Mr. Papalia questions the re-offending rates of female, non-Indigenous juvenile offenders after their first custodial sentence. The answer provides limited data and requests more specific parameters for further analysis.

AnsweredQoN 147Legislative Assembly
Asked
7 May 2013
Portfolio
Corrective Services

QuestionView source ↗

(1) What percentage of female juvenile non-indigenous offenders re-offend, resulting in a new custodial sentence, after having completed their first custodial sentence (including each exit and/or return, but excluding imprisonment for fine default only and returns for fine default or breach early release order)?
(2) What percentage of female juvenile non-indigenous offenders re-offend within one year of release, resulting in a new custodial sentence, after having completed their first custodial sentence?
(3) What percentage of female juvenile non-indigenous offenders re-offend within two years of release, resulting in a new custodial sentence, after having completed their first custodial sentence?
(4) What percentage of female juvenile non-indigenous offenders re-offend within five years of release, resulting in a new custodial sentence, after having completed their first custodial sentence?

AnswerView source ↗

Answered
11 June 2013
Responded by
Minister for Corrective Services
Response time
35 days
(1) 28.57% of female juvenile non-Indigenous offenders who were released on
or after 1 January 2001 returned to either juvenile detention or adult custody.
1 January 2001 is the earliest date of available juvenile records on the record
keeping system.
(2)-(4) Any data provided for a particular year of release for offenders
would not be statistically significant without having a discrete series of
years in order to make a comparison. The Member may wish to specify a release
year or a series of years in order for statistical comparisons between release
cohorts to be made.

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