Total incarceration rate
Total inmates in custody count
Total Maximum Sentence Length
The longest length of time as stated by the court that the offender could be required to serve.
Trial court
Tribal court
Tribal jurisdiction
Tribal law enforcement agencies respond to both felony and misdemeanor crimes. For most of Indian country, the federal government provides felony law enforcement concerning crimes by or against American Indians and Alaska Natives. Certain areas of Indian country are under P.L. 83–280, as amended (commonly referred to as P.L. 280). P.L. 280 conferred jurisdiction over Indian country to certain states and suspended enforcement of the General Crimes Act (18 U.S.C. § 1152) and Major Crimes Act (18 U.S.C. § 1153) in these areas. Tribes retain concurrent jurisdiction to enforce laws in Indian country where P.L. 280 applies.
Tribal police powers
Tribal wellness courts
Type of Admission to Prison
The reason an offender entered into the physical custody of a correctional facility.
Type of Release from Prison
The method of, or reason for, departure from the custody of your prison system on the reported date of release.
Types of financial release
Deposit bond—Defendant deposits a percentage (usually 10%) of the full bail amount with the court. The percentage of the bail is returned after the disposition of the case, but the court often retains a small portion for administrative costs. If the defendant fails to appear in court, he or she is liable to the court for the full bail amount.
Full cash bond—The defendant posts the full bail amount in cash with the court. If the defendant makes all court appearances, the cash is returned. If the defendant fails to appear in court, the bond is forfeited.
Property bond—Involves an agreement made by a defendant as a condition of pretrial release requiring that property valued at the full bail amount be posted as an assurance of his or her appearance in court. If the defendant fails to appear in court, the property is forfeited. Also known as "collateral bond."
Types of nonfinancial release
Unsecured bond—The defendant pays no money to the court but is liable for the full amount of bail should he or she fail to appear in court.
Conditional release—Defendants are released under specified conditions. Monitoring or supervision, if required, is usually done by a pretrial services agency. In some cases, such as those involving a third-party custodian or drug monitoring and treatment, another agency may be involved in the supervision of the defendant. Conditional release sometimes includes an unsecured bond.
U.S. CERT
Unconditional release
Expirations of sentences, commutations, and other unspecified unconditional releases.
Unit
The N-DASH can display three different types of estimates: number of victimizations, rate of victimization, or percentage of victimizations for the characteristics selected. See User’s Guide section on How to Interpret Dashboard Results for information on how these estimates are calculated and how to interpret them.
Urban areas
Use of excessive force
Use of force
Veterans courts
Victim
The recipient of a criminal act, usually used in relation to personal crimes, but also applicable to households.
Victim services use
A measure of whether victims received any help or advice from victim service agencies. This is asked of victims of both personal and property victimization. Victim service agencies are publicly or privately funded organizations that provide victims with support and services to aid their physical and emotional recovery, offer protection from future victimizations, guide them through the criminal justice system process, and assist them in obtaining restitution.
The data visualization tool uses this coding for victim services use:
- Yes (Services received from victim service agencies)
- No (No services received from victim service agencies)
Victim-offender relationship
A classification of a crime victim’s relationship to the offender for crimes involving direct contact between the two. For the analysis tool, this applies to crimes that involve contact between the victim and the offender (personal victimization); this distinction is not made for property victimization.
The data visualization tool uses this coding for victim-offender relationship:
- Intimate Partners (i.e., current or former spouses, boyfriends, and girlfriends)
- Other relatives (i.e., parents, stepparents, children, stepchildren, brothers, sisters, and other relatives)
- Well-known/casual acquaintances (i.e., friends or former friends, roommates or boarders, schoolmates, neighbors, people at work, and other known nonrelatives)
- Strangers (i.e., anyone not previously known by the victim)
- Don’t know relationship
- Don’t know number of offenders
Victimization
A crime as it affects one individual person or household. For personal crimes, the number of victimizations is equal to the number of victims involved. The number of victimizations may be greater than the number of incidents because more than one person may be victimized during an incident. Each crime against a household is assumed to involve a single victim, the affected household.
Victimization rate
A measure of the occurrence of victimizations among a specified population group. For personal crimes, this is based on the number of victimizations per 1,000 residents age 12 or older. For property crimes, the victimization rates are calculated using the number of incidents per 1,000 households.
Personal victimization rate
(Number of victimizations × 1,000) / Number of persons
Household victimization rate
(Number of victimizations × 1,000) / Number of households