NCJ Number
253820
Journal
Journal of Offender Rehabilitation Volume: 58 Issue: 2 Dated: 2019 Pages: 133-153
Date Published
2019
Length
21 pages
Annotation
This study analyzed the impact of the Cook County (Illinois) State's Attorney's Office Deferred Prosecution Program (DPP) regarding participation outcome patterns, and it also compared recidivism rates between a sample of DPP participants (695) and a comparison group (991) of defendants found guilty through traditional adjudication from February 28, 2011 and December 5, 2012 with recidivism rates through June 6, 2014.
Abstract
Binary logistic and Cox proportional regressions were utilized to evaluate the program. No statistically significant difference in re-arrest rates was found for a sample of DPP participants and a comparison group of defendants found guilty through traditional adjudication; however, DPP did have a statistically significant effect on re-arrest rates for women charged with theft; in such cases, DPP reduced the likelihood of re-arrest by approximately 76 percent. The study concluded that DPP has the potential to reduce the future collateral consequences of a criminal conviction for individuals who complete the program. Although DPP seems to have limited impact on re-arrest rates overall, the program may be revised to target certain types of defendants. (publisher abstract modified)