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1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008
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Page 1: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

1

Florida Department of Corrections

Presentations to the

Senate Criminal Justice Committee

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

Page 2: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

2

Foreign Citizens (Aliens)in State Prison

Page 3: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

3

Operational Guidelines

Federal Immigration Law (Title 8, United States Code) The Department works in partnership with federal officials to ensure

identification and removal of deportable incarcerated aliens.

Section 33-601.210(2) (j), Florida Administrative Code, and Department Procedures: Department initially assigns alien inmates to Close Custody. Establishes procedures for the identification, coordination of removal

hearings, and releasing of criminal aliens to the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) upon completion of their state commitment.

Page 4: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

4

Alien Inmate Process

Memorandum of Agreement (MOA)

The Department, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) signed MOA in 2001.

ICE assumes custody of aliens upon end of sentence. Department coordinates inmate movements, information

sharing and notice to alien inmates. EOIR coordinates determination hearings.

Page 5: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

5

Alien Inmate Process

Reception

At South Florida Reception Center and Central Florida Reception Center: Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents are

assigned daily.

At Reception & Medical Center (Lake Butler), Broward Correctional Institution and Lowell Correctional Institution: Weekly lists of suspected aliens are forwarded to ICE

offices in Jacksonville, Miami and Orlando.

Page 6: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

6

Alien Inmate Process

If an inmate is a suspected alien

ICE does: Administrative Hold; Investigation; Determination; and Detainer (if necessary)

If during an audit, the Department has an inmate whose status is not determined – the Department’s Central Office Coordinator contacts ICE.

Page 7: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

7

Alien Inmate Process

Release to ICE

Within 90 days of release, alien inmates are approved for transfer to an ICE release site.

Weekly, Department provides ICE with a list of all alien inmates who have a release date within 90 days.

ICE can pick up inmates 10 days in advance of the actual release date.

Page 8: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

8

Alien Inmate Population

5,274 Confirmed Aliens (as of 12/31/07)

ROBBERY 397 8%

BURGLARY 690 13%

VIOLENT, OTHER 735 14%

DRUGS 1,002 19%

SEXUAL / LEWD BEHAVIOR

785 15%

MURDER / MANSLAUGHTER

1,158 21%

OTHER 193 4%

PROPERTY THEFT/FRAUD/DAMAGE

239 5%

WEAPONS 73 1% MISSING DATA

2 0%

Page 9: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

9

Alien Inmate PopulationTop Ten Countries of Origin

(4,526 or 86% of the 5,274 alien inmates)

1,836

1,038

415

405

195

169

142

118

106

102

- 500 1,000 1,500 2,000

CUBA

MEXICO

JAMAICA

HAITI

COLOMBIA

HONDURAS

BAHAMAS

GUATEMALA

NICARAGUA

DOM. REP

Country

Alien Inmates

Page 10: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

10

Funding

State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP)

SCAAP is a reimbursement.

SCAAP provides federal payments to states and localities that incurred correctional officer costs for incarcerating undocumented criminal aliens.

SCAAP is governed by the Immigration and Nationality Act and the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994.

Generally, if a state or a political subdivision exercises authority over the incarceration of undocumented criminal aliens and submits a written request, that jurisdiction may be compensated.

Page 11: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

11

Funding

SCAAP Reimbursement History (in millions)

$18.1

$9.2

$18.3

$11.8

$22.1

$26.7$23.0

$12.8$18.6

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007

Federal Fiscal Year

Page 12: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

12

Trends in Prison Admissions

Page 13: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

13

Key Facts

95,000 Inmates Gained more than 3,000 inmates since 2007 Session

135 Correctional Facilities:• 59 Major Institutions – 6 private facilities

• 40 Work Camps

• 30 Work Release Centers – 9 contract facilities

• 5 Road Prisons

• 1 Treatment Center

Page 14: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

14

Criminal JusticeEstimating Conference

Section 216.136(5), Florida Statutes: The Criminal Justice Estimating Conference (CJEC) shall

develop information relating to the criminal justice system, including forecasts of prison admissions and population and of supervised felony offender admissions and population...

Section 944.023(2) and (4), Florida Statutes: Using CJEC’s estimates, the Department shall develop and

annually update a comprehensive correctional master plan to project the needs for the coming 5-year period.

Page 15: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

15

92,92795,000

98,023

103,737

109,711

115,633

120,283

90,000

95,000

100,000

105,000

110,000

115,000

120,000

125,000

Inmates

06-07 Today 07-08 08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12

Fiscal Year

Prison PopulationGrowth

Page 16: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

16

98,023

103,737

109,711

115,633

120,283

111,080108,321

105,184

96,717100,999

90,000

95,000

100,000

105,000

110,000

115,000

120,000

125,000

07-08 08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12

Fiscal Year

Inmates

CJEC - Feb 16, 2007 CJEC - Oct 8, 2007

Changes inCJEC Projections

Page 17: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

17

96,717

1,306

100,999

2,738

105,184

4,527

108,321

7,312

111,080

9,203

90,000

95,000

100,000

105,000

110,000

115,000

120,000

125,000

Inmates

07-08 08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12

Fiscal Year

CJEC - Feb 16, 2007 Change in Projections

Difference BetweenCJEC Projections

Page 18: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

18

Trends in PrisonAdmissions

There were 39,289 admissions to prison in FY 06-07, up 7.0 percent from FY 05-06.

The average sentence length of new commitments continues downward: FY 06-07 – 4.4 years FY 05-06 – 4.6 years

The percentage of year-and-a-day sentences has continued to increase as a percentage of total admissions: FY 06-07 – 17.7% FY 05-06 – 15.1% FY 01-02 – 8.8%

Page 19: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

19

Trends in PrisonAdmissions

The percent of admissions that are probation violators is stable at about 43%.

The percent of admissions that have been in prison before is also stable at 43%.

There is a slight increase in the percentage of female youthful offenders in the population.

The proportion of inmates that need to be housed in a secure cell is fairly stable at about one-third.

Page 20: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

20

Trends in PrisonAdmissions

The older inmate (age 50+) population represents a great percentage of the overall inmate population. FY 06-07 – 13.63% FY 02-03 – 9.95%

The growth rate of the male inmate population with a psychological grade of 3 or higher (needing psychotropics or in crisis stabilization or transitional care) is higher than the growth rate of the overall population.

The proportion of inmates with high medical grades (3 or higher) has been stable for the last year, at 14%.

• M 3 = Is being followed in chronic illness clinic (CIC) every three months. • M 4 = Is being followed in chronic illness clinic (CIC) at least every three

months and requires ongoing visits to the physician more often than every three months.• M 5 = Requires long-term (greater than 30 days) inpatient, infirmary, or

designated housing, (i.e. Zephyrhills CI J Dorm).

Page 21: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

21

Legislative Budget Requestfor Fixed Capital Outlay

Based on CJEC’s original projections (Feb 07): FY 08-09: $220 million (5,761 beds) FY 08-09 to FY 12-13: $1.1 billion (15,349 beds)

As submitted, based on revised CJEC (Oct 07): FY 08-09: $649 million (10,003 beds) FY 08-09 to FY 12-13: $1.85 billion (25,920 beds)

Florida will need to fund the equivalent of 19 new prisons over the next five years (1,335 inmates/prison).

Page 22: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

22

Alternatives

Fiscal Year 2007-2008

Problem: There is a realistic possibility that the Department will run out of bed capacity before the end of fiscal year 2007-2008. The Department is currently incarcerating 1,253 unfunded inmates. The Department will definitely reach a critical number of available

beds in September 2008.

Alternative: Utilize temporary structures that can be assembled faster than a traditional correctional institution. Tents Leased Structures

Page 23: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

23

Alternatives

Fiscal Year 2008-2009

Problem: The use of tents and leased structures is not appropriate as a long-term solution:

Alternative: Supervised Reentry – Delays the need for $301,227,000 in fixed capital outlay spending. Expand Florida’s existing work release program to allow the 3,000

inmates already working in the community by day to stay in the community at night.

Regular supervision by corrections and probation officers. Regular drug testing, background screening and verification of

employment. Violating will result in being charged with Escape (third degree

felony).

Page 24: 1 Florida Department of Corrections Presentations to the Senate Criminal Justice Committee Tuesday, January 08, 2008.

24

Alternatives

Long-Term

Problem: Building prisons does not cut costs. In fact, building a $100 million prison creates a $40 million cost to run the prison.

Alternative: Reentry programs, like substance abuse treatment, vocational training, academic education, life-skills management, and faith and character-based programs have some major benefits. Crime prevention is victim prevention. Lower criminal offending reduces the demand on criminal justice

services like police investigations, court costs, and prosecuting and defending crimes.


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