The purpose of the study was to provide information about
home detention monitoring systems and to evaluate their effectiveness.
The principal investigators sought to determine (1) whether electronic
monitoring systems relieved some of the burdens associated with manual
monitoring of home detention, such as making telephone calls and field
visits, (2) how home detention affected the lifestyles of offenders,
(3) whether the methods of monitoring influenced offender behavior
during the program, (4) how electronic monitoring differed from manual
monitoring in terms of supervision of the offenders, (5) how offenders
reacted to electronic monitoring, (6) how offenders' families reacted
to electronic monitoring, and (7) whether the method of monitoring
influenced the probability of an arrest or subsequent contact with the
criminal justice system after release from the program. Part 1 contains
demographic information, such as age, race, marital status, number of
children, living arrangements, employment, and education for each
offender. Also included is information on the offense leading to the
current case, including numbers and types of charges and convictions
for both felonies and misdemeanors, recommendations and judicial
disposition for the current case, and information on the criminal
history of the offender. Part 2 contains data from the intake interview
with the offender, such as information on the offender's family, living
arrangements, education, employment, past alcohol and drug use, and
expectations for the home detention program and monitoring procedures.
Part 3 contains information collected in the exit interview and is
similar in content to Part 2. Part 4 contains information on the
program delivery (type of release from the program, violations of the
program, results of tests for alcohol and drug use, errand time,
payment, contacts with offenders, and the characteristics and results
of the contacts with electronically monitored offenders). Part 5 is a
check of criminal histories of offenders for at least one year after
their release from the program.
Baumer, Terry L., and Mendelsohn, Robert I. Electronic Monitoring of Nonviolent Convicted Felons: An Experiment in Home Detention in Marion County, Indiana, 1986-1988. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2006-01-12. https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR09587.v1
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United States Department of Justice. Office of Justice Programs. National Institute of Justice (86-IJ-CX-0041)