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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 Nevada from 2018 through 2020.

Admissions

From 2018 to 2020, Nevada saw a 19 percent decline in the number of prison admissions due to supervision violations.

The breakdown

Total Admissions Violation Admissions Technical Violation Admissions
2018652225802500
2019597125152447
2020437221001983
Total 2018 2019 2020
Total admissions 6,522 5,971 4,372
Total Violation admissions 2,580 2,515 2,100
Probation admissions 1,491 1,375 1,123
Parole admissions 1,089 1,140 977
Total Technical Violation admissions 2,500 2,447 1,983
Probation admissions 1,427 1,325 1,018
Parole admissions 1,073 1,122 965
Total New Offense admissions 80 68 117
Probation admissions 64 50 105
Parole admissions 16 18 12
Population

From 2018 to 2020, Nevada saw a 22 percent decline in the number of people in prison due to supervision violations.

The breakdown

Total Population Violation Population Technical Violation Population
20181374029962653
20191292226802399
20201142223332020
Total 2018 2019 2020
Total population 13,740 12,922 11,422
Total Violation population 2,996 2,680 2,333
Probation population 1,899 1,717 1,499
Parole population 1,097 963 834
Total Technical Violation population 2,653 2,399 2,020
Probation population 1,684 1,541 1,283
Parole population 969 858 737
Total New Offense population 343 281 313
Probation population 215 176 216
Parole population 128 105 97

Additional State Notes

The Nevada Department of Corrections (NDOC) received additional data for the last half of 2020 and have implemented new data cleansing strategies. NDOC is working to implement these data cleansing strategies for 2018 and 2019 as well.

Technical violations are defined as incarcerations with no 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.