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50 State Reports

Supervision Violation Data Snapshot

States across the country saw changes in their prison admissions and populations due to supervision violations in 2020. But some states were already experiencing reductions in violation admissions and population prior to the pandemic. This snapshot shows available supervision violation data for Kansas from 2018 through 2020.

Admissions

From 2018 to 2020, Kansas saw a 36 percent decline in the number of prison admissions due to supervision violations.

The breakdown

Total Admissions Violation Admissions Technical Violation Admissions
2018654244343737
2019638843143690
2020447328312302
Total 2018 2019 2020
Total admissions 6,542 6,388 4,473
Total Violation admissions 4,434 4,314 2,831
Probation admissions 3,106 3,011 1,869
Parole admissions 1,328 1,303 962
Total Technical Violation admissions 3,737 3,690 2,302
Probation admissions 2,655 2,588 1,510
Parole admissions 1,082 1,102 792
Total New Offense admissions 697 624 529
Probation admissions 451 423 359
Parole admissions 246 201 170
Population

From 2018 to 2020, Kansas saw a 16 percent decline in the number of people in prison due to supervision violations.

The breakdown

Total Population Violation Population Technical Violation Population
2018997330771379
20191004430851410
2020886925901236
Total 2018 2019 2020
Total population 9,973 10,044 8,869
Total Violation population 3,077 3,085 2,590
Probation population 2,283 2,337 1,807
Parole population 794 748 783
Total Technical Violation population 1,379 1,410 1,236
Probation population 1,379 1,410 1,001
Parole population 0 0 235
Total New Offense population 1,698 1,675 1,338
Probation population 904 927 790
Parole population 794 748 548

Additional State Notes

Admissions data is from FY2018 to FY2020. Probation supervision in Kansas is provided by two different agencies: Court Services and Community Corrections. The Department of Corrections has access to the data for people supervised by Community Corrections, but not the data for people supervised by Court Services. Therefore, prison admissions due to probation violations are only included if supervised by Community Corrections. Prison admissions due to probation violations do include short incarceration stays in state-funded custody (1- to 180-day sanctions).

Technical probation and parole violations may include people who ultimately receive a new felony conviction.


Whether an incarceration is the result of a new offense or technical violation is often difficult and problematic to delineate, even in states with available data. Most states do not consider a supervision violation to be the result of a new offense unless a new felony conviction is present, meaning technical violations may include misdemeanor convictions or new arrests. "Prison" includes county jail if the county was reimbursed by the state for a person’s incarceration, which occurs in some, but not all, states. Supervision violations may include revocations (i.e., unsuccessful terminations of a supervision and completion of a sentence in prison or jail) or short-term sanctions (i.e., probation or parole jurisdiction is maintained and the person is incarcerated for a short period of time in prison or jail). Not all states impose or include short-term sanctions in their count of supervision violations.