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Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

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Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants
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Page 1: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants

Page 2: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Purpose of Risk Assessment

• To provide a consistent means to assess offenders

• To provide a valid measure of risk• To provide a measure of risk that can be

used in decision making

Page 3: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Treatment Effects for Low Risk Offenders

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Page 4: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Treatment Effects for High Risk Offenders

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-18 -17-15 -14

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2 3 3 35

7 8 8 810 10

12 12 12 13 1315

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Page 5: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

We have seen the Risk Principle with Females

Page 6: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Recidivism Rates by Risk Levels for Females: New Arrest (Felony or Misd).

Ohio ½ and CBCF House Study all treatment cases. N=1,340

Low Low/Moderate Moderate High 0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

Experimental 0.19 0.28 0.39 0.52

Comparison 0.06 0.16 0.38 0.66

Recidivism Rates

Page 7: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

We have seen the Risk Principle with Sex Offenders

Page 8: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Recidivism Rates by Risk Levels for Sex Offenders: New Arrest (Felony or Misd).

Ohio ½ and CBCF House Study: Successful terminations only. N=390

Low Low/Moderate Moderate High 0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

Experimental 0.27 0.33 0.42 0.49

Comparison 0.15 0.29 0.47 0.66

Recidivism Rates

Page 9: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS Overview

• Pre-trial Tool• Community Supervision Tool

– Community Supervision Screening Tool• Prison Intake Tool

– Prison Intake Screening Tool• Supplemental Reentry Tool• Reentry Tool

Page 10: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

CASE STUDY

Page 11: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Who Is More Likely to Reoffend?

• 1st time DUI• Drinking at a bar with friends• Crossed the double yellow line• .12 BA• Employed• Has a driver’s license• States “The cop was just doing

their job”• “It is not ok to drink and drive”• Family that supports sober

lifestyle• Friends got a cab

• 1st time DUI• Drinking at a bar with friends• Crossed the double yellow line• .12 BA• Unemployed• Driving w/o a license• States “The cop was out to get me”• Everyone gets one DUI• Family who engages in alcohol use

on a regular basis• Friends played “who is the most

sober”

11

Page 12: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Multiple DUIs/Domestic Violence

Criminal History Family Education and Employment Neighborhoods Substance Abuse Peers Antisocial Attitudes

Page 13: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

What Are the Barriers?

• Time

• High Demand

• Single Need Defendants/Offenders

Page 14: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Methods

• Identified individuals in the ORAS database that were assessed through Municipal Court

• Completed the full ORAS-CST• Minimum of 11 month follow-up

Page 15: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Recidivism • The Ohio Law Enforcement Gateway (OhLEG)

was used to examine recidivism for each offender in the sample– Minor traffic violations (e.g., speeding) were excluded

• Recidivism was measured as arrest for a new crime– Later measures (e.g., convictions) need a longer follow-

up period than 11 months– Arrests in the community allow CST to identify

criminogenic needs that are likely to result in danger to the community

Page 16: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Participating Municipal Courts

Court N (%)

Ashtabula Municipal Court 15 (.78)

Athens Co Municipal Court 7 (.37)

Bellefontaine Municipal Court 22 (1.1)

Bryan Municipal Court 7 (.37)

Canton Municipal Court 303 (15.8)

Champaign Co Municipal Court 40 (2.1)

Circleville Municipal Court 127 (6.6)

Clark Co Municipal Court 36 (1.9)

Clermont Co Municipal Court 42 (2.2)

Clinton Co Municipal Court 95 (5.0)

Court N (%)

Fairfield Municipal Court 74 (3.9)

Franklin Co Municipal Court 57 (3.0)

Fremont Municipal Court 92 (4.8)

Gallipolis Municipal Court 135 (7.1)

Greene Co Municipal Court 40 (2.1)

Licking Co Municipal Court 105 (5.5)

Mansfield Municipal Court 20 (1.0)

Marietta Municipal Court 53 (2.8)

Marion Municipal Court 145 (7.6)

Medina Municipal Court 16 (.84)

Page 17: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Participating Municipal Courts – ContinuedCourt N (%)

Mentor Municipal Court 1 (.05)

Monroe Municipal Court 16 (.84)

Morgan Co Municipal Court 64 (3.3)

Muskingum Co Municipal Court 2 (.01)

Newton Falls Municipal Court 9 (.47)

Norwalk Municipal Court 51 (2.7)

Painesville Municipal Court 5 (.26)

Sidney Municipal Court 2 (.01)

Steubenville Municipal Court 6 (.31)

Toledo Municipal Court 34 (1.8)

Washington CH Municipal Court 213 (11.1)

Willoughby Municipal Court 70 (3.7)

Zanesville Municipal Court 10 (.52)

Page 18: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Counties Included in ORAS-MAT Validation*County N (%)

Ashtabula 27 (1.6)

Champaign 30 (1.7)

Clark 33 (1.9)

Clermont 32 (1.9)

Clinton 76 (4.4)

Fairfield 57 (3.3)

Fayette 157 (9.1)

Franklin 78 (4.5)

Gallia 106 (6.2)

Greene 29 (1.7)

Huron 40 (2.3)

County N (%)

Lake 55 (3.2)

Licking 67 (3.9)

Logan 23 (1.3)

Lucas 31 (1.8)

Marion 118 (6.9)

Morgan 56 (3.3)

Out of State 23 (1.3)

Pickaway 123 (7.1)

Sandusky 81 (4.7)

Stark 260 (15.1)

Washington 43 (2.5)

*Counties contributing < 20 cases: Adams, Allen, Athens, Belmont, Brown, Carroll, Crawford, Cuyahoga, Erie, Geauga, Hamilton, Henry, Highland, Hocking, Jackson, Jefferson, Knox, Lawrence, Madison, Medina, Meigs, Monroe, Montgomery, Morrow, Muskingum, Noble, Ottawa, Perry, Pike, Portage, Richland, Ross, Seneca, Shelby, Summit, Trumbull, Tuscarawas, Union, Wayne, Williams, Wyandot

Page 19: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Courts were also Asked the Following Follow-Up Questions:

• What was the offender charged with (i.e., what brought the offender to your court)?

• Was the offender’s charge related to any of the following offenses:– DUI, Domestic Violence, Violence, Substance

Abuse / Drugs

• If offender’s charge was related to substance use / drugs, identify type of drug:– Cocaine, Marijuana, Heroin, Prescription, Other

(specify)

Page 20: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

* Some variables do not total 1,722 due to missing data

Page 21: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

* Some variables do not total 1,722 due to missing data

Page 22: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Current Community Supervision Assessment (CST) Instrument

• 35 items across 7 domains• Takes 45 minutes to complete (on average)• Provides overall level of risk to reoffend• Level of risk by domain (criminogenic needs)• Developed on a range of offenders including

misdemeanor and felony offenders

Page 23: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Current ORAS-CST Domains

1. Criminal History (6 items)

2. Education, Employment, and Finances (6 items)

3. Family and Social Support (5 items)

4. Neighborhood Problems (2 items)

5. Substance Use (5 items)

6. Peer Associations (4 items)

7. Criminal Attitudes and Behavioral Problems (7 items)

Page 24: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Validating the CST for Misdemeanor Offenders Only

• Examined the validity of full CST on a misdemeanor only population

• Modified cutoffs to best fit population

Page 25: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Overall CSTMisdemeanor Offenders Only

LOW MOD HIGH VERY HIGH0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

AUC = .613; r2 = .194

Page 26: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS-CST Intake Assessment

Page 27: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS-CST Re-assessmentEducation and Employment

Page 28: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS-CST Re-assessmentPeer Association

Page 29: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS-CST Re-assessmentSubstance Abuse

Page 30: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

THE OHIO RISK ASSESSMENT SYSTEM-MISDEMEANANTS

Page 31: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Criminal History

Low Moderate/High0%5%

10%15%20%25%30%35%40%45%50%

Page 32: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

EDUCATION

Page 33: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Education/Employment/Finance

Low Mod High0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Page 34: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

FAMILY AND SOCIAL SUPPORT

Page 35: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Family and Social Support

Low Mod High0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Page 36: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

NEIGHBORHOOD

Page 37: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Neighborhood

No crime Some Crime A lot of Crime0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

Page 38: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

SUBSTANCE ABUSE

Page 39: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Substance Abuse

Low Mod High0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

Page 40: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

PEERS

Page 41: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Peers

Low Mod High0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

Page 42: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ATTITUDES, VALUES, AND BELIEFS

Page 43: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Attitudes, Values, and Beliefs

Low Mod/High0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

Page 44: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

OVERALL RISK LEVEL

Page 45: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Overall Risk Levels

Low Mod High Very High0%

10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%

100%

Page 46: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Misdemeanor Assessment Tool

• New tool has 11 items• Strongest predictors from CST • Primary Factors:

– Criminal History– Employment and Education– Drug use– Criminal Peers– Criminal Attitudes

• Approximately 15 minutes

Page 47: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS-MAT• Most Serious Arrest Under Age 18

– 0 = None– 1 = Yes, Misdemeanor– 2 = Yes, Felony

• Number of Prior Adult Felony Convictions– 0 = None– 1 = One or Two– 2 = Three or More

• Highest Education– 0 = High School Graduate or Higher– 1 = Less than High School or GED

• Ever Suspended or Expelled From School– 0 = No– 1 = Yes

• Currently Employed– 0 = Yes, Full-time, Disabled, or Retired– 1 = Not Employed, or Employed Part-

Time

• Better Use of Time– 0 = No, Most Time Structured– 1 = Yes, Lots of Free Time

• Drug Use Caused Problems– 0 = None– 1 = Past– 2 = Current

• Drug Use Caused Problems with Employment– 0 = No– 1 = Yes

Page 48: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS-MAT• Criminal Friends

– 0 = None– 1 = Some– 2 = Majority

• Contact with Past Criminal Peers– 0 = No Contact with Criminal Peers– 1 = At Risk of Contacting Criminal Peers– 2 = Contact or Actively Seeks Out Criminal Peers

• Criminal Attitudes – 0 = No/Limited Criminal Attitudes– 1 = Some Criminal Attitudes – 2 = Significant Criminal Attitudes

Page 49: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Misdemeanor Tool

LOW (0 to 2) MOD (3 to 7) HIGH (8 to 17)0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

AUC = .620; r2 = .208

Page 50: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS-MAT: Males

LOW (0 to 2) MOD (3 to 7) HIGH (8 to 17)0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

AUC =.628; r2 = .226

Page 51: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS-MAT: Females

LOW (0 to 3) MOD (4 to 9) HIGH (10 to 17)0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

AUC = .600; r2 = .181

Page 52: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS MAT for DUI Drivers

LOW (0 to 2) MOD (3 to 7) HIGH (8 to 17)0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

AUC = .597Recidivism rate: Any re-arrest

Page 53: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS MAT for DV Offenders

LOW (0 to 2) MOD/HIGH (3+)0%5%

10%15%20%25%30%35%40%45%50%

AUC = .598Re-Arrest for any reason

Page 54: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Misdemeanor Screening Tool

• 5 items– Criminal History (2 items)– Education– Drug Use– Criminal Attitudes

• Provides low and mod/high classification• 7% False Negative rate

Page 55: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Misdemeanor Screening Tool Items

• Most Serious Arrest Under Age 18– 0 = None– 1 = Yes, Misdemeanor– 2 = Yes, Felony

• Number of Prior Adult Felony Convictions– 0 = None– 1 = One or Two– 2 = Three or More

• Currently Employed– 0 = Yes, Full-time,

Disabled, or Retired– 1 = Not Employed, or

Employed Part-Time

• Drug Use Caused Problems– 0 = None– 1 = Past– 2 = Current

• Criminal Attitudes – 0 = No/Limited Criminal

Attitudes– 1 = Some Criminal Attitudes – 2 = Significant Criminal

Attitudes

Page 56: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Misdemeanor Screening Tool

LOW (0 to 1) MOD/HIGH (2 to 9)0%5%

10%15%20%25%30%35%40%45%50%

AUC = .631; r2 = .210

Page 57: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Accuracy of Screener

SCREENER

Low Moderate/High

MISDEMEANOR TOOL

Low 93.1% 6.9%

Moderate 32.3% 67.8%

High 0 100%

Page 58: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

EXAMINING THE IMPACT OF HEROIN AND OTHER DRUGS

Page 59: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Additional Data Collected

• Clermont• Champaign• Clark• Fairfield• Gallipolis• Mansfield

• Marietta• Marion• Morgan• Norwalk• Toledo

Page 60: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Supplemental Data

• Additional data on 568 offenders• Percentage of Offenders by Drug Type

– Cocaine 7%– Heroin/Rx Pills 33%– Marijuana 5%– Alcohol/Other 25%– None 31%

Page 61: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Percent of Heroin/Prescription Users by Risk Level

LOW (0 to 2) MOD (3 to 7) HIGH (8 to 17)0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

Page 62: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Re-Arrest Rates by Risk Level for Heroin/Prescription Users

LOW (0 to 2) MOD/HIGH (3+)0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Page 63: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS-MAT + Heroin/Rx Abuse for Males

LOW (0 TO 2) MOD (3 TO 7) HIGH (8+0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

R2 = .230; AUC = .620

Page 64: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

ORAS-MAT + Heroin/Rx Abuse for Females

LOW (0 TO 3) MOD (4 TO 8) HIGH (9+)0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

R2 = .185; AUC = .600

Page 65: Applying the Ohio Risk Assessment to Misdemeanants.

Next Steps

• Select tools to be utilized– MAT-Screener– MAT– CST

• Develop process for when/who completes assessment• Train Staff• Implement continuum of services based on

assessment results• Monitor/Quality Improvement


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