http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/08/110808152417.htm
ScienceDaily (Aug. 8, 2011) — The use of GPS
technology to monitor sex offenders should be viewed as a tool rather
than a control mechanism, a team of researchers at Sam Houston State
University found in a recent study.
In "Examining GPS Monitoring Alerts Triggered by Sex Offenders: The
Divergence of Legislative Goals and Practical Applications in Community
Corrections," Dr. Gaylene Armstrong and Beth Freeman examined the
affects of a state law in Arizona that required the lifelong GPS
monitoring of adult sex offenders convicted of dangerous crimes against
children and placed on community supervision. The study monitored sex
offenders in Maricopa County, AZ over a two-year period.
"A divergence between legislative goals and practical application of
mandated GPS monitoring programs exists," said Dr. Armstrong, Research
Director of the Correctional Management Institute of Texas at the
College of Criminal Justice. "GPS technology is far more limited than
anticipated and should be viewed as a tool rather than depended upon as a
control mechanism."
The study found that a significant number of equipment-related alerts
were triggered by a loss of a satellite signal, rather than offender
violations. Those alerts resulted in a significant increase in the
workload of probation officers.
"While it is expected that GPS technology provides the capability for
near real-time tracking of an offender's location and movement in the
community and that alerts would primarily indicate non-compliance with
geographical and temporal restrictions, findings demonstrated that the
responses to non-violation alerts consumed an inordinate amount of an
agency's resources -- resources that could be better directed to other
case management activities," the study found.
A secondary impact is the possibility of complacency by probation
officers because of an overload of non-violation alerts, which may
result in a failure to act and liability for offender actions, the
report concluded.
The cost effectiveness of GPS monitoring should be considered when
setting budget for technology and vendors, especially considering the
workload required to implement and maintain the system. If lifelong
monitoring is mandated, the number of cases will continue to grow, the
study said.
Community corrections supervisors estimate that 70 percent of alerts
are false alarms and are usually related to technology issues. Steps
should be taken to reduce the likelihood of unintentional alarms.
Probation officers also should be trained on the use of the GPS system,
and written rules and policies should be implemented, the report said.
"Results demonstrated a clear difference between legislative
perceptions of the level of technological advancement of GPS equipment
and its actual readiness for broad based roll out in community
corrections settings at this time," said the study. "Moreover, it
appears from these results that GPS technology is currently too
underdeveloped to recommend continued swift enactment of legislation
mandating implementation and utilization of GPS in a cost-effective
manner."
The study was published in the Journal of Criminal Justice.
WI DOC claims that it IS just a tool, not a punishment. Wear it for a while and then see what you think.
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