U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

Time Served on Prison Sentence: Felons First Released to Parole by Offense Calendar Year 1996

NCJ Number
169172
Date Published
1997
Length
25 pages
Annotation
This report presents information on parole and time served in California correctional institutions for felons first released to parole in calendar year 1996.
Abstract
Tables provide data on total admissions for felons first released to parole broken down by gender. Data are also provided on new admissions first released to parole for male and female felons, as well as parole violators with a new term first released to parole. Data show that during 1996, 57,520 felon inmates were paroled for the first time from a California correctional institution. The total mean time served in corrections institutions and in custody prior to institutionalization was 22.6 months. The median time served was 17.3 months. The total mean time served, including time in custody prior to institutionalization, was 23.2 months for males and 17.3 months for females. The mean time served in institutions was 18.5 months for males and 12.7 months for females. The mean time in prior custody was 4.5 months for males and 4.4 months for females. The total mean time served for personal offenses (crimes against persons) was 36 months, with males serving 8.2 months longer than females (36.3 months for males and 28.1 months for females). Time served for property offenses was 19.5 months for males and 15.7 months for females. Time served for drug offenses was 19.7 months for males and 16.4 months for females. Time served for all other offenses was 16.5 months for males and 16.1 months for females. 9 tables

Downloads

No download available