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PA Bulletin, Doc. No. 96-1202

THE COURTS

Title 204--JUDICIAL SYSTEM GENERAL PROVISIONS

PENNSYLVANIA COMMISSION ON SENTENCING

Impact of '3-Strikes' Legislation (Act 21 of 1995)

[26 Pa.B. 3530]

   Act 21 of 1995, referred to as the '3-strikes' legislation, increased the mandatory penalties for certain repeat violent offenders. Act 21 further mandated the Pennsylvania Commission on Sentencing to provide an impact statement on the projected increases in the prison population as a result of this legislation. This impact analysis was conducted by the Correctional Population Projection Committee, which is comprised of the Lancaster County Prison Warden, the York County Chief Adult Probation Officer along with representatives of the following agencies:  Commission on Crime and Delinquency, Commission on Sentencing, Department of Corrections, Board of Probation and Parole, and Office of the Budget. Questions concerning this impact statement should be directed to Doug Hoffman, Chair, at (717) 787-5152., of the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency.

SENATOR DAVID HECKLER,   
Chair

   Impact Summary:  Violent Offense Mandatories--Act 21 of 1995 expands the definition of Act 54 of 1982 to include the offenses of robbery of a motor vehicle and burglary of an occupied dwelling. It also added solicitation or conspiracy to commit any of the designated offenses to the list of offenses for repeat offenders. The act increases the mandatory sentences for second offenses from 5 to 10 years if the presumption that the offender is a ''High Risk Dangerous'' offender has not been rebutted. The act increases mandatory minimum sentences for third and subsequent offenses to 25 years and allows the court to sentence these offenders to life in prison.

   Analysis and Assumptions:  Consistent with all previous special session bill impact analyses, the Committee assumed that all new sentences would be effective January 1, 1996. For this analysis, the Committee assumed that 90% of the offenders who meet the criteria for the second offense mandatories will be found to be ''High Risk Dangerous'' and receive the 10 year mandatory minimum sentence. The other 10% of second time offenders will receive the mandatory 5 year minimum sentence. For third and subsequent offenders, it was assumed that all offenders who met the criteria would receive at least the 25 year mandatory minimum sentence and that 20% of these offenders would receive a sentence of life imprisonment. While the imposition of these mandatory sentences is currently subject to the discretion of the prosecution, the new criteria and sentence length is expected to affect plea bargains and other sentences by lengthening those sentences. The following tables show the estimated impact of this bill through the year 2005. However, the long sentences, defined as those with minimum sentences of up to 25 years or a life sentence, mean that the maximum impact will not be experienced for 40 years, assuming the average life sentence will be 40 years (average offender age = 32 years). That impact has been included below the projection for the year 2005.

   Note:  All analyses produced by the Committee unless, stated otherwise, assume only the changes described in the analyzed bill will occur. Total impact of all bills enacted will require a separate analysis. Since a single offender may be affected by more than one bill, simply adding the individual impact estimates will not produce an accurate total impact estimate.

Estimated Impact of Act 21 of 1995 (3-strikes legislation)1

Department of Corrections

Prison Population Under
Past PolicyImpact of Act 21 of 1995Act 21 of 1995
199635,606+2335,629
199735,557+4635,603
199835,132+7635,208
199934,773+11834,891
200034,739+19434,933
200134,742+32835,070
200234,833+52635,359
200335,025+77435,799
200435,345+104436,389
200535,741+130137,042

Eventual Impact (40 years) + 3069

Board of Probation and Parole

Impact of Special SessionPrison Population Under
Past PolicyAct 21 of 1995Act 21 of 1996
199622,111022,111
199724,711024,711
199827,317-727,310
199929,709-2629,683
200031,556-7931,477
200133,153-19032,963
200234,675-36534,310
200336,015-59035,425
200437,165-83736,328
200538,070-107136,999

Eventual Impact (40 years) + 2389

Jail Impact -45 within 2 years

[Pa.B. Doc. No. 96-1202. Filed for public inspection July 26, 1996, 9:00 a.m.]

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1  This assumes that 90 percent of second time offenders are determined to be ''High Risk Dangerous''.



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