Associated Press
WASHINGTON — More former state inmates are getting arrested again after being released from prison, the Justice Department reported Sunday.
Convicted car thieves and burglars were more likely to be rearrested than those who had served time for murder or sexual assault, a department study found. Younger people and those with longer criminal records also were more likely to be arrested again.
Overall, more than 67 percent of former inmates released from state prison in 1994 were arrested again within three years, up from more than 62 percent in1983, the Bureau of Justice Statistics reported.
The three-year study followed 272,211 former inmates released from prisons in 15 states in 1994. Washington was not included in the 15 states studied.
The highest rearrest rates were among those who had been incarcerated for stealing cars (79 percent), possessing or stealing other stolen property (77 percent) and larceny (75 percent).
Those with the lowest rearrest rates were people who had been in prison for homicide (41 percent), sexual assault (41 percent) and rape (46 percent).
Other findings:
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