PHILADELPHIA (April 13, 2022) – A new published white paper by the University of Pennsylvania, in collaboration with the District Attorney’s Office (DAO), shows alternatives to incarceration for people who are arrested for low-level offenses reduce recidivism and costs to taxpayers.
The study, led by Dr. Viet Nguyen of the Department of Criminology at the University of the Pennsylvania, assessed the impact of the Accelerated Misdemeanor Program (AMP), a community service-oriented diversion program, on people arrested for low-level offenses in Philadelphia. The study involves misdemeanor cases eligible and ineligible for AMP from 2009 to 2011 and follows their activity through 2016. Among the study’s important findings: AMP reduced five-year reconviction rates by 35% and led to an estimated 45% reduction in future sentenced supervision time. Factoring in reduced costs related to incarceration and probation, AMP reduces crime and frees up public dollars that could be better invested in public goods and services such as public health and education.
Dr. Nguyen’s study covers a version of AMP that is much more restrictive than present-day diversion programs, particularly those under District Attorney Larry Krasner. When it was introduced in 2010, AMP offered a lighter and more constructive type of accountability for defendants as compared to the other options at the time: a conviction and a sentence of jail or probation, or accountability without a conviction through the Accelerated Rehabilitation Disposition (ARD) program, the only diversionary program available to individuals charged with misdemeanors at that time.
Instead of an enduring conviction (with its disabling effects on future employment, education, housing, etc.) followed by jail and probation or a drawn out, probation-like experience under ARD, AMP held defendants accountable by requiring that participants complete 12 to 18 hours of community service and pay modest restitution in exchange for a more rapid dismissal of the case.The fees required of AMP participants were significantly lower than those associated with a conviction followed by a sentence or the ARD program. AMP excluded people with violent misdemeanor offenses who had been convicted within the previous 10 years. People who successfully completed AMP were eligible for automatic expungement (or erasure) of the case from public criminal records.
The Penn study compared defendants who would have been eligible for AMP to people ineligible for AMP due to their current offense or prior history before and after the introduction of AMP. The study found that AMP produced enormous benefits, including:- 35% reduction in five-year re-conviction rates
- an estimated 45% reduction in costly sentenced supervision time and a 38% reduction in future court fees over a five-year window
- 32% reduction in cases sentenced to jail or probation
- 69% increase in expungement rates among eligible defendants, removing barriers to employment and housing caused by having convictions or longstanding diversionary supervision on their criminal records
- 50% increase in the diversion rate of eligible defendants
- Light-touch programming, not lengthy probation or incarceration
- Low or no fees
- Accountability through positive social activities such as community service
- Automatic expungement after completion
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The Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office is the largest prosecutor’s office in Pennsylvania, and one of the largest in the nation. It serves the more than 1.5 million residents of the City and County of Philadelphia, employing 600 lawyers, detectives, and support staff. The District Attorney’s Office is responsible for the prosecution of approximately 40,000 criminal cases annually. Learn more about the DAO by visiting PhillyDA.org.