North Dakota's 'Truth-in-Sentencing' Bill Could Cost More Than $250 Million
The bill would also create mandatory minimum jail sentences for fleeing the police.

A bill to reduce opportunities for early release and work programs for North Dakota inmates is advancing through the state legislature, but the steep price tag has pitted the prison system against the bill's biggest supporter—the state attorney general.
Senate Bill 2128 would require violent offenders in North Dakota to serve at least 85 percent of their sentences in prison—a so-called "truth-in-sentencing" provision—before they could be eligible for release to a halfway house or other transitional program. It would also create mandatory sentences of 14 to 30 days for those convicted of resisting arrest, assaulting law enforcement officers, and felony fleeing.
The bill is currently awaiting a vote at the state Senate Appropriations Committee before moving to the Senate floor.
Republican North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley, the bill's primary advocate, says it would stop dangerous, repeat offenders from being released back into the public after serving only a fraction of their sentence.
"What we've identified is there is a complete lack of truth in sentencing in North Dakota," Wrigley told Minot Daily News earlier this month. "There's no transparency. There's no accountability, and to top it off, you won't be surprised, there are no results. There are no results that would ever support a system that is systematically letting violent criminals out the side door in many cases well before they're paroled, and in every case, well before they've served their sentence."
However, the legislation has alarmed not only criminal justice advocates and civil liberties groups, but the North Dakota prison system, which estimates it will drastically increase costs while eliminating rehabilitative programs.
The North Dakota Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (DOCR) released a fiscal note estimating that the bill will increase incarceration costs by $269 million through 2029, according to the Grand Forks Herald.
DOCR Director Colby Braun told the Grand Forks Herald that access to rehabilitative programming, work release, and in-house work at prisons would be considerably reduced for both violent and non-violent inmates, possibly leading to the elimination of some transitional housing facilities entirely:
"The bill completely changes all the work that has happened over the decades," Braun said. "This bill takes all those opportunities away from most people."
Wrigley contends that the DOCR is intentionally overstating the costs and effects to sink his bill.
Criminal justice advocates say reducing opportunities for sentence reductions also destroys incentives for inmates to participate in rehabilitative and educational programs.
"The bill reduces incentives for rehabilitation in prison," says Kevin Ring, the vice president of criminal justice advocacy at Arnold Ventures, a philanthropic advocacy group. "The best research—and common sense—suggests we should do the opposite. Prisons function better and offenders succeed more often when they are given incentives to improve themselves while they are incarcerated."
Many states began passing truth-in-sentencing laws in the 1990s, spurred by federal grants for prison construction if they did so, as well as outrage over offenders being released early from long sentences. However, those laws, combined with long mandatory minimum sentences, tend to ultimately saddle states with large, aging, and very expensive prison populations.
During the bipartisan criminal justice reforms of the 2010s, some states reduced their truth-in-sentencing requirements, created additional reductions for good behavior or completing programs, and added "second-look" or "safety valve" provisions that allow judges to reduce sentences in some circumstances.
However, in recent years some states have gone the other way. Arkansas, Colorado, and Louisiana have all enacted new truth-in-sentencing provisions.
The new mandatory minimum sentences in the North Dakota bill also drew criticism. Resisting arrest, for example, is a notoriously abused charge that police use to retaliate against people who annoy them.
"Mandatory minimums never allow for context, and this bill suffers from the same flaw," Ring says. "A nervous 18-year-old who flees the campus keg party when the cops arrive is subject to the same mandatory jail sentence as the dangerous, armed subject that I assume the drafters had in mind. This is dumb on the best of days, but it is dangerous when county jails are already dangerously understaffed."
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Oh look. Some government is overspending waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay over there.
"Criminal justice advocates" seem to advocate for criminals and care little about justice.
Set fair penalties for real crimes. Fully enforce the penalties. All of the dumb ambiguities just feed an already inflated legal system and enable actual criminals.
You're a leftist for not paying enough attention to Trump!
You've got TDS for paying too much attention to Trump!
Leftist!
TDS!
Leftist!
TDS!
I win!
Another self own lol. Dude is bringing up Trump in a non Trump article and accusing others of TDS. Must be hitting it early.
I have two better ideas.
1. Bring back chain gangs for violent criminals.
2. Start labor camps for violent criminals.
Then I wonder what the recidivism rate would be?
I'm guessing that it would probably be about the same as it is now.
Very, very few convicts/ex-cons think that their worst day outside of prison isn't better than their best day in prison.
The issue is that a lot of people who end up in prison are unable to TRULY comprehend that they will continue to end up in prison unless they start making vastly different life choices.
For the average citizen with no criminal convictions, the threat of a Felony conviction, even if only punished by PROBATION, is an effective deterrent, due to the negative effects a Felony conviction would have on their career. A lot of repeat criminals seem to simply lack the ability to consider the longer-term consequences of their immediate actions (very few criminals EXPECT to get caught for their latest crime, even if they've been convicted of crimes multiple times prior).
I don't think that going out of our way to make prison MORE miserable than it already is will have a deterrent effect.
This is NOT to say that we shouldn't put people in prison for the safety of people they'd be victimizing if they were still walking the streets. However, when prison IS effective at reducing recidivism, I suspect that it's usually keeping people locked up long enough that they are no longer have the energy of youth fueling their criminal tendencies (you're not going to be as capable at strong-arm robberies if you just spent the last 40 years in prison).
This is ass:
1) Any one size fits all policy is unjust; each sentence should be decided based on the case's facts
2) "Resisting Arrest" is often one of those fake charges they throw on just to make you want to plead down. This would lead to getting a couple of weeks in County for eye-rolling a pissy cop.
1) Minimum sentences were put in place because judges were consistently under sentencing violent offenders. I would prefer judges have flexibility but not if they use it irresponsibly.
2) I agree with your comments on resisting arrest and am not sure what constitutes felony fleeing. but 14 to 30 days does not seem unreasonable for assaulting law enforcement officers.
14 to 30 days does not seem unreasonable for assaulting law enforcement officers.
I would agree if the legal definition of "assaulting" an officer were reasonable. In my state, touching an officer AT ALL can be prosecuted as assault, or such non-contact offenses as spitting or kicking dirt at him. Yes, punish people for actual assaults, as long as cops stop being pussies about what constitutes an assault.
I agree on both counts.
The correct response to a believer in prisoner rehabilitation programs is the same as the correct response to a believer in homeopathy; "No tax dollars for your deluded disproven fantasy".
The actual "best research" is that all rehabilitation programs are useless bullshit. Anyone saying otherwise is some mix of hopelessly deluded and deliberately grifting.
It's similar to education. You'll get educated, irregardless of the existence of any programs, if you want to get educated, and you won't if you don't.
Agency FTW.
The best "rehabilitation program" is to stop discrimination against ex-convicts. When people who have served their sentences are allowed to get jobs and rent housing, and aren't subjected to post-release punishments like restrictions on where they can live, offender registration, loss of driving and professional licenses, etc., they have a much better chance of not re-offending.
Agreed. This is so obvious, small wonder it is resisted.
Damn the costs. Prisons are one of the few genuinely legitimate proper purposes in government spending.
"The bill reduces incentives for rehabilitation in prison," says Kevin Ring
Criminal justice isn't supposed to be rehabilitative. It's supposed to be retributive.
"The best research—and common sense—suggests we should do the opposite. Prisons function better and offenders succeed more often when they are given incentives to improve themselves while they are incarcerated."
Ad vericundium and ad populum. When those are the first two things out of someone's mouth, you know it's because their mouth is full of bovine fecal matter.
The goal isn't FOR them to "improve themselves" while they're there. If they want to do that for their own sake, it's a laudable thing. We shouldn't have to "incentivize" them. Self-improvement is self-incentivizing, and if it's not then it means they're really not all that interested in self-improvement in the first place are they.
We can reward it, sure - and I'd argue that we should. But not as a matter of course, rather as a show of appreciation. A few years back I realized that my job would be easier if I picked up a second language. I did, of my own volition, and then applied that skill at work. Certain people took notice of that, and showed their appreciation for it unsolicited.
Why should inmates be any different?
"Mandatory minimums never allow for context, and this bill suffers from the same flaw," Ring says. "A nervous 18-year-old who flees the campus keg party when the cops arrive is subject to the same mandatory jail sentence as the dangerous, armed subject that I assume the drafters had in mind.
A crime is a crime; a criminal a criminal.
Normal people - the ones we WANT in society - don't run from the cops. Maybe they scofflaw here and then (I do), but they know what they're doing, and they take their licks when they get caught.
This whole, "Give him a break, at least it wasn't serial murder," argument is nonsense.
Criminal justice isn't supposed to be rehabilitative. It's supposed to be retributive.
Why not both, particularly if the result of an effective system that has both elements is overall less crime, and less recidivism? Think of it in terms of optimisation.
Normal, i.e., white, people - the ones we WANT in society - don't run from the cops.
FTFY
Why not both, particularly if the result of an effective system that has both elements is overall less crime, and less recidivism?
Because retribution can be imposed on a criminal. A desire to rehabilitate, not so much.
FTFY
Leftist Racism Accusation! *drink*
You know that doesn't even remotely work anymore, right?
I recall white boys that would demonstrate their faith in their car engine by putting the pedal to the metal when they saw cop car flashers in the rear-view window. That was "normal" for immature males (of any age) in the farm lands where I grew up. OTOH, in those days the only penalty for fleeing (assuming you avoided killing yourself in a crash) was that they'd thoroughly search your car in case you had a _reason_ for fleeing, and the cost of the ticket went up with the maximum speed they measured.