Los Angeles County Grand Jury • 1999-2000 • Agency Response

Final Report 1999 - 2000

Published: June 19, 2000 302 pages Consolidated Report
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Findings 10 findings

F1
Ensure risk assessment consistency, by ensuring that at least 60% of all cases have an initial Risk & Needs Assessment completed, and that 35% of all cases be reassessed at the mid-term of probation.
F2
Probation Costs and Charges A. Formal Probation B. Summary Probation Conclusions
F3
Revocation and Measures of Probation Effectiveness A. Formal Probation B. Summary Probation Conclusions INTRODUCTION Although the Grand Jury does not have the authority to study and make recommendations about the courts’ systems, this report includes information on summary probation, which emanates from the courts. This Grand Jury report compares: • The profile of probationers sentenced by the courts to formal and summary probation. • The costs of supervising formal and summary probationers. • The rate at which formal and summary probation is revoked. To accomplish these objectives, various documents and standard data reports produced by the County and the courts were reviewed, and representatives from the Municipal Courts and Los Angeles County Probation Department were interviewed. In addition, we worked with the Municipal Courts, the Probation Department, the Information Systems Advisory Body, and the County Internal Services Department to design and produce special data processing reports on formal and summary probation case profiles and revocation activity, to better define the formal and summary probation populations and probation violation outcomes. To obtain a better understanding of formal probation monitoring effectiveness and the reasons for revocation, a limited sampling of formal probation cases was conducted. All data gathering and sampling activities focussed on probation cases that were active during Fiscal Year 1998-99. After completing the analysis, a draft report was prepared and a meeting was held with representatives from the Los Angeles Municipal Courts and the Chief Probation Officer and managers from the Probation Department, to discuss the report findings, conclusions and
F4
Ensure that at least 60% of existing cases, where probationers have outstanding financial obligations, will be reported to the courts for violation, at least 90 days prior to the end of the probation term.
F5
Establish controls to ensure that 94 percent of all court reports will be submitted to the courts two days prior to scheduled hearing. In order to achieve these goals, the Probation Department has implemented an Adult Compliance Team (ACT) program, which is designed to ensure that monitoring activities for minimum supervision caseloads are current, the processing of notifications of new arrests on all active probation cases are expedited, and probation officers assigned to certain specialty caseloads are assisted. In addition, the Department is in the process of modifying its automated probation violation tracking capability within APS. To accomplish this, modifications to the existing system will be implemented, and new functionality will be added. To a large extent, these improvements will automate current manual processes. In addition, new processes will be established to track cases and identify probationers that are in violation of conditions of probation, thus providing probation officers with an added tool for identifying probation violation activity. These changes are being made possible, in part, because of increases in resources appropriated to the Department in recent years. For example, the Probation Department received funds in FY1999-2000 to lower caseload to probation officer ratios for Domestic Violence, Child Threat and Minimum Supervision case types. Other process improvements, including the establishment of a kiosk system to expand client-reporting tools and validate reporting authenticity, are also being implemented. It is the hope of the Department to meet or exceed all of these goals within the next 18 months to two years. In addition, the Department would like to receive additional funding for probation officer personnel to further reduce caseload to probation officer ratios. To support continuous process improvement, the Department would also like to establish a Research & Evaluation Unit. We support the Department’s goals and objectives, and believe the
F6
The circumstances of the offense for which the individual was placed on probation, including whether the conviction was for a violent crime. Points are assigned for each characteristic. Any person who scores 15 points or higher will be assigned to one of the more intensive supervision caseloads. If the score is 14 points or less, the person will be assigned to an AMS caseload unless there are factors that suggest a specialized caseload may be more appropriate. In these instances, the risk score of 14 points or less may be set aside by the probation officer, with approval from his/her supervisor, and the probationer may be assigned to one of the Department’s more intensive supervision caseloads. In FY1998-99, the Probation Department provided services to 90,968 individuals, who were distributed between supervision categories, as shown in Table 1.1 below. Table 1.1 Distribution of Misdemeanor and Felony Cases by Case Category – FY1998-99 CASE MISD FELONY TOTAL % MISD % FELONY % CLIENTS/ CATEGORY CLIENTS CLIENTS CLIENTS CLIENTS CLIENTS CATEGORY HRO 550 1 5,891 1 6,441 3.3% 96.7% 18.1% DOM 996 2 ,046 3,042 32.7% 67.3% 3.3% CTH 245 1 ,852 2,097 11.7% 88.3% 2.3% NTU 198 1 5,488 1 5,686 1.3% 98.7% 17.2% GNG 26 716 7 42 3.5% 96.5% 0.8% OTH 27 587 6 14 4.4% 95.6% 0.7% AMS 16,449 35,897 52,346 31.4% 68.6% 57.5% TOTAL 18,491 7 2,477 9 0,968 20.3% 79.7% 100.0% HRO = High Risk Offender; DOM = Domestic Violence; CTH = Child Threat; NTU = Narcotics Testing Unit; GNG = Gang; OTH = Other; AMS = Automated Minimum Supervision To assess the differences between formal and summary probationers, a profile of formal and summary probationers was requested from the Probation Department and the courts detailing the number of counts per probationer and the number of prior convictions by type of offense. This information was provided by the courts and is presented later in this section. The Probation Department could not electronically compile the information and manual compilation was not feasible. As a result, the only formal probation profile information available is as presented in Table 1.1. As shown in the table, 52,346 persons, or approximately 57.5 percent of all Probation Department clients were assigned to Automated Minimum Supervision (AMS) caseloads in FY 1998-99. Of these, approximately 68.6 percent had been convicted of felony offenses and 31.4 percent had been convicted of misdemeanor offenses. In the high risk and specialized caseload categories, over 95 percent of all clients had been convicted of felonies, with the exception of domestic violence and child threat categories, which were assigned 67.3 percent and 88.3 percent felons respectively. Based on a review of the scoring criteria employed by the Probation Department’s risk assessment tool, the data included in Table 1.1, interviews with Probation Department and Municipal Court managers and judges, and other factors, the AMS misdemeanant client profile appears to most closely correspond with that of persons who are placed on summary probation in Los Angeles County. Accordingly, the analysis of formal probation caseload and practices focuses on the AMS population rather than the case categories that generally receive more intensive supervision. This is discussed more fully, below. Probation Department Automated Minimum Service Workload The Adult Services Field Bureau and Adult Special Services Bureau of the Probation Department operate 14 Area Field Offices which are geographically dispersed throughout the County. The Directors at thirteen of these Area Field Offices manage probation officers who are responsible for HRO, Gang and AMS cases. Also housed at all 13 of these locations are probation officers responsible for Narcotics Testing, Domestic Violence and Child Threat specialty cases. Unlike the other specialty cases, Narcotics Testing is managed centrally. Probation officers at the fourteenth location–the La Madera Office (which recently moved and has been renamed the Riverview Office)–are responsible solely for AMS cases. During the period of this study, the La Madera Office monitored AMS probationers who resided within the boundaries of the Foothill, Pasadena, Pomona, Rio Hondo and San Gabriel Area Field Offices. In FY1998-99, probation officers at the La Madera Office monitored an average of 16,165 AMS probationers, which was approximately 37 percent of the total County AMS caseload at that time. According to the Director of the La Madera Office, cases are now being accepted from an additional five Area Field Offices: Firestone; South Central; Long Beach; Long Beach-Harbor; and Santa Monica. Once the full transition of these caseloads occurs, the Director anticipates that the La Madera Office will be responsible for a total of 25,000 to 30,000 AMS cases—or up to 70 percent of the County’s total AMS caseload. The Field Services Bureau Director has confirmed this estimate. This is significant because the La Madera Office operates a program that relies heavily on compliance data that is entered into the Department’s Adult Probation System (APS) by clerical personnel. This data is monitored by probation officers, who use the information to prepare progress reports for the courts, determine probationer compliance with conditions 90 days prior to the end of their probation term, and report on any other violations which may surface during the period of probation. After initial probationer orientation, there is no requirement that the probationer meet with the probation officer, nor does the probation officer make a field visit to the probationer’s home or work location. Instead, the probationers are generally required to report monthly, by mail. Given the scope of this investigation, it was not practical to evaluate AMS probation monitoring practices at all of the Area Field Offices. Accordingly, the evaluation focussed on the La Madera Office because (a) the probation officers at that location are responsible solely for an AMS caseload, (b) the operation is highly routine, and depends heavily on automated reporting of probationer compliance, and (c) the Department is migrating toward the La Madera Office model for managing AMS cases in the future. In addition to the review of the La Madera office, also reviewed were AMS case management functions at the Firestone and Pomona Area Field Offices since they have both implemented new procedures that the Department is considering replicating at La Madera and at other offices. A profile of each office follows. Firestone Area Field Office – The Firestone Office has established an Intake process for all new AMS and NTU cases referred by the courts. Under this new process, an Intake Officer at the Firestone Office performs initial probationer orientation, and may retain supervision over an AMS case for up to 30 days to monitor initial compliance with the court order. If an AMS probationer meets these interim conditions of probation, the Intake Officer then transfers the case to La Madera. If interim conditions are not met, the Intake Officer may report violations to the court. In other locations, cases are transferred directly to the La Madera Office from the courts, and probation officers at the La Madera Office conduct initial orientation and compliance monitoring. Although it is too early to reach conclusions regarding the effectiveness of the Firestone Area Office model, it is the Department’s reported intention to increase probation success by initially providing more intensive supervision of AMS probationers prior to transfer to a banked caseload. Pomona Area Field Office – The Pomona Area Field Office has developed a computerized AMS case management system known as the Compliance Tracking System (CTS). Every day, the system automatically flags cases where a probationer is out of compliance with the terms and conditions of probation (e.g., financial, program, and community service conditions). This system automatically produces probationer notification letters, instructions, and other correspondence after clerical prompts. Using these features, clerical staff are able to produce packets of documentation for each probation officer which (a) identify non-compliant probationers, (b) provide detailed case information for the preparation of court reports and, (c) supply form letters and other materials that aid with probation enforcement. However, this system does not automatically interface with the Department’s APS system or other supporting data systems relied upon by the Department, so all probationer case data must be independently researched and input into APS by clerical personnel. This is a labor intensive process, which increases the potential for data input error and inconsistencies between the APS and CTS databases. Accordingly, the Department is presently engaged is a project to export CTS to other Area Field Offices, and to implement an automated interface between CTS and APS. When implemented, this effort will provide an enhanced tool for probation officers, and should increase the efficiency and effectiveness of the AMS monitoring process. Given the complexities of these processes, and the changes being undertaken by the Department, flow charts were prepared of AMS caseload management at four locations:
F7
The homeless, while understandably irritating to many and an embarrassment to society, are apparently being treated with understanding by Los Angeles County law enforcement. Volunteer organizations agree that the police are very helpful, compassionate, and they even volunteer for special programs such as “Thanksgiving in the Street” and the “Christmas Carnival.”
F8
The use of canines is a police tactic that reflects credit on the departments. The few earlier complaints are no longer heard. The K9s in all departments are now trained to “find and bark”. Money and time are saved and criminals are apprehended.
F9
Domestic disputes continue to represent troubling, and at times, highly dangerous police calls. Increased awareness and efforts are being made in LA County. However, the meritorious DART program is only operational in about 50% of Los Angeles City. While supported by the Chief of Police, it has not been uniformly mandated. Thus, it largely is dependent upon individual division commanders to implement. Moreover, DART depends upon quality shelters which may have a variety of priorities and goals. Fortunately, there are many highly motivated police in the program, but there is a shortage of resources. Ancillary to training related to domestic violence, sworn officers receive guidance related to their own possible family violence. Guidelines and departmental standards are reflected in both roll call and advanced training. LASD Family Violence policy for deputies extends to 5 pages. Noteworthy is the Beverly Hills Chaplaincy Program that utilizes civilian volunteers, who are able to provide guidance and counseling to department members.
F10
There are consistent policies and guidelines stating that “bullets do not stop cars” and, in most instances, vehicles are not used to ram. According to one expert, “police are asking for more power from their cars, not more skills from the officers.” While numerous car chases are shown on television, the good news is that the incidence of these cases is not increasing.

Recommendations 92