What is Recidivism?

Our Country in Crisis

There’s a crisis in our country. And most of us have no idea it’s even happening. At its heart, recidivism is a person’s tendency to relapse into a previous condition or mode of behavior, especially a relapse into criminal behavior. When it comes to criminal justice in the United States, for a long time, and largely is the case still today, penal codes are focused far more on punishment. When stepping away from the real world, it makes sense as a thought experiment — any rational human being would steer clear from crime altogether if the punishments are harsh enough. In the mind and on paper, this concept seems to make sense.

Unfortunately, the Bureau of Justice’s data paints a completely different picture. After decades of harsh punishments, extreme mandatory minimum sentences for first-time offenders, and a whole host of other issues, the reality is more complicated.

For one, you would expect someone who has endured incarceration to understand the penalties of committing a crime. But, a 2018 study update by the Bureau of Justice shows us that, on the state level, five out of six prisoners released ended up re-offending and going back to jail within nine years of release. On the surface, this might seem like prison is insufficient — and we’ll dig into that.

But what the numbers miss are people trying to live their lives within a broken system. We face a mental health crisis like none other, as state budgets for caring for the mentally ill have been slashed to the bone. The problem is that when you try to break someone and take away every other option available to them, the likelihood that they will end up where they started increases exponentially.

But just how did we get here?

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What is Recidivism?

Our Country in Crisis

There’s a crisis in our country. And most of us have no idea it’s even happening. At its heart, recidivism is a person’s tendency to relapse into a previous condition or mode of behavior, especially a relapse into criminal behavior. When it comes to criminal justice in the United States, for a long time, and largely is the case still today, penal codes are focused far more on punishment. When stepping away from the real world, it makes sense as a thought experiment — any rational human being would steer clear from crime altogether if the punishments are harsh enough. In the mind and on paper, this concept seems to make sense.

Unfortunately, the Bureau of Justice’s data paints a completely different picture. After decades of harsh punishments, extreme mandatory minimum sentences for first-time offenders, and a whole host of other issues, the reality is more complicated.

For one, you would expect someone who has endured incarceration to understand the penalties of committing a crime. But, a 2018 study update by the Bureau of Justice shows us that, on the state level, five out of six prisoners released ended up re-offending and going back to jail within nine years of release. On the surface, this might seem like prison is insufficient — and we’ll dig into that.

But what the numbers miss are people trying to live their lives within a broken system. We face a mental health crisis like none other, as state budgets for caring for the mentally ill have been slashed to the bone. The problem is that when you try to break someone and take away every other option available to them, the likelihood that they will end up where they started increases exponentially.

But just how did we get here?

The Hands Of The People

What mandatory minimum laws do is take the power out of our hands and instead make the government the sole arbiter of justice. They tell us that a duly sworn judge and jury are incapable of using their own reason to determine the merits of a case, and whether or not a 17-year-old first-time offender with no criminal history should be locked up for twenty years. Unfortunately, this is where recidivism begins — long before the inmate has even gone to prison for the first time.

The facts stand that, in this instance of a 17-year-old being caught with crack cocaine, getting tried as an adult, and getting sent to jail for decades, it’s extremely likely that if they were not a hardened career criminal before going to prison, they will likely exit the system as one. The harsher the conditions of that youth’s confinement, the more likely this outcome.

Numerous studies have demonstrated that the harsher a prisoner’s term is, the more likely that they will re-offend later, even for those who have committed the same or similar crimes.

So those mandatory minimum laws, while well-intended when they were passed, have actually contributed to the problem of recidivism. And, in doing so, they have taken a fundamental piece of our Bill of Rights and thrown it out the window. Intended as a check on government power and overreach, the Sixth Amendment of the Constitution provides for a jury of one’s peers in order to determine a consensus for guilt and innocence, as well as punishment in many cases. Mandatory minimums end up being government overreach, yet juries are powerless to stop it. This is where the system starts to break before the prisoner can even re-offend.

The Financial Burden Of Recidivism

According to the Bureau of Prisons, in 2017 it cost over $36,000 per year to house each inmate. Some people argue that this is because prison is “too nice” and that prisoners get too many privileges like television and the commissary. But as we’ve gone over already, the harsher the prison conditions and term, the higher the likelihood of recidivism. So basically, by making prison even more hellish than it already is, it won’t save money in the long run — rather, it will just ensure that the yearly cost is spent for the remainder of an inmate’s life.

Historical Recidivism

Although recidivism has always been an issue, its explosion since the 80s and 90s in the US is unprecedented anywhere else in the world. To begin with, our incarceration rate is the highest on the planet. Countries like Iran, China, and Russia — nations synonymous in the US with draconian, authoritarian police states — all incarcerate a smaller percentage of their populations than the US does, and by a rate of about 7%.

With a population of incarcerated individuals that is this high, it isn’t surprising that we also run into such trouble with prisoners ending up back in the system. And, although there are several programs over the years which have helped in some cases, there isn’t nearly enough funding headed to those programs to actually make a dent in the problem.

There are several factors that put us here. Likely the most significant contributing factor to this reality is the practice of extreme mandatory minimum sentences that have criminalized drugs nearly among racial and ethnic lines based on consumption. For instance, with crack cocaine — which for decades has been targeted towards poorer and minority populations — you find that the mandatory minimum is significantly higher than its more potent powdered form, which is mainly consumed by wealthier white people. Same drug, same crime, different punishment. That’s fundamentally un-American.

What mandatory minimums do is take the power out of the people’s hands. Before mandatory minimum laws were so prevalent, a jury would decide guilt or innocence, and then mete out justice in the form of punishment if the defendant is guilty. In some instances, the judge would determine the punishment, based on the severity of the offense and the criminal history of the defendant.

Running The Numbers

Let’s take a scenario where the US taxpayers pay less for incarceration, thus making a sentence harsher.

Take an adult male with a ten-year prison sentence at a reduced $20,000 per year. The US taxpayer would spend $200,000 incarcerating that individual. He is not paying taxes on real income (prison income is criminally low, thus the taxes paid minor, if at all), he is not contributing to society in terms of purchasing goods and services, raising children, etc. And, once the ten years are up, he will go back into society without marketable skills or education, meaning that his likelihood of getting gainful employment is extremely low. More likely than not, this ex-con will recede into a life of crime. He has no other options to live. Thus, he will likely commit another crime and then cost taxpayers an additional $100-200,000 over another 5-10 year prison term, if not for life.

Now, let’s take that same individual, and instead of stripping him of all privileges, we keep them, even at the cost of $36,000 per year. Instead of being harsher, we ensure that he leaves prison with a useful associate’s degree, and with good behavior, moves from a medium-security prison to a halfway house with gainful employment after 3 years, where he works, pays rent and taxes, is involved in the local community, and is getting his life on track for success. Instead of the $200,000 and likely more that would cost the US, he is instead only costing $108,000 — significantly less and with a likely outcome of being a productive member of society.

A Path Forward

As a nation, we have to educate one another on this issue. It’s far more complicated than “lock them up and throw away the key.” Recidivism surrounds a lot of other issues as well, from healthcare to education, access to opportunity and upward mobility, and a whole host of other factors.

RED’s goal is to beat recidivism, to make sure that those who do commit crimes pay their debt to society, but are also set up for success when they leave prison so that we never have to incarcerate them again.

At the end of the day, making prison worse and cheaper in the short term is extremely fiscally irresponsible. This shows just how much more cost-effective it is to focus on eliminating recidivism than to simply push for harsher punishments. It’s better for the prisoner, it’s better for their families, it’s better for communities, and it’s better for taxpayers. But it’s going to take a lot of work.

To find out what you can do to help RED in its goal to raise awareness and, ultimately, stop recidivism, click here.

Make An Impact

With a Tax Free & Hassle Free Donation 

The Hands Of The People

What mandatory minimum laws do is take the power out of our hands and instead make the government the sole arbiter of justice. They tell us that a duly sworn judge and jury are incapable of using their own reason to determine the merits of a case, and whether or not a 17-year-old first-time offender with no criminal history should be locked up for twenty years. Unfortunately, this is where recidivism begins — long before the inmate has even gone to prison for the first time.

The facts stand that, in this instance of a 17-year-old being caught with crack cocaine, getting tried as an adult, and getting sent to jail for decades, it’s extremely likely that if they were not a hardened career criminal before going to prison, they will likely exit the system as one. The harsher the conditions of that youth’s confinement, the more likely this outcome.

Numerous studies have demonstrated that the harsher a prisoner’s term is, the more likely that they will re-offend later, even for those who have committed the same or similar crimes.

So those mandatory minimum laws, while well-intended when they were passed, have actually contributed to the problem of recidivism. And, in doing so, they have taken a fundamental piece of our Bill of Rights and thrown it out the window. Intended as a check on government power and overreach, the Sixth Amendment of the Constitution provides for a jury of one’s peers in order to determine a consensus for guilt and innocence, as well as punishment in many cases. Mandatory minimums end up being government overreach, yet juries are powerless to stop it. This is where the system starts to break before the prisoner can even re-offend.

The Financial Burden Of Recidivism

According to the Bureau of Prisons, in 2017 it cost over $36,000 per year to house each inmate. Some people argue that this is because prison is “too nice” and that prisoners get too many privileges like television and the commissary. But as we’ve gone over already, the harsher the prison conditions and term, the higher the likelihood of recidivism. So basically, by making prison even more hellish than it already is, it won’t save money in the long run — rather, it will just ensure that the yearly cost is spent for the remainder of an inmate’s life.

Historical Recidivism

Although recidivism has always been an issue, its explosion since the 80s and 90s in the US is unprecedented anywhere else in the world. To begin with, our incarceration rate is the highest on the planet. Countries like Iran, China, and Russia — nations synonymous in the US with draconian, authoritarian police states — all incarcerate a smaller percentage of their populations than the US does, and by a rate of about 7%.

With a population of incarcerated individuals that is this high, it isn’t surprising that we also run into such trouble with prisoners ending up back in the system. And, although there are several programs over the years which have helped in some cases, there isn’t nearly enough funding headed to those programs to actually make a dent in the problem.

There are several factors that put us here. Likely the most significant contributing factor to this reality is the practice of extreme mandatory minimum sentences that have criminalized drugs nearly among racial and ethnic lines based on consumption. For instance, with crack cocaine — which for decades has been targeted towards poorer and minority populations — you find that the mandatory minimum is significantly higher than its more potent powdered form, which is mainly consumed by wealthier white people. Same drug, same crime, different punishment. That’s fundamentally un-American.

What mandatory minimums do is take the power out of the people’s hands. Before mandatory minimum laws were so prevalent, a jury would decide guilt or innocence, and then mete out justice in the form of punishment if the defendant is guilty. In some instances, the judge would determine the punishment, based on the severity of the offense and the criminal history of the defendant.

Running The Numbers

Let’s take a scenario where the US taxpayers pay less for incarceration, thus making a sentence harsher.

Take an adult male with a ten-year prison sentence at a reduced $20,000 per year. The US taxpayer would spend $200,000 incarcerating that individual. He is not paying taxes on real income (prison income is criminally low, thus the taxes paid minor, if at all), he is not contributing to society in terms of purchasing goods and services, raising children, etc. And, once the ten years are up, he will go back into society without marketable skills or education, meaning that his likelihood of getting gainful employment is extremely low. More likely than not, this ex-con will recede into a life of crime. He has no other options to live. Thus, he will likely commit another crime and then cost taxpayers an additional $100-200,000 over another 5-10 year prison term, if not for life.

Now, let’s take that same individual, and instead of stripping him of all privileges, we keep them, even at the cost of $36,000 per year. Instead of being harsher, we ensure that he leaves prison with a useful associate’s degree, and with good behavior, moves from a medium-security prison to a halfway house with gainful employment after 3 years, where he works, pays rent and taxes, is involved in the local community, and is getting his life on track for success. Instead of the $200,000 and likely more that would cost the US, he is instead only costing $108,000 — significantly less and with a likely outcome of being a productive member of society.

A Path Forward

As a nation, we have to educate one another on this issue. It’s far more complicated than “lock them up and throw away the key.” Recidivism surrounds a lot of other issues as well, from healthcare to education, access to opportunity and upward mobility, and a whole host of other factors.

RED’s goal is to beat recidivism, to make sure that those who do commit crimes pay their debt to society, but are also set up for success when they leave prison so that we never have to incarcerate them again.

At the end of the day, making prison worse and cheaper in the short term is extremely fiscally irresponsible. This shows just how much more cost-effective it is to focus on eliminating recidivism than to simply push for harsher punishments. It’s better for the prisoner, it’s better for their families, it’s better for communities, and it’s better for taxpayers. But it’s going to take a lot of work.

To find out what you can do to help RED in its goal to raise awareness and, ultimately, stop recidivism, click here.

0
%

The state of Georgia reports a 30% recidivism rate, but the actual recidivism rate is closer to 50%.

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%

The rate of recidivism in U.S. is 86%! But RED’s is ONLY 10%.

0
K

Total number of people currently incarcerated in the United States.

A Few of Our Valued Partners

Archbishop Desmond Tutu

“There comes a point where we need to stop just pulling people out of the river [and] we need to go upstream and find out why they are falling in.” – Desmond Tutu

Archbishop Desmond Tutu

“There comes a point where we need to stop just pulling people out of the river [and] we need to go upstream and find out why they are falling in.” – Desmond Tutu

The 4 Pillars of Our RED Program

What is Recidivism? Recidivism refers to the tendency for the formerly incarcerated to relapse into criminal activity after a first conviction. Recidivists are also known as repeat offenders. RED’s curriculum is structured to develop a student’s social, civic, and financial literacy through task-oriented learning, engaging workshops, interactive educational modules and a mentor to coach them through the entire program. Each of these four pillars contribute to the growth of our participants that extends far beyond the RED program.

The 4 Pillars of Our RED Program

What is Recidivism? Recidivism refers to the tendency for the formerly incarcerated to relapse into criminal activity after a first conviction. Recidivists are also known as repeat offenders. RED’s curriculum is structured to develop a student’s social, civic, and financial literacy through task-oriented learning, engaging workshops, interactive educational modules and a mentor to coach them through the entire program. Each of these four pillars contribute to the growth of our participants that extends far beyond the RED program.

Civic Participation

By providing knowledge on how to actively participate & initiate change within your community, our program participants learn to grow as individuals while contributing to the greater good.

Social Strength

Through the development of cognitive, emotional and intellectual capabilities each of our participants develop the personal compassion and character to be the best version of themselves.

Financial Literacy

With thorough lessons on banking processes, income budgeting, credit, and more, we empower our participants with the financial literacy necessary to move towards financial freedom.

Personal Mentorship

By establishing & maintaining solid relationships with a mentor they can relate to & grow through, our participants find the trust & motivation needed to get & stay on the right path.

2022 Graduate Stories

Making a Difference One Life at a Time

The Impact Of Recidivism

We Need Solutions that Create Lasting Change

Mass incarceration and steadily increasing crime rates have become an epidemic in the United States. The goal of our justice system has always been to produce a positive change in behavior. This is not happening with the standard criminal justice procedures we have in place today. Instead, current procedures serve only to perpetuate and escalate the problem. Now, more than ever, our communities have a pressing need for a solution that will create long-lasting change.

Standard prosecution for non-violent offenses often leads to a conviction, incarceration and/or probation. The overuse of probation is our biggest problem. In Georgia, our probation services are run by private companies. Nonviolent people have been sentenced to unreasonably long periods of probation in order to turn a profit. Who pays for this excessive supervision? YOU DO. The money you pay in taxes could be earmarked for improving your child’s education, getting you access to better healthcare, fixing roads and increasing safety in your neighborhood, but instead, your tax dollars are funneled into a system that isn’t working. The standard system perpetuates this strain on the economy.

Another issue with standard prosecution is that it perpetuates crimes. Once a person is convicted, obtaining gainful employment becomes difficult if not impossible. The conviction blocks access to federal student aid which prevents people from pursuing higher education. If that isn’t enough, a conviction also restricts people from acquiring housing resources, leaving them facing possible homelessness. This type of punishment alienates people from society. The psychological effects of alienation lead to desperation and hopelessness which is the underlying basis for criminal behavior. Standard criminal justice procedures are actually creating a breeding ground for recidivism.

Restorative Justice Programs Are The Solution

We here in Georgia lead our nation in criminal justice reform. Restorative justice programs are the next step. Restorative justice programs hold people accountable for crime in a different way. Victim restitution is made directly or indirectly. Restorative justice focuses on rehabilitation through education, mentoring and meaningful community experiences. This cultivates a sense of belonging and personal accountability to society. By intervening immediately after a person’s first arrest we can redirect the lives of young men and women to keep them out of the criminal justice system – permanently.

Restorative justice programs reverse the detrimental effects of standard prosecution. This new tradition in law enforcement reduces crime, eliminates probation and ends recidivism. Everybody benefits. At one-third of the cost of probation, these programs not only free up taxpayer money to reinvest in our communities, but they boost the economy by cultivating more taxpaying, law-abiding citizens. No more self-perpetuating drain on our resources. The benefits are more than just short term. Over time the benefits to our community include a measurable economic boost, reduced unemployment rates, and increased safety in our neighborhoods.

Become a Mentor

RED is always looking for dedicated individuals to help us guide our program participants in a meaningful way.

Join Our Newsletter

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Become a Partner

If you or your organization would like to partner with RED to help increase our impact we would love to hear from you.

Impact in Your Inbox

Learn about the impact we’re making in the lives of those fighting to overcome the challenges of recidivism.
Stay up-to-date on our latest efforts, and find out how you can help. Sign up now to join our community of change-makers.

Impact in
Your Inbox

Learn about the impact we’re making in the lives of those fighting to overcome the challenges of recidivism. Stay up-to-date on our latest efforts, and find out how you can help. Sign up now to join our community of change-makers.