This webpage provides an overview of the parole process which involves three entities: the Department of Corrections, the DOC’s Division of Adult Parole Services, and the Parole Board. Once released to parole, parolees remain committed to the custody of the DOC.
The Division of Adult Parole Services is responsible for monitoring an offender while in the community on parole and for reporting an offender to the Parole Board if the offender violates a condition of parole. Revoking an offender’s parole necessitates interaction between the Division of Adult Parole Services and the Parole Board. The Parole Board is responsible for providing the offender with a hearing and deciding whether the offender should remain on parole.
The parole process, including:
The parole population, including:
Colorado law specifies that any person sentenced for a class 2, class 3, class 4, class 5, or class 6 felony, or any unclassified felony, is eligible for parole after serving 50 percent of the imposed sentence, less earned time (up to ten days per month). Assuming an inmate earns 100 percent of allowable earned time, the earliest possible parole date is after serving 38 percent of the sentence (see Figure 5.1 on page 40). Colorado law prohibits inmates from reducing their sentence through earned time by more than 25 percent.
Offenders convicted of more serious violent crimes, however, are not eligible for parole after serving 50 percent of their sentence. Certain violent offenders must serve 75 percent of their sentence, less earned time. These include offenders convicted of the following offenses committed on or after July 1, 2004:
The above provisions only apply to offenders convicted of the above-listed crimes that are class 2 or class 3 felonies, and offenders convicted of the above-listed crimes that are class 4 or 5 felonies when the offender has previously been convicted of a crime of violence.
The following crimes are included in the list of crimes of violence:
As of November 1, 1998, the parole of sex offenders is governed by the “Colorado Sex Offender Lifetime Supervision Act of 1998,” codified in Section 18-1.3-1002, C.R.S. Among other things, the legislation set a minimum parole period of 20 years for a sex offender convicted of a class 2 or 3 felony, and a minimum of ten years for a sex offender convicted of a class 4 felony. A sex offender can be placed on parole for the remainder of his natural life if the Parole Board believes indefinite supervision is necessary to protect public safety.
“Crime of violence” also means any unlawful sexual offense in which the defendant caused bodily injury to the victim or in which the defendant used threat, intimidation, or force against the victim. It should be noted that class 1 felony offenders are not eligible for parole.
Any offender (except sex offenders 1) convicted and sentenced for a crime enumerated above who twice previously was convicted for a crime which would have been a crime of violence and who has been convicted lf a class 2 or class 3 felony listed above, or a class 4 or 5 felony listed above after two prior convictions of a crime of violence, is eligible for parole after serving 75 percent of the sentence, but no earned time is granted.
Pre-Parole ProceduresAll eligible inmates are scheduled to be seen by the Parole Board at least 90 days prior to their parole eligibility date. Before an inmate can be released from a DOC facility or community corrections program, the inmate must have a parole plan that details where he or she will live and work, and who will be responsible for the inmate upon release. DOC case managers are responsible for preparing an inmate’s parole plan.
The plan then is submitted to the Division of Adult Parole Services for investigation by a community parole officer (CPO). A CPO in the appropriate regional office is assigned to verify information in the parole plan. Ideally, the CPO visits the inmate’s proposed residence, employer, family members, and all other persons identified as potential parole resources. Once the division receives the plan, the investigation should be completed within 15 days for domestic cases and 30 days for interstate cases. At the release hearing, the board reviews the inmate’s file, hears from the inmate’s case manager, and makes a determination of whether parole will be granted.
The Parole BoardSize and composition of the Parole Board. The Colorado State Board of Parole consists of seven members who are appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate. Parole Board members perform their duties full-time. The board is composed of two representatives from law enforcement, one former parole or probation officer, and four citizen representatives. The statutes require that Parole Board members have knowledge of parole, rehabilitation, correctional administration, the functioning of the criminal justice system, and the issues associated with victims of crime. The statutes further require the three designated Parole Board members (law enforcement and probation representatives) each have at least five years education or experience, or a combination thereof, in their respective fields.
Hearings of the Parole BoardThe Parole Board’s primary responsibility is to conduct inmate release hearings.
Parole Board members conduct four types of hearings:
The Parole Board considers a number of variables when deciding whether to release an inmate to parole: the inmate’s criminal record; the nature and circumstances of the offense for which the inmate was committed to the DOC; the inmate’s behavioral history while incarcerated; participation in treatment and programs; and current psychological and medical evaluations. The Parole Board also must consider the inmate’s risk assessment score and apply the current parole guidelines, as set out in statute.
The parole guidelines law also sets out nine mitigating factors the board may consider when deciding whether to parole an inmate:
The parole guidelines legislation lists 15 aggravating factors for the Parole Board to consider:
The Division of Adult Parole is responsible for supervising adult parolees who have been released to the community by the Parole Board. The division is organized into four state-wide regions (Denver, Northeast, Southeast, and Western) and operates 19 offices throughout the state. As of June 30, 2006, community parole officers (CPOs) supervised 6,551 parolees in Colorado. Caseload ratios for CPOs with regular parole cases is 73:1. Officers with a strict Intensive Supervision Program – Parole (ISP-P) caseload have a ratio of 26:1. CPOs are peace officers and have arrest powers and may carry firearms.
General Statutory DutiesThe Division of Adult Parole is statutorily responsible for the following:
Community parole officers and parole violators. The statutes and administrative regulations outline the responsibilities of CPOs. In some cases, CPO’s have discretion to decide how to proceed after a suspected parole violation while in other cases they do not. When discretion is given, administrative regulations require the CPO to meet with a supervisor to decide on a response.
The statutes provide that if the CPO makes an arrest rather than issuing a summons, the parolee is to be held in custody. After completing an investigation, the CPO has the following options:
The statutes additionally spell out when a CPO may arrest a parolee in order to begin revocation proceedings. A CPO may make an arrest when:
Colorado law requires that all convicted felons in the criminal justice system be assessed for drug use. Therefore, as a condition of parole, every parolee is required to submit to random drug and alcohol testing.
The statutes spell out specific CPO responsibilities when a parolee tests positive for illegal controlled substances. For the first positive test, the CPO may:
For a second or subsequent positive test for illegal controlled substances, in addition to1 making an immediate arrest, increasing the level of supervision, or referring the parolee to a substance abuse treatment program, the CPO may:
A final responsibility of the division is to classify inmates in order to determine the level of parole supervision. The division uses a supervision classification instrument which provides CPOs with a tool to develop an appropriate supervision plan and establish and administer appropriate education and treatment programs and other productive activities to assist in offender rehabilitation. Supervision classification tools also provide CPOs with a prediction as to the risk of reoffending while on parole.
Offenders are generally assessed within the first 30 days of their release from prison and are reassessed every six months. The division classifies inmates in seven levels: new, unclassified, intensive supervision, maximum, medium, minimum, and administrative.
Revoking an inmate’s parole necessitates interaction between the Division of Adult Parole Services and the Parole Board. The Division of Adult Parole Services is responsible for monitoring the inmate while in the community on parole and for reporting that inmate to the Parole Board when the inmate violates a condition of parole. The Parole Board is esponsible for providing the inmate with a hearing and deciding whether the inmate should remain on parole.CPOs and the revocation process. CPOs are generally the starting point for the revocation process. Statutes dictate that a CPO may arrest a parolee for specific reasons.
Pursuant to administrative regulations of the DOC, revocation complaints filed by CPOs are either mandatory or discretionary. When a parolee commits certain offenses, the CPO is required to file a complaint in order to begin revocation proceedings (this does not mean the offender’s parole is required to be revoked). For other offenses, the CPO uses discretion in deciding whether to begin revocation proceedings.
Mandatory Complaint OffensesMandatory complaint offenses include the following:
CPOs have the discretion to file or not to file a complaint for a parole violation that does not require mandatory action, based upon the circumstances of the complaint. Administrative regulations provide that discretionary decisions are determined on a caseby- case basis. Such decisions are made for offenses including but not limited to the following:
Statutes and administrative regulations provide that revocation hearings are to be conducted by a single Parole Board member or by an Administrative Hearings Officer (AHO). In general, if the board member or AHO determines that 11the parolee violated a condition of parole, he or she may either revoke the parole, continue the parole in effect, or continue the parole with modified parole conditions. If parole is revoked, the board member or AHO is required to provide the parolee with a written statement of the evidence relied on and the reasons for revoking parole. Specifically, the board member or AHO may make a decision as follows:
After a period of decline in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the parole population is increasing and is expected to continue to increase significantly. From 1988 through 1994, the parole population decreased 30 percent. This decrease was primarily due to legislation adopted in 1990 which awarded earned time to offenders while on parole. However, this legislation was amended since that time as reflected by variations in the parole population. Currently, only non-violent offenders may receive earned time while on parole. Based on parole population projections by Legislative Council Staff, populations are expected to steadily increase. This increase will primarily be due to legislation adopted in 1993 which mandates that all offenders serve a period of parole.
Factors Driving the Parole PopulationTwo factors drive the growth in the parole population: the number of releases to parole and the length of stay on parole. Both of these components have been significantly influenced by the implementation of mandatory parole. House Bill 93-1302 created mandatory parole for all inmates released from prison who committed a crime on or after July 1, 1993. Beginning in FY 1995-96, the parole population began to grow due to the flow of inmates with mandatory parole sentences that were completing their prison sentences. As a result of mandatory parole, the parole population more than tripled from June 1995 to June 2006.
Before mandatory parole, the Parole Board tended to grant parole for those near the end of their sentences in order to provide some period of supervision in a community placement. Otherwise, inmates could discharge their sentence in prison and avoid a supervised transition to the general public. Therefore, some inmates were placed on parole before their sentences were discharged in prison and other inmates discharged their sentences in prison and re-entered the
general public. With mandatory parole, every inmate receives an additional supervision period after the prison sentence. In the late 1990s, as the number of “mandatory parole” inmates approached the end of their prison sentence, the number of discretionary parolees (or “early” releases) decreased and mandatory parolees increased.
Mandatory parole also had the consequence of increasing the length of stay on parole. Before mandatory parole, the Parole Board could discharge a parolee once it determined that the parolee could no longer benefit from supervision. With mandatory parole, there is a minimum period for parolees to serve. While mandatory parole initially increased the average length of stay on parole, from a low of 9.5 months in 1991 to a high of 15.8 months in 2003, the average length of stay on parole has steadily dropped since then to 14.4 months in 2006.
Credit for this article is given to the Colorado Legislative Council Staff