Prisoner Assessment Tool Targeting Estimated Risk and Needs (PATTERN) Interactive Tool September 4, 2019 The First Step Act, signed into law at the end of 2018, focuses on improving public safety through rehabilitative programming and reducing the use and impact of lengthy prison sentences based on mandatory minimums for drug offenses and weapons enhancements, along with other improvements to the federal prison system. The law creates incentives for people incarcerated in the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) to take part in programs and treatment aligned with their risks and needs and enables those assessed at the lowest risk levels to earn credits toward earlier release to community supervision by completing recidivism-reduction programming. At the core of the law is the development and release of a risk and needs assessment system. As required by First Step, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) recently developed and released the Prisoner Assessment Tool Targeting Estimated Risk and Needs (PATTERN), a risk assessment tool for people in BOP prisons. The tool predicts whether someone currently incarcerated is at high, medium, low, or minimum risk for reoffending based on several characteristics, or “risk factors.” One of the ways BOP will use this tool is to help determine who is eligible for early release. Only people who score low or minimum risk are eligible for early transfer from prison, either into home confinement, a halfway house, or community supervision.1 Below is an interactive version of the PATTERN tool, which you can use to see how each risk factor either increases or decreases a person’s risk score. For example, how many programs would a person in the high-risk category need to complete to reduce his or her risk score enough to be eligible for early release? What if the person also incurred an infraction conviction? How do the results change based on how old the person is at the time of assessment? In simplest terms, those factors that make someone more likely to reoffend add points to the score, while those factors that reduce the likelihood of reoffending subtract points from the score. Some of the factors are “static” and cannot change over time (e.g., age at first conviction), while others are “dynamic” and can reasonably be expected to change during a period of incarceration. First Step requires that BOP conduct periodic reassessments and that the new risk assessment system include dynamic factors such as the number of programs completed so that people can move from higher to lower levels of risk. Because the risk factors for reoffending can differ between men and women, DOJ developed a separate tool for each gender with slightly different items and scoring. The table below shows how the risk score corresponds with the risk categories for males and females. (See the full DOJ report for more information on scoring and how the tools were developed.) Male Female Minimum <=10 <=9 Low 11-33 10-29 Medium 34-45 30-45 High >45 >45 In the interactive PATTERN tool below, start by selecting a gender. Then, select a response for each question. The results at the bottom, including the risk score and risk category, will update automatically. CHOOSE ONE: Male Female PATTERN RESULTS A female in federal prison with the selected characteristics would receive the following results based on the PATTERN risk assessment tool: Overall risk score: -21 Risk category: Minimum Based on these results, she would be eligible for early release. STATIC ONE Age at first conviction > 35 (0 points) 25–34 (5 points) 18–24 (10 points) < 18 (15 points) TWO Criminal history score 0-1 points (0 points) 2-3 points (6 points) 4-6 points (12 points) 7-9 points (18 points) 10-12 points (24 points) > 12 points (30 points) THREE History of violence None (0 points) > 10 years minor (1 point) > 15 years serious (2 points) 5-10 years minor (3 points) 10-15 years serious (4 points) < 5 years minor (5 points) 5-10 years serious (6 points) < 5 years serious (7 points) FOUR History of escapes None (0 points) > 10 years minor (2 points) 5-10 years minor (4 points) < 5 years minor or any serious (6 points) FIVE Voluntary surrender Yes (-9 points) No (0 points) SIX Education score High school degree or GED-verified (-2 points) Enrolled and progressing in GED (-1 point) No verified degree and not participating in GED program (0 points) DYNAMIC SEVEN Age at time of assessment > 60 (0 points) 51-60 (3 points) 41-50 (6 points) 30-40 (9 points) 26-29 (12 points) 18-25 (15 points) EIGHT Infraction convictions (any) 0 (0 points) 1 (2 points) 2 (4 points) > 2 (6 points) NINE Infraction convictions (serious and violent) 0 (0 points) 1 (2 points) 2 (4 points) > 2 (6 points) TEN Number of programs completed (any) 0 (0 points) 1 (-2 points) 2-3 (-4 points) 4-10 (-6 points) > 10 (-8 points) ELEVEN Number of technical or vocational courses2 0 (0 points) 1 (-1 point) > 1 (-2 points) TWELVE Federal industry employment (UNICOR) Yes (-1 point) No (0 points) THIRTEEN Drug treatment while incarcerated No need indicated (-9 points) Completed residential drug treatment during incarceration (-6 points) Completed drug treatment during incarceration (-3 points) Need indicated but no treatment during incarceration (0 points) FOURTEEN Noncompliance with financial responsibility No (0 points) Yes (3 points) 1The law also includes two other requirements for early release eligibility: 1) a person must earn enough time credits to at least equal his or her remaining sentence; and 2) for release to home confinement or a halfway house, the law also requires that a person maintain a low or minimum risk score for at least two assessment cycles. The law also allows people to become eligible for early release if approved by the prison warden (regardless of risk level). 2The point values reported here are the reverse of what appears in the US Department of Justice’s report on page 54; we understand the values were incorrectly displayed in the report.