Criminal Justice
Permanent link for this communityhttps://hdl.handle.net/2022/14362
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Item A Description of a Multilayer Mentoring Program for Reducing Recidivism of Incarcerated Youth(2020) Weller, Niki M.; Ochoa, Theresa A.; Datchi, Corinne; Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; Riddle, Molly; Mungle, BeckyItem ’A Rape was Reported’: Construction of Crime in a University Newspaper.(2019) Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; Allison, Kayla; Ducate, CaitlinItem A retrospective study of the role of probation revocation in future criminal justice involvement(Journal of Criminal Justice, 2024-07-01) Diaz, Carmen L.; Lowder, Evan M.; Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; Ying, Michelle; Hatfield, TroyPurpose: Probation revocations and associated incarceration can have detrimental impacts on individuals, their families, and local jails and prisons. Yet, few studies have examined the potential long-term criminogenic effects of revocation. To address this gap, we conducted a retrospective observational study examining whether probation revocation predicted future criminal justice contact. Methods: The sample included 1,873 probation clients who exited probation between 2014 and 2016 in Monroe County, Indiana. We used hierarchical logistic regression models to examine whether probation revocation predicted future criminal justice outcomes including any jail return, any felony charges, any violent charges, any prison return, and any probation return over a five-year follow-up. Results: After controlling for relevant covariates, probation revocation did not predict any of the five outcomes. However, low-risk clients experienced a criminogenic effect of technical violation revocations on the likelihood of returning to jail in the five-year follow-up period. Conclusions: Revocation broadly does not appear to influence future criminal justice contact. Instead, revocation seems to indicate that an individual is already following a trajectory of misconduct. Among low-risk probation clients however, technical violations are particularly harmful. Caution may be warranted when responding to technical violations committed by low-risk clients.Item Adolescent Identities and Sexual Behavior: An Examination of Anderson’s ‘Player’ Hypothesis(2009) Giordano, Peggy; Longmore, Monica; Manning, Wendy; Northcutt, MiriamItem An exploration of female offenders’ memorable messages from probation and parole officers on the self-assessment of behavior from a control theory perspective(2016) Cornacchione, Jennifer; Smith, Sandi; Morash, Merry; Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; Cobbina, Jennifer; Kashy, DeborahItem Can we prevent deaths of homeless persons? Police led public health approach to prevent homeless deaths(The Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless, 2016-10-14) Ballew, Alfarena T; Hipple, Robert F Jr; Shaefer, Sarah J M; Hipple, Natalie KroovandResearch on homeless populations demonstrates that homelessness in itself is an independent risk factor for death. However, there is a dearth of detailed data on homeless decedents and the situations surrounding their deaths. This lack of knowledge, a desire to understand how and why homeless individuals were dying, and a sentinel event death led the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Homelessness and Panhandling Unit to partner with a local researcher and begin conducting homeless death reviews. The approach is modeled after the evidence-based, public health approach of the Fetal and Infant Mortality Review process (FIMR). The FIMR model is a systematic approach to understanding system gaps and obtaining insights into the factors that resulted in homelessness and ultimately death. This article reports on the process to develop this unique multi-agency, police-led review of homeless deaths in Indianapolis, Indiana and resulting recommendations for action to decrease these deaths.Item Community Corrections: Fines and Fees in Indiana(2022-12) Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; Ying, MichelleItem Cumulative Disadvantage & the Role of Transportation in Community Supervision(2018) Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; DeMaris, AlfredItem Desires and Desirability of Volunteers in CoSA Programs(2021) Gilliam, Mia; Novak, Megan; Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; Duwe, GrantItem The difference between living and dying: Victim characteristics and motive among non-fatal shooting and gun homicides.(2017-12-01) Hipple, Natalie Kroovand; Magee, Lauren A.Using both official and unofficial data sources, researchers examined nonfatal (n = 617) and fatal shooting (n = 159) victim characteristics over an 18-month period in Indianapolis. This research revealed that the typical shooting victim was male, non-White, almost 29 years old, had been arrested prior to inclusion in this study, and had been shot more than once. Interestingly, this research supports the notion that nonfatal shooting and homicide victims are different, especially as they relate to victim age, gunshot wound severity, and shooting motive. It highlights the need for better gun violence data collection beyond what currently exists. Striving for improved, more comprehensive cross-sector data collection has implications beyond just police policy and practice to include public health and prevention efforts.Item The Difference Between Living and Dying: Victim Characteristics and Motive Among Nonfatal Shootings and Gun Homicides(Violence and Victims, 2017) Hipple, Natalie; Magee, LaurenUsing both official and unofficial data sources, researchers examined nonfatal (n = 617) and fatal shooting (n = 159) victim characteristics over an 18-month period in Indianapolis. This research revealed that the typical shooting victim was male, non-White, almost 29 years old, had been arrested prior to inclusion in this study, and had been shot more than once. Interestingly, this research supports the notion that nonfatal shooting and homicide victims are different, especially as they relate to victim age, gunshot wound severity, and shooting motive. It highlights the need for better gun violence data collection beyond what currently exists. Striving for improved, more comprehensive cross-sector data collection has implications beyond just police policy and practice to include public health and prevention efforts.Item Education and Transition Requirements for Students with Disabilities in US Juvenile Correctional Facilities(2021) Ochoa, Theresa A.; Weller, Niki M.; Datchi, Corinne; Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; Grubbs, DerekItem Evaluating Recidivism and Job Quality Outcomes for Participants in the Hoosier Initiative for Reentry Employment (HIRE) Program(2017) Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; Hood, Brittany; Meckes, JessicaItem Evaluating Restorative Justice Circles of Support and Accountability (COSA): Can Social Support Overcome Structural Barriers?(International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 2016-06-05) Hipple, Natalie Kroovand; Duwe, Grant; Northcutt Bohmert, MiriamIn a climate in which stigmatic shaming is increasing for sex offenders as they leave prison, restorative justice practices have emerged as a promising approach to sex offender reentry success and have been shown to reduce recidivism. Criminologists and restorative justice advocates believe that providing ex-offenders with social support they may not otherwise have is crucial to reducing recidivism. This case study describes the expressive and instrumental social support required and received, and its relationship to key outcomes, by sex offenders who participated in Circles of Support and Accountability (COSA), a restorative justice, reentry program in Minnesota. In-depth interviews with re-entering sex offenders and program volunteers revealed that seventy-five percent of offenders reported weak to moderate levels of social support leaving prison, 70% reported receiving instrumental support in COSA and 100% reported receiving expressive support. Findings inform work on social support, structural barriers, and restorative justice programming during sex offender reentry.Item Female offenders and reentry(Routledge Press, 2017) Northcutt Bohmert, MiriamItem Graffiti with a Purpose: Sexual Violence & Social Justice Conversations in University Bathroom Stalls(2018) Green, Rachel E.; Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; Gesselman, Amanda N.; Mowatt, Rasul; Maher, Jennifer; Garcia, Justin R.Item Gun crime incident reviews as a strategy for enhancing problem solving and information sharing(Journal of Crime and Justice, 2016-03-09) Huebner, Beth M; O’Brien, Mallory; McGarrell, Edmund F; Hipple, Natalie KroovandOver the last several decades, police departments and other criminal justice agencies have seen a shift toward a proactive problem-solving response to crime problems. This problem solving orientation has often included an emphasis on expanded partnerships across criminal justice agencies as well as with a variety of community stakeholders, including researchers. This manuscript uses the issue of gun violence as a lens through which to examine the organizational and inter-organizational changes necessary to apply a data-driven, proactive, and strategic policing-led response to gun homicides and non-fatal shootings in four Midwestern sites. Each site adapted a unique data collection process and incident review. The data collection, incident reviews, and the varying models developed across the four cities, provide a reflection on corresponding organizational and inter-organizational changes that illuminate the movement toward this proactive, data-driven, problem solving model of criminal justice. Fulfilling the promise of the incident reviews, however, requires internal organizational and cross-agency inter-organizational collaboration to align people, systems, and resources with this proactive, problem-solving model. Additionally, effectively implementing these organizational and inter-organizational changes appears dependent on commitment and leadership, collaboration and partnerships, data quality and availability, and training and communication within and across organizational boundaries.Item Interracial Friendship and the Trajectory of ProMinority Attitudes: Assessing Intergroup Contact Theory(2015) Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; DeMaris, AlfredItem Lest We Forget: A Historical Analysis of Police Line of Duty Deaths in Indianapolis(Routledge Taylor & Francis Group, 2017-07-07) Hipple, Natalie Kroovand; Gruenewald, Jeff; Gonsler, John; Sargent, D. JacksonPrevious studies on police line of duty deaths are limited by their heavy reliance on traditional data. While the FBI’s Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted (LEOKA) data have undoubtedly advanced what we know about violence against police, placing line of duty deaths in their social and historical context poses challenges. Further, only a select number of variables are available for event-level analyses from traditional data sources. In this study, we utilise data culled from several open-source materials to present a comprehensive analysis of police line of duty deaths in Indianapolis, Indiana from 1880 to 2014. Descriptive findings for several incident, victim, and offender-level variables are presented, while placing fatal attacks on police within their sociohistorical and situational contexts. Two themes emerging from open-source data are also used to make sense of our descriptive findings. The first theme captures shifting circumstances from public to private line of duty deaths, while the second theme suggests how advancing technologies have been used to benefit police work while also introducing new risks to officer safety.Item Men’s Vulnerability to Prisoner-on-Prisoner Sexual Violence: A State Correctional System Case Study(2012) Morash, Merry; Jeong, Seokjin; Northcutt Bohmert, Miriam; Bush, Daniel
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