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  1. DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONAL SERVICES. Recidivism Report. November 15, 2022. Governor Larry J. Hogan Lt. Governor Boyd K. Rutherford Secretary Robert L. Green 2. Executive Summary 5 Introduction 5 Smaller, Acute Populations 6 Separate Systems of Incarceration 6 Figure 1: Maryland Correctional Structure 7 Initial Impacts of the ...

  2. Mar 1, 2022 · The highest ten-year arrest rates were for weapons crimes (87.4%), property crimes (86.7%) and drug possession (83.0%). Males were more likely to be arrested within the first year than females, 44% v. 34%. However, the difference in arrest rates narrowed by year ten to 83% for men and 76% for women.

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  4. Recidivism rates from 2016 -2018 by return year Source: Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services, Recidivism Report, November 2021

  5. djs.maryland.gov › Documents › publicationsMaryland ~ .Maryland

    Overall Recidivism Rates for Treatment Program Releases for Youth with Sustained Offenses Originally Transferred from Adult Court Jurisdiction. 6-, 12-, 24-, AND 36-M ONTH JUVENILE AND /OR CRI M INAL JUSTI C E R EC IDIVIS M R ATES FOR FY 2019-2021 R ELEASES Between FY 2019 and FY 2021, the 12-month rearrest rate decreased 7.6 percentage points.

  6. The Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) collects criminal history data from the FBI and state record repositories to study recidivism patterns of various offenders, including persons on probation or discharged from prison. The latest study of state prisoners estimated the recidivism patterns of about 400,000 persons released from state prisons ...

  7. May 3, 2018 · Specifically, studies were included if they met the following criteria: the study population had been classified (or self-identified) as drug and/or alcohol users or engaged in risky drug-taking practices; substance use after intervention and/or recidivism after prison release (i.e., self-reported reoffending, rearrest, or reincarceration) was ...

  8. 2. Reduction of Marylands prison population by approximately 25% to below 18,000 people by 2020 (Figure 1) 3. Reduction of Marylands three-year recidivism rate from 50% to 36% 4. Reduction in the number of people admitted to a Maryland prison from 15,000 per year to 10,000 per year 5.

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