.

100.

Street, G. (2022). Breaking the chains of a habitually offensive penal system: An examination of Louisiana’s habitual-offender statute with recommendations for continued reform. Louisiana Law Review, 82(3), 964-1000; Turkington, C. (2017). Louisiana’s addiction to mass incarceration by the numbers. Loyola Law Review, 63(1): 557-568

101.

Schiraldi, V, Colburn, J. & Lotke, E. (2004). Three strikes and you’re out an examination of the impact of strikes laws 10 years after their enactment. Justice Policy Institute.

102.

American Bar Association (2022). Resolution 502 and report.

103.

The Second Look Act of 2022 (2022).

104.

District of Columbia Corrections Information Council (2021). DC Council Passes Second Look Amendment Act of 2019.

105.

District of Columbia (2022). Revised Criminal Code Act of 2022.

106.

Survivors Justice Project (2021). Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act resource guide. Brooklyn Law School.

107.

Ghandnoosh, N. (2021). A Second look at injustice. The Sentencing Project.

108.

Ghandnoosh, N. & Nellis, A. (2022). How many people are spending over a decade in prison? The Sentencing Project; Kazemian, L. (2021). Pathways to desistance from crime among juveniles and adults: Applications to criminal justice policy and practice. National Institute of Justice; Blumstein, A., & Piquero, A. (2007). Restore rationality to sentencing policy. Criminology & Public Policy, 6(4), 679-687; Kazemian, L., & Farrington, D. P. (2018). Advancing knowledge about residual criminal careers: A follow-up to age 56 from the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development. Journal of Criminal Justice, 57, 1-10.; Piquero, A., Hawkins, J., & Kazemian, L. (2012). Criminal career patterns. In R. Loeber & D. P. Farrington (Eds.), From juvenile delinquency to adult crime: Criminal careers, justice policy, and prevention (pp. 14–46). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

109.

Ghandnoosh, N. & Nellis, A. (2022). How many people are spending over a decade in prison? The Sentencing Project.

110.

Pfaff, J. (2011). The causes of growth in prison admissions and populations. Social Science Research Network.

111.

Durnan, J. & Elderbroom, B. (2018). What happens when states defelonize drug possession?, Urban Institute.

112.

Durnan, J. & Elderbroom, B. (2018). What happens when states defelonize drug possession?, Urban Institute.

113.

Bird, M., Nguyen, V., & Grattet, R. (2020), Impact of defelonizing drug possession on recidivism. Criminology and
Public Policy. 19(2), 591– 616. https://doi.org/10.1111/1745-9133.12489.

114.

Agan, A., Doleac, J., & Harvey, A. (2021). Misdemeanor prosecution. National Bureau of Economic Research.

115.

Petrich, D. M., Pratt, T. C., Jonson, C. L., & Cullen, F. T. (2021). Custodial sanctions and reoffending: A meta-analytic review. Crime and Justice, 50(1), 353–424. https://doi.org/10.1086/715100; Loeffler, C. E., & Nagin, D. S. (2022). The impact of incarceration on recidivism. Annual Review of Criminology, 5(1), 133–152. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-criminol-030920-112506.

116.

Given that felony charging decisions rest on prosecutorial discretion, interventions that improve prosecutorial transparency in plea bargaining, disincentive overcharging, and protect the adversarial process are also vital. Pfaff, J. (2017). Locked in: The true causes of mass incarceration and how to achieve real reform. Basic Books.

117.

Farrington,D., Loeber, R., & Howell, J. (2012). Young adult offenders. Criminology and Public Policy, 11(4), 729-768. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-9133.2012.00842.x; Piquero, A., 17 Jennings, W., & Barnes, J. (2012). Violence in criminal careers: A review of the literature from a developmental life-course perspective. Aggression and Violent Behavior. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.avb.2012.02.008; 17(3), 171-179.; Sampson, R., & Laub, J. (2003). Life course desisters? Trajectories of crime among delinquent boys followed to age 70. Criminology, 41(3), 301-339. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-9125.2003.tb00997.x

118.

For example, in Norway, Anders Behring Breivik was convicted of killing 77 people in two attacks and sentenced to 21 years in prison, with the possibility of continued preventative detention after 21 years if he continues to pose a risk to society. Townsend, M. (2012). Anders Behring Breivik’s 21-year jail term closes Norway’s darkest chapter. The Guardian.

119.

Basdekis-Jozsa, R., Mokros, A., Vohs, K., Briken, P., &
Habermeyer, E. (2013). Preventative detention in Germany: An overview and empirical data from two federal states. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 31(3), 344-358. https://doi.org/10.1002/bsl.2058: Bials, J., & Bonta, J. (2015).Tracking and managing high risk offenders: A Canadian initiative. Law and Human Behavior, 39(3), 253–265. https://doi.org/10.1037/lhb0000109; Drenkhahn, K, & Morgenstern, C. (2021). Preventative detention in Germany and Europe. In A. R. Felthous & H. Saß (Eds.), The Wiley International Handbook on Psychopathic Disorders and the Law, 2nd ed (pp. 87-106). Wiley Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119159322

120.

Hoppe, T., Meyer, I. H., De Orio, S., Vogler, S., & Armstrong,
M. (2020). Civil commitment of people convicted of sex offenses in the United States. UCLA School of Law, Williams Institute

121.

The Associated Press. (2018, August 23). Protracted Minnesota Sex Offender Program suite comes to end. MPR News.; Logue, D. W. (2022). 25 years after court ruling, released sex offenders endure ‘shadow prisons.’ The Crime Report.

122.

Risk assessment tools should be scrutinized for racial bias;
e.g., criminal history scores in relation to systemic racial bias in the criminal justice system. See, Freeman, K. R., Hu, C., & Jannetta, J. (2021). Racial equity and criminal justice risk assessment. Urban Institute. Vincent, G. M., & Viljoen, J. L. (2020). Racist algorithms or systemic problems? Risk assessments and racial disparities. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 47(12),
1576–1584. https://doi.org/10.1177/0093854820954501

123.

Hanson, R. K. (2018). Long-term recidivism studies show that desistance is the norm. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 45, 1340-1346. https://doi.org/10.117/0093854818793382; Hanson, R. K., Harris, A. J., Helmus, L., & Thornton, D. (2014). High-risk sex offenders may not be high risk forever. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 29, 2792–2813. https://doi.org/10.1177/0886260514526062

124.

Such facilities could be modeled on “open prisons,” used
in Finland among other European countries, which are a common part of the reentry process and house about a third of the Finnish incarcerated population. Bichell, R. (2021). In Finland’s ‘open prisons,’ inmates have the keys. The World.

125.

Minnesota uses intensive supervised release (ISR) for individuals being released from prison who are deemed high or very high recidivism risk, which is based on risk assessment scores in combination with an assessment by the “End of Confinement Review Committee.” It is a four phase supervision plan where the intensity of supervision is reduced phase-by-phase with the participant’s compliance with ISR program rules and their progress on their case plan goals. Research shows that high or very high recidivism risk justice-impacted persons released under Minnesota’s ISR program have significantly lower odds of general, felony, and violent (including sex offenses) reoffending. In addition, ISR was found to be a cost-effective intervention. See, Duwe, G., & McNeeley, S. (2021). The effects of intensive postrelease correctional supervision on recidivism: A natural experiment. Criminal Justice Policy Review, 232(7), 740-763. https://doi.org/10.1177/0887403421998430

126.

Normalization can take the form of spacious private rooms, wearing personal clothing, flexible daily schedules, an assortment of activities and educational opportunities, and freedom of movement within prison grounds, among other elements. Subramanian, R. and Shames, A. (2013). Sentencing and Prison Practices in Germany and the Netherlands. Vera Institute.

127.

For the People (2022). Prosecutor-initiated resentencing: California’s opportunity to expand justice and repair harm.

128.

Doleac, J. (2018). New evidence that access to health care reduces crime. Brookings; John Jay College Research Advisory Group on Preventing and Reducing Community Violence (2020). Reducing violence without police: A review of the research evidence. John Jay College of Criminal Justice; Love, H., Barr, A., & Odumosu, O. (2022). Addressing the root causes of gun violence with American Rescue Plan funds: Lessons from state and local governments. Brookings.

129.

Emilee, G. (2019). An overview of evidence-based practices and programs in prison reentry. Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority.

Cahalan, M. W. (1986). Historical corrections statistics in the United States, 1850-1984. Bureau of Justice Statistics.; Carson, E. A. (2022). Prisoners in 2021–Statistical tables. Bureau of Justice Statistics. In 1973, national incarceration rates began to rise and steadily increased until 2009. The year 2010 marked the first year of decarceration and between 2010 and 2019, the prison population declined 11%. Between 2019 and 2020 the prison population declined 14% due to modest decarceration efforts in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. In 2021, decarceration resumed its slow pre-pandemic pace, declining less than 2%.
Minton, T., Beatty, L. G., & Zeng, Z. (2021). Correctional populations in the United States, 2019–Statistical tables. Bureau of Justice Statistics.
Poehlmann-Tynan, J. & Turney, K. (2021). A developmental perspective on children with incarcerated parents. Child Development Perspectives, 15 (1), 3-11.https://doi.org/10.1111/cdep.12392.
Lee, H. & Wildeman, C. (2021). Assessing mass incarceration’s effects on families. Science 375(6565), 277-281. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abj7777.
Rehavi, M. M. (2014). Racial disparity in federal criminal sentences. Journal of Political Economy, 122(6), 1320-1354.
Kids Count. (2016). A shared sentence: The devastating toll of parental incarceration on kids, families and communities. The Annie E. Casey Foundation.
Clear, T.(2008). The effects of high imprisonment rates on communities. Crime and Justice 37 (1), 97- 99. doi http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/522360. “Imprisonment affects the children of people who are locked up and their families; it affects community infrastructure— the relations among people in communities and the capacity of a community to be a good place to live, work, and raise children—and it affects how safe a community is to live in.”. Sered, D. (2014), Young Men of Color and the Other Side of Harm: Addressing Disparities in our Response to Violence. Vera Institute of Justice.
Ghandnoosh, N. & Nellis, A. (2022). How many people are spending over a decade in prison? The Sentencing Project; Nellis, A. (2021). No end in sight: America’s enduring reliance on life imprisonment. The Sentencing Project.
To address the most extreme outlier cases for which 20 years of imprisonment may not suffice, the report recommends highly limited preventative detention with robust due process guarantees. Such detention must be subject to restrictions to avoid the pitfalls of the United States’ already extreme usage of preventative detention for crimes of a sexual nature and fraught history with civil commitment.
Cahalan, M. W. (1986). Historical corrections statistics in the United States, 1850-1984. Bureau of Justice Statistics.
Ghandnoosh, N. (2021). Can we wait 60 years to cut the prison population in half? The Sentencing Project.
Travis, J., Western, B., & Redburn, S. (Eds.) (2014). The growth of incarceration in the United States: Exploring causes and consequences. National Research Council. National Academies Press.
Georgia Department of Corrections (2022, December). Prisoner length of stay (CY) report.
Mauer, M. (2018). Long-term sentences: Time to reconsider the scale of punishment. University of Missouri Kansas City Law Review 87(1), 113-131.
Travis, J., Western, B., & Redburn, S. (Eds.) (2014). The growth of incarceration in the United States: Exploring causes and consequences. National Research Council. National Academies Press
Crewe, B. (2020). Life imprisonment from young adulthood. Palgrave Macmillan; Tonry, M. (1996). Sentencing matters. Oxford University Press; Van Zyl Smit, D. & Appleton, C. (2018). Life imprisonment: A global human rights analysis. Harvard University Press.
Blumstein, A., & Piquero, A. (2007). Restore rationality to sentencing policy. Criminology & Public Policy, 6(4), 679-687; Kazemian, L. (2021). Pathways to desistance from crime among juveniles and adults: Applications to criminal justice policy and practice. National Institute of Justice; Kazemian, L., & Farrington, D. P. (2018). Advancing knowledge about residual criminal careers: A follow-up to age 56 from the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development. Journal of Criminal Justice, 57, 1-10; Piquero, A., Hawkins, J., & Kazemian, L. (2012). Criminal career patterns. In R. Loeber & D. P. Farrington (Eds.), From juvenile delinquency to adult crime: Criminal careers, justice policy, and prevention (pp. 14–46). Oxford University Press.
Durlauf, S., & Nagin, D. (2011). Imprisonment and crime: Can both be reduced? Criminology and Public Policy, 10(1), 13–54; Travis, J., Western, B., & Redburn, S. (Eds.) (2014). The growth of incarceration in the United States: Exploring causes and consequences. National Academies Press.
See Nellis, A. (2022). Nothing but time: Elderly Americans serving Life without Parole. The Sentencing Project.
Piquero, A. R., Hawkins, J. D., & Kazemian, L. (2012). Key issues in criminal career research: New analysis of the Cambridge Study on Delinquent Development. Cambridge University Press.
Nellis, A. (2021). A new lease on life. The Sentencing Project.
Ghandnoosh, N. & Nellis, A. (2022). How many people are spending over a decade in prison? The Sentencing Project. In this study, the authors compare year end prisoner count data for 44 states and observe that three times as many people are spending over a decade in prison in 2019 when compared to prison lengths in 2000.
Nellis, A. (2021). No end in sight: America’s enduring reliance on life imprisonment. The Sentencing Project.
Mitchell, O. & Mackenzie, D. (2004). The relationship between race, ethnicity, and sentencing outcomes: A meta-analysis of sentencing research. U.S. Department of Justice.
U.S. Census Bureau (n.d.) State population by characteristics: 2010-2019; Carson, E. A. (2021). Prisoners in 2020. Bureau of Justice Statistics; Ghandnoosh, N. & Nellis, A. (2022). How
many people are spending over a decade in prison? The Sentencing Project; Nellis, A. (2021). No end in sight: America’s enduring reliance on life imprisonment. The Sentencing Project.
Mitchell, O. & Mackenzie, D. (2004). The relationship between race, ethnicity, and sentencing outcomes: A meta-analysis of sentencing research. U.S. Department of Justice.
Death Penalty Information Center (2022). Facts about the death penalty
United Nations Human Rights Council (2020), Universal Periodic Review – United States of America.
Alaska Statute 12.55.125 requires mandatory 99-year sentences for enumerated crimes and discretionary 99-year sentences in others. After serving half of the sentence, the statute permits the opportunity to apply for modification or reduction of sentence.
Agyepong, T. (2010). Children left behind bars: Sullivan, Graham, and juvenile life without parole sentences. Northwestern Journal of International Human Rights 9(1), 83-102.
van Syl Smit, D., & Appleton, C. (2018). Life imprisonment: A global human rights analysis. Harvard University Press.
R. v. Bisonnette (2022). Canadian Supreme Court. SCC 23.
Steiker, C. & Steiker, J. (2013). Miller v. Alabama: Is death still different? Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law, 11(1): 37-56; Steiker, C. & Steiker, J (2010). Graham lets the sun shine in: The Supreme Court opens a window between two formerly walled-off approaches to Eighth Amendment proportionality review. Federal Sentencing Reporter 3(1): 79-86; Steiker, C. & Steiker, J (2008). Opening a window or building a wall? The effect of Eighth Amendment death penalty law and advocacy on criminal justice more broadly. Journal of Constitutional Law 11(1): 155-205.
In re Pers. Restraint of Monschke and Bartholomew, No. 96772-5 (Wash. Mar. 11, 2021); Schoen, A. (2021). Washington state Supreme Court finds mandatory life without parole sentences unconstitutional for offenders younger than 21. Journal of Law and Social Problems. In 2022, Tennessee’s Supreme Court (Tennessee v. Booker) ruled that mandatory LWP sentences for youth convicted of homicide while under 18 years old were unconstitutional.
People v. Parks, No. 162086, 2022 WL 3008548 (Mich. July 28, 2022).
Becker, D. (2022). Judge bars mandatory life sentences for people under 21 in Mass. WBUR.
Those convicted of some violent crimes must wait at least 20 years into their sentences, and others are not eligible under the law, including those convicted of predatory criminal sexual assault of a child. Section 730 Illinois Compiled Statute 5/5-4.5-115 – Parole review of persons under the age of 21 at the time of the commission of an offense.
Garrett, B., et al.,(2020). Life without parole sentencing in North Carolina. Duke University School of Law.
House Bill 1797, 2021 Regular Session, (Massachusetts, 2021). An Act to Reduce Mass Incarceration. https://malegislature.gov/Bills/192/H1797
Legislative Document 842, 2021 Regular Session, (Maine 2021). 842 An Act to Reestablish Parole. Summary of LD 842.
Illinois Department of Corrections (2022, October). Prison population dataset.
Ghandnoosh, N. (2021). Felony murder: An onramp for extreme sentencing. The Sentencing Project.
Ghandnoosh, N. (2021). Felony murder: An onramp for extreme sentencing. The Sentencing Project.
Ghandnoosh, N.  (2021). Felony murder: An onramp for extreme sentencing. The Sentencing Project.
Binder, G. & Yankah, E. (2022). Police killings as felony
murder. Harvard Law and Policy Review, 17: 1-77. https://digitalcommons.law.buffalo.edu/journal_articles/1044.
District of Columbia (2022). Revised Criminal Code Act of 2022. Legislation passed by the D.C. Council is subject to the review of the U.S. Congress, which may prevent it from going into effect via a joint resolution signed by the president. The Revised Criminal Code Act will undergo congressional review in 2023.
Kung, K., Beletsky, L., Lok, J., & Martin, N. (2019). Drug induced homicide laws [Paper Presentation]. American Statistical Association Virtual Conference, 2020.
Fair and Just Prosecution (2022). Drug-induced homicide prosecutions.
Pew (2018). More Imprisonment Does Not Reduce State Drug Problems
Kung, K., Beletsky, L., Lok, J., & Martin, N. (2019). Drug induced homicide laws [Paper Presentation]. American Statistical Association Virtual Conference, 2020.
Legislative Analysis and Public Policy Association (2021). Good Samaritan Fatal Overdose Prevention and Drug-induced Homicide: State Laws
Fair and Just Prosecution (2022). Drug-induced homicide prosecutions.
Health in Justice Action Lab (2022). Drug induced homicide.
Liem, M. & Tichavsky, L. (2014). Criminal recidivism among
homicide offenders. Journal of Interpersonal Violence.
Studies have shown recidivism rates for violent offenses between 7% and 16%. Liem, M., Zahn, M., & Tichavsky, L.(2014). Criminal recidivism among homicide offenders. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 29(14), 2-22.
Durose, M.R., Cooper, A. D., & Snyder, H. N. (2014). Recidivism of prisoners released in 30 states in 2005: Patterns from 2005 to 2010. Bureau of Justice Statistics.
Mauer, M. (2010). Testimony to the US Sentencing Commission on mandatory minimums. The Sentencing Project; Smith, P., Goggin, C., & Gendreau, P. (2002). The effects of prison sentences and intermediate sanctions on recidivism: General effects and individual differences. Solicitor General of Canada.
Rehavi, M. M. & Starr, S. (2014). Racial disparity in federal criminal sentences. University of Michigan Law School. In this study of federal sentences, results indicate that prosecutors brought charges carrying mandatory minimum against Black defendants 65% as often as comparable whites, resulting in Black individuals spending more time in prison than white people for the same crimes
Mauer, M. (2018). Long-term sentences: Time to reconsider
the scale of punishment. The Sentencing Project.
Caldwell, H. (2012). Coercive plea bargaining: The unrecognized scourge of the justice system. Catholic University Law Review, 61(63), 67–85; Fellner, J. (2013). An offer you can’t refuse: How U.S. federal prosecutors force drug defendants to plead guilty. Human Rights Watch.
The Mellman Group and Public Opinion Strategies (2016). National survey key findings–Federal sentencing and prisons. Pew.
Democratic National Committee (2022). The Biden plan for strengthening America’s commitment to justice; Peters, J. (2014). G.O.P. moving to ease its stance on sentencing. The New York Times.
Johnson, C. (2014). Judge regrets harsh human toll of mandatory minimum sentences. National Public Radio; Martin, R.
(2017). Minimum sentences often don’t fit the crime. National Public Radio.
Judicial Conference of the United States (1990). Reports of the proceedings of the judicial conference of the United States; American Bar Association (2017). ABA opposes mandatory minimum sentences; American Law Institute (2017). Model Penal Code: Sentencing, Proposed final draft.
For example, more than 200 mandatory minimums are in the Virginia criminal code. See, for example: Justice Forward Virginia (2022). Mandatory minimums and racial justice.
FAMM (2013). Turning Off the Spigot: How Sentencing Safety Valves Can Help States Protect Public Safety and Save Money.
District of Columbia (2022). Revised Criminal Code Act of 2022.
U.S. Sentencing Commission (2022). Quick Facts: Federal Offenders in Prison January 2022.
U.S Sentencing Commission (2022). Quick Facts: Federal Offenders in Prison January 2022.
U.S. Sentencing Commission (2022). Quick Facts: Mandatory Minimum Penalties FY2021.
The Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 established the U.S. Sentencing Commission to set national guidelines for federal judges to reduce disparities, provide for non-incarcerative punishments for non-violent first time offenses, and restrain prison populations. These guidelines were originally mandatory, but were later converted to advisory by the U.S. Supreme Court in US v. Booker in 2005. United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220 (2005).
United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220 (2005).
Pew Charitable Trusts (2015). Prison Time Surges for Federal Inmates.
National Research Council (2014). The Growth of Incarceration in the United States: Exploring Causes and Consequences |The National Academies Press. 78.
Mitchell, K. (2017). State Sentencing Guidelines: A Garden Full of Variety. Federal Probation
Mitchell, K. (2017). State Sentencing Guidelines: A Garden Full of Variety. Federal Probation.
U.S. Sentencing Commission (2018). Recidivism Among Federal Offenders Receiving Retroactive Sentence Reductions: The 2011 Fair Sentencing Act Guideline Amendment. Frase, R. (2017). Prior Record Enhancements: High Costs, Uncertain Benefits. Robina Institute.; Frase, R., Roberts, J., Hester, R., & Mitchell, K.(2015). Criminal History Enhancements Sourcebook. University of Minnesota Robina Institute of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice.
Eisen, L.B. (2019). The 1994 Crime Bill and beyond: How federal funding shapes the criminal justice system. The Brennan Center; Ditton, P. M. & Wilson, D. J. (1999). Truth in sentencing in state prisons. Bureau of Justice Statistics.
Seeds, C. (2022). Death by prison: The emergence of life without parole and perpetual confinement. University of California Press.
Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238 (1972).
Schulberg, J. (2022). When a prison sentence of 10 years and 6 months turns into forever. Huffington Post.
Schulberg, J. (2022). When a prison sentence of 10 years and 6 months turns into forever. Huffington Post.
The Sentencing Project (2022). U.S. criminal justice data.
The Sentencing Project (2022). Prison population over time: Tennessee.
Sabol, W. et al (2002). The influences of truth-in-sentencing reforms on changes in states’ sentencing practices and prison populations. The Urban Institute.
An individual could be eligible for review after 51 years with good time credits but this is not guaranteed.
Tamburin, A. (2022), New law will increase prison sentences. Axios. Those offenses are attempted first-degree murder, second-degree murder, vehicular homicide, aggravated vehicular homicide, especially aggravated kidnapping, especially aggravated robbery, carjacking, and especially aggravated burglary.
Stockard, S. (2022). Governor still reviewing truth-in-sentencing legislation. Tennessee Lookout.
Tamburin, A. (2022). New law will increase prison sentences. Axios.
Ghandnoosh, N. (2021). A Second Look at Injustice. The Sentencing Project.
Human Rights Watch/American Civil Liberties Union (2020). Revoked: How Probation and Parole Feed Mass Incarceration in the United States
Brown, J. (2022), Court: 292-year sentence in string of nonviolent burglaries is not excessive. Arizona PBS.
Patsalis v. Shinn, 47 F.4th 1092 (2022).
Protecting Canadians by Ending Sentence Discounts for Multiple Murders Act, S.C. 2011, c. 5.
For example, over 90% of those subject to a gang enhancement in California are Black or Latino. Clayton, A. (2019). 92% black or Latino: the California laws that keep minorities in prison. The Guardian.
Habitual Offender Law, Rev. Stat. 15:529.1, (1956 & rev. 2019).
Frase, R. (2015). Paying for the past: The case against prior record enhancements. Oxford University Press; The Sentencing Project (2018). Report to the United Nations on Racial Disparities in the U.S. Criminal Justice System.
Nellis, A. (2021). Individuals serving life without parole. [unpublished raw data]. The Sentencing Project.
Schiraldi, V, Colburn, J. & Lotke, E. (2004). Three strikes and
you’re out an examination of the impact of strikes laws 10 years after their enactment. Justice Policy Institute.
Street, G. (2022). Breaking the chains of a habitually offensive penal system: An examination of Louisiana’s habitual-offender statute with recommendations for continued reform. Louisiana Law Review, 82(3), 964-1000; Turkington, C. (2017). Louisiana’s addiction to mass incarceration by the numbers. Loyola Law Review, 63(1): 557-568
Schiraldi, V, Colburn, J. & Lotke, E. (2004). Three strikes and you’re out an examination of the impact of strikes laws 10 years after their enactment. Justice Policy Institute.
American Bar Association (2022). Resolution 502 and report.
The Second Look Act of 2022 (2022).
District of Columbia Corrections Information Council (2021). DC Council Passes Second Look Amendment Act of 2019.
District of Columbia (2022). Revised Criminal Code Act of 2022.
Survivors Justice Project (2021). Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act resource guide. Brooklyn Law School.
Ghandnoosh, N. (2021). A Second look at injustice. The Sentencing Project.
Ghandnoosh, N. & Nellis, A. (2022). How many people are spending over a decade in prison? The Sentencing Project; Kazemian, L. (2021). Pathways to desistance from crime among juveniles and adults: Applications to criminal justice policy and practice. National Institute of Justice; Blumstein, A., & Piquero, A. (2007). Restore rationality to sentencing policy. Criminology & Public Policy, 6(4), 679-687; Kazemian, L., & Farrington, D. P. (2018). Advancing knowledge about residual criminal careers: A follow-up to age 56 from the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development. Journal of Criminal Justice, 57, 1-10.; Piquero, A., Hawkins, J., & Kazemian, L. (2012). Criminal career patterns. In R. Loeber & D. P. Farrington (Eds.), From juvenile delinquency to adult crime: Criminal careers, justice policy, and prevention (pp. 14–46). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Ghandnoosh, N. & Nellis, A. (2022). How many people are spending over a decade in prison? The Sentencing Project.
Pfaff, J. (2011). The causes of growth in prison admissions and populations. Social Science Research Network.
Durnan, J. & Elderbroom, B. (2018). What happens when states defelonize drug possession?, Urban Institute.
Durnan, J. & Elderbroom, B. (2018). What happens when states defelonize drug possession?, Urban Institute.
Bird, M., Nguyen, V., & Grattet, R. (2020), Impact of defelonizing drug possession on recidivism. Criminology and
Public Policy. 19(2), 591– 616. https://doi.org/10.1111/1745-9133.12489.
Agan, A., Doleac, J., & Harvey, A. (2021). Misdemeanor prosecution. National Bureau of Economic Research.
Petrich, D. M., Pratt, T. C., Jonson, C. L., & Cullen, F. T. (2021). Custodial sanctions and reoffending: A meta-analytic review. Crime and Justice, 50(1), 353–424. https://doi.org/10.1086/715100; Loeffler, C. E., & Nagin, D. S. (2022). The impact of incarceration on recidivism. Annual Review of Criminology, 5(1), 133–152. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-criminol-030920-112506.
Given that felony charging decisions rest on prosecutorial discretion, interventions that improve prosecutorial transparency in plea bargaining, disincentive overcharging, and protect the adversarial process are also vital. Pfaff, J. (2017). Locked in: The true causes of mass incarceration and how to achieve real reform. Basic Books.
Farrington,D., Loeber, R., & Howell, J. (2012). Young adult offenders. Criminology and Public Policy, 11(4), 729-768. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-9133.2012.00842.x; Piquero, A., 17 Jennings, W., & Barnes, J. (2012). Violence in criminal careers: A review of the literature from a developmental life-course perspective. Aggression and Violent Behavior. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.avb.2012.02.008; 17(3), 171-179.; Sampson, R., & Laub, J. (2003). Life course desisters? Trajectories of crime among delinquent boys followed to age 70. Criminology, 41(3), 301-339. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-9125.2003.tb00997.x
For example, in Norway, Anders Behring Breivik was convicted of killing 77 people in two attacks and sentenced to 21 years in prison, with the possibility of continued preventative detention after 21 years if he continues to pose a risk to society. Townsend, M. (2012). Anders Behring Breivik’s 21-year jail term closes Norway’s darkest chapter. The Guardian.
Basdekis-Jozsa, R., Mokros, A., Vohs, K., Briken, P., &
Habermeyer, E. (2013). Preventative detention in Germany: An overview and empirical data from two federal states. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 31(3), 344-358. https://doi.org/10.1002/bsl.2058: Bials, J., & Bonta, J. (2015).Tracking and managing high risk offenders: A Canadian initiative. Law and Human Behavior, 39(3), 253–265. https://doi.org/10.1037/lhb0000109; Drenkhahn, K, & Morgenstern, C. (2021). Preventative detention in Germany and Europe. In A. R. Felthous & H. Saß (Eds.), The Wiley International Handbook on Psychopathic Disorders and the Law, 2nd ed (pp. 87-106). Wiley Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119159322
Hoppe, T., Meyer, I. H., De Orio, S., Vogler, S., & Armstrong,
M. (2020). Civil commitment of people convicted of sex offenses in the United States. UCLA School of Law, Williams Institute
The Associated Press. (2018, August 23). Protracted Minnesota Sex Offender Program suite comes to end. MPR News.; Logue, D. W. (2022). 25 years after court ruling, released sex offenders endure ‘shadow prisons.’ The Crime Report.
Risk assessment tools should be scrutinized for racial bias;
e.g., criminal history scores in relation to systemic racial bias in the criminal justice system. See, Freeman, K. R., Hu, C., & Jannetta, J. (2021). Racial equity and criminal justice risk assessment. Urban Institute. Vincent, G. M., & Viljoen, J. L. (2020). Racist algorithms or systemic problems? Risk assessments and racial disparities. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 47(12),
1576–1584. https://doi.org/10.1177/0093854820954501
Hanson, R. K. (2018). Long-term recidivism studies show that desistance is the norm. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 45, 1340-1346. https://doi.org/10.117/0093854818793382; Hanson, R. K., Harris, A. J., Helmus, L., & Thornton, D. (2014). High-risk sex offenders may not be high risk forever. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 29, 2792–2813. https://doi.org/10.1177/0886260514526062
Such facilities could be modeled on “open prisons,” used
in Finland among other European countries, which are a common part of the reentry process and house about a third of the Finnish incarcerated population. Bichell, R. (2021). In Finland’s ‘open prisons,’ inmates have the keys. The World.
Minnesota uses intensive supervised release (ISR) for individuals being released from prison who are deemed high or very high recidivism risk, which is based on risk assessment scores in combination with an assessment by the “End of Confinement Review Committee.” It is a four phase supervision plan where the intensity of supervision is reduced phase-by-phase with the participant’s compliance with ISR program rules and their progress on their case plan goals. Research shows that high or very high recidivism risk justice-impacted persons released under Minnesota’s ISR program have significantly lower odds of general, felony, and violent (including sex offenses) reoffending. In addition, ISR was found to be a cost-effective intervention. See, Duwe, G., & McNeeley, S. (2021). The effects of intensive postrelease correctional supervision on recidivism: A natural experiment. Criminal Justice Policy Review, 232(7), 740-763. https://doi.org/10.1177/0887403421998430
Normalization can take the form of spacious private rooms, wearing personal clothing, flexible daily schedules, an assortment of activities and educational opportunities, and freedom of movement within prison grounds, among other elements. Subramanian, R. and Shames, A. (2013). Sentencing and Prison Practices in Germany and the Netherlands. Vera Institute.
For the People (2022). Prosecutor-initiated resentencing: California’s opportunity to expand justice and repair harm.
Doleac, J. (2018). New evidence that access to health care reduces crime. Brookings; John Jay College Research Advisory Group on Preventing and Reducing Community Violence (2020). Reducing violence without police: A review of the research evidence. John Jay College of Criminal Justice; Love, H., Barr, A., & Odumosu, O. (2022). Addressing the root causes of gun violence with American Rescue Plan funds: Lessons from state and local governments. Brookings.
Emilee, G. (2019). An overview of evidence-based practices and programs in prison reentry. Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority.

About the Authors

  • Liz Komar

    Sentencing Reform Counsel

    Liz Komar advocates for an end to extreme sentencing in the state and federal criminal legal systems by supporting the work of the Sentencing Project’s Campaign to End Life Imprisonment, leading federal advocacy efforts, and managing amicus litigation activities.

    Read more about Liz
  • Ashley Nellis, Ph.D.

    Co-Director of Research

    Ashley Nellis, Ph.D. has an academic and professional background in analyzing criminal justice policies and practices, racial disparities, juvenile justice systems, and long-term imprisonment. Her documentation of the prevalence of life imprisonment has served as a national resource for academics, advocates, policymakers, reporters, and incarcerated persons.

    Read more about Ashley
  • Kristen M. Budd, Ph.D.

    Research Analyst

    Kristen M. Budd, Ph.D., has an academic and research background in the social and legal responses to interpersonal violence with a focus on crimes of a sexual nature. She has conducted research on public perceptions of sex offenses and corresponding laws and criminal justice practice as well as patterns and predictors of sex offense behavior and victimization.

    Read more about Kristen

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