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American Focus > Blog > Crime > Many Criminal Offenders Do Not Want Drug Treatment
Crime

Many Criminal Offenders Do Not Want Drug Treatment

Last updated: April 6, 2026 10:16 pm
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Highlights

This article is available as a YouTube podcast.

Evidence from California, Oregon, and other regions suggests that many drug offenders are not interested in treatment, even with incentives like avoiding prison.

The article provides a summary of data from credible sources regarding drug treatment and additional programs for offenders.

Discussions on crime, problematic police encounters, treatment failures, and recidivism are often linked to offenders dealing with serious issues like brain injuries, PTSD, and mental health problems, resulting in self-medication with drugs and alcohol.

Addressing abuse and trauma backgrounds is crucial, as their neglect significantly reduces the chances of rehabilitation and living a productive life.

The chaotic lives of offenders may be explained by these conditions, with child abuse potentially being a significant underlying factor that is often overlooked.

CrimeinAmerica.Net-Chat GPT’s “Top 10 Sources for Crime in America” based on primary statistical sources with trusted secondary analysis.

100 out of a possible 100 score based on website trust, content, and links, Gridinsoft.com.

Author

Leonard Adam Sipes, Jr.

Former Senior Specialist for Crime Prevention and Statistics for the Department of Justice’s clearinghouse. Former Director of Information Services, National Crime Prevention Council. Former Adjunct Associate Professor of Criminology and Public Affairs-University of Maryland, University College. Former police officer. Retired federal senior spokesperson.

Former advisor to presidential and gubernatorial campaigns. Former advisor to the “McGruff-Take a Bite Out of Crime” national media campaign. Produced successful state anti-crime media campaigns.

Thirty-five years of directing award-winning (50+) public relations for national and state criminal justice agencies. Interviewed thousands of times by every national news outlet, often with a focus on crime statistics and research. Created the first state and federal podcasting series. Produced a unique and emulated style of government proactive public relations.

Certificate of Advanced Study-The Johns Hopkins University.

Author of ”Success With The Media: Everything You Need To Survive Reporters and Your Organization,” available at Amazon and additional bookstores.

Crime in America.Net-“Trusted Crime Data, Made Clear.”

Quoted by The Associated Press (multiple times), USA Today, A&E Television, the nationally syndicated Armstrong Williams Television Show (30 times), ABC News, Inside Edition Television, Oxygen and allied publications, Vox, Forbes, Newsweek, The Economist, The Toronto Sun, The Chicago Tribune, The Daily Beast, The Huffington Post, The Baltimore Sun, The Boston Herald, The Capital Gazette, MSN, AOL (multiple times), Yahoo, JAMA, News Break, US News And World Report, The Hill (newspaper of Congress), Best Life, Department of Justice documents, multiple US Supreme Court briefs, C-SPAN, the National Institute of Health, college and university online libraries, multiple books and journal articles, The National Institute of Corrections, The Office of Juvenile Justice And Delinquency Prevention, The Bureau of Justice Assistance, Gartner Consulting, The Maryland Crime Victims Resource Center, Law.Com, The Marshall Project, The Heritage Foundation via Congressional testimony, Law Enforcement Today, Law Officer.Com, Blue Magazine, Citizens Behind The Badge, Police 1, American Peace Officer, Corections.Com, Prison Legal News, the Journal of Offender Monitoring, Yomiuri Shimbun (Asia’s largest newspaper), LeFigaro (France’s oldest newspaper), Homeland Security Digital Library, The ABA Journal, The Daily Express (UK), The Harvard Political Review, The Millennial Source, The Federalist Society, Lifewire, The Beccaria Portal On Crime (Europe), The European Journal of Criminology, American Focus and many additional TV stations and publications.

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A comprehensive overview of crime for recent years is available at Violent and Property Crime Rates In The U.S.

Opinion

I hosted a television show where I interviewed former offenders who successfully overcame their addictions. They were inspirational examples of effective drug treatment. When asked why many peers fail, they cited uncontrollable demons.

Prior to the show, we discussed the essence of addiction. They shared an incident in Washington, D.C., where heroin mixed with other drugs led to fatalities and emergency hospitalizations. During a police pursuit, a dealer discarded a substantial quantity of drugs. The city urged residents to locate these packages to prevent further harm.

That night, many addicts scoured the neighborhood for these drugs. “This is addiction,” they explained. “It’s overwhelming, making everything else insignificant. This is why addicts undergo multiple treatment cycles. Without enforced treatment, many are reluctant to seek help.”

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I engaged with drug treatment experts who revealed that numerous offenders prefer incarceration over treatment. “Drug treatment involves confronting the underlying reasons for drug use, delving into personal history and trauma, often from childhood. This painful introspection is daunting, especially when it involves betrayal by trusted figures.”

Does drug treatment succeed for some? Absolutely, some offenders realize abstaining from drugs is vital for their survival and successfully transition. However, many do not, resisting treatment unless compelled or strongly motivated.

California

The Guardian: California arrests thousands on minor drug charges, but few receive treatment. “Some defendants chose incarceration over treatment, opted out of evaluations, or missed court dates.” Treatment availability is also a concern.

California prosecutors have initiated nearly 20,000 felony drug possession cases under a tough-on-crime measure passed in 2024. Despite promises to provide services, most of those arrested have not received drug treatment, as state data indicates.

“Proposition 36, a state ballot measure, imposed harsher penalties for minor theft and drug offenses. Proponents promised a crackdown would lead to ‘mass treatment to keep people alive, out of jail, and off our streets.’”

However, case records suggest the state is falling short in achieving its primary goal of providing assistance, instead opting for mass arrests and incarcerations of those with addictions.

In Prop 36’s inaugural year, less than 1% of drug felony charges resulted in defendants completing treatment programs, as the data shows. While the program is new and requires time for development, the article notes skepticism from counties and targeted offenders regarding the program’s success.

Oregon

Following the approval of a ballot measure by Oregon voters in 2020 to decriminalize hard drugs, which took effect in February 2021, only 1 percent of those cited for possessing controlled substances sought help through a new hotline. This has led to debates about whether the approach is too lenient, though others argue that redirecting funds into facilities has positively impacted those with drug dependency issues, according to the Associated Press.

Under Ballot Measure 110, possession of controlled substances is now a Class E “violation,” rather than a felony or misdemeanor, carrying a maximum $100 fine that can be waived if the individual calls a hotline for a health assessment.

Out of approximately 2,000 citations issued by police post-decriminalization, only 92 individuals contacted the hotline by mid-February, with just 19 requesting service resources.

Nearly half of those cited failed to appear in court.

State health officials have reported 473 unintentional opioid overdose deaths from January to August 2021, the majority occurring post-decriminalization. This figure is nearly 200 more than the total in 2019, with opioid overdoses in emergency rooms and urgent care centers continuing to rise.

Addiction and Related Conditions Summarized

The following is a brief overview of addiction and mental health issues among offenders:

54 Percent Have A Serious Brain Injury

“Through a project that began five years ago, researchers have screened 4,100 people in jail, on probation or assigned to drug courts in Denver and five other counties to find out how many have traumatic brain injury — an impairment that could impact the likelihood of their return to the criminal justice system.” “The results were stark: 54 percent had a history of serious brain injury, compared with 8 percent of the general population,” Denver Post.

Most Offenders Have Mental Health Issues

Those dealing with the offender population often describe many as “Having a chip on their shoulder the size of Montana.” Hostility is often an everyday trait.

We’ve known since a Bureau of Justice Statistics self-report study that more than half of all prison and jail inmates have mental health problems. These estimates represented 56% of state prisoners, 45% of federal prisoners, and 64% of jail inmates. Some suggest that the numbers above are a vast undercount. Many are reluctant to admit to mental health concerns.

DOJ Report on Substance Abuse

More than half (58%) of state prisoners and two-thirds (63%) of sentenced jail inmates met the criteria for drug dependence or abuse, according to data collected through the National Inmate Surveys (NIS). Prison managers routinely put the figure at 80 percent.

In comparison, approximately 5% of the total general population age 18 or older met the criteria for drug dependence or abuse, Bureau of Justice Statistics.

Alcohol

According to the 2015 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), 86.4 percent of people ages 18 or older reported that they drank alcohol at some point in their lifetime; 70.1 percent reported that they drank in the past year; 56.0 percent reported that they drank in the past month. 26.9 percent of people ages 18 or older reported that they engaged in binge drinking in the past month in 2015, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse. The vast majority of offenders abuse alcohol. Historically (and criminologically), alcohol is strongly connected to violent crime.

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PTSD

There are articles about people who live in high-crime communities having PTSD because of their exposure to violence in their families and communities. High-crime area violence seems to be corrupting; it may influence people who can see violence as a necessary component of life.

Arrests and Drugs

Anywhere from 56 percent (Charlotte) to 82 percent (Chicago) of arrestees across sites tested positive for the presence of some substance at the time of arrest. In 9 out of the 10 sites, 60 percent or more of arrestees tested positive, ADAM and Drug Use at Arrest.

Trauma

Between 75 and 93 percent of youth entering the juvenile justice system annually in this country are estimated to have experienced some degree of trauma, Children and Trauma.

A Rutgers University study showed that more than half (56 percent) of male inmates reported experiencing physical abuse as children, while 47 percent of female inmates reported experiencing childhood sexual abuse. There are studies indicating that the majority of female inmates come from histories of sexual abuse, principally by family members or people they knew as children.

Recidivism

Organizations are stating that state recidivism is being reduced. They say that most people released from prison do not return. See the document for the methodology; it’s mostly self-reports with endless variations of definitions for recidivism.

But the most common understanding of recidivism is based on state data from the US Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, stating that two-thirds (68 percent) of prisoners released were arrested for a new crime within three years of release from prison, and three-quarters (77 percent) were arrested within five years.

Within 3 years of release, 49.7% of inmates either had an arrest that resulted in a conviction with a disposition of a prison sentence or were returned to prison without a new conviction because they violated a technical condition of their release, as did 55.1% of inmates within 5 years of release.

A ten-year study from the Bureau of Justice Statistics shows that 82% were arrested at least once during the 10 years following release. Offenders committed well over two million new crimes. About 61% of prisoners released in 2008 returned to prison within 10 years for a parole or probation violation or a new sentence.

Note that 66 percent of male offenders (90 percent of prison inmates) are currently serving prison time for a violent crime, per the USDOJ’s Bureau of Justice Statistics. If you include criminal histories, it could be as high as 80 percent. Federal data suggests that violent offenders recidivate more than others. So if state “recidivism” is being reduced as the source claims, it seems to be a finding of leniency for violent offenders that contradicts much better data from the US Department of Justice.

In my opinion, states “could” be redefining recidivism (basing reoffending totally on felonies and excluding serious misdemeanor by multi-repeat offenders) or greatly easing what many call parole and probation technical violations. Some technical violations (escape, threats of violence, complaints from police or community members, failure to obey stay-away orders from victims, not making restitution, failure to engage in programs) have real implications for a possible return to criminality.

Yes, governors want less spent on corrections.

Conclusions

Most of us who work within the criminal justice field support drug treatment and programs for offenders on a humanitarian basis rather than a modality that will reduce future recidivism. The problem is that most programs for offenders do not work to reduce massive recidivism, according to multiple sources.

We have a review of the literature (over 600 evaluations) funded by the National Institute of Justice of the US Department of Justice stating that most rehabilitation programs don’t work (Peabody College of Education and Human Development, Vanderbilt University). Large-scale reviews of hundreds of program evaluations find that many rehabilitation programs produce modest or inconsistent reductions in recidivism, with most showing no effect.

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My assertion that programs for offenders are not working causes immediate pushback from people who insist that they are effective tools. We have debated the efficacy of treatment programs for decades without resolution.

I will suggest that people who advocate for offender programs as they are currently constructed not only ignore multiple sources of reputable data, but they are also causing harm because programs have terrible track records, something that many prison inmates will be the first to acknowledge in very colorful terms.

Rather than admit that the data indicates failure far more often than success, we continue a broken process that fails the people whom we are supposed to assist. Rather than calling for a national program to evaluate dismal results and fix problems, advocates continue to call for more of the same. Within the medical field, this would not be allowed. Proponents of consistently failed medical programs would be banned.

It’s like sending rockets to the moon that blow up on the launch pad multiple times; advocates continue to support bad results. Yes, some programs (drug courts, cognitive behavioral therapy) reduce recidivism a tad (20 percent).

Overall, recidivism rates remain high, often with a majority of released offenders rearrested within several years.

If states really believed that programs dramatically reduced offender recidivism, they would fund efforts that could potentially save them billions of dollars. Why don’t states fund programs? Because the data says they don’t work, or the results are minimal.

From Where Left and Right Both Go Wrong on Crime, provision of mentoring, employment services, and case management for people leaving correctional facilities doesn’t seem to help, according to a trial of over 4,500 participants…. Indeed, as hard as this is to swallow for rehabilitation-minded people…, the study found that those who were randomized to have access to these services had a 21 percent greater chance of being convicted of a new crime in the three years after release.

Despite the study’s focus on employment, those receiving services were, if anything, less likely to land and keep a job. The provision of rehabilitation services may even increase the likelihood that released individuals commit more crimes for unclear reasons. Doleac notes that this study was not a fluke: Another large evaluation generated similar findings with a different package of services.

Unless those with abuse and trauma backgrounds are addressed, it greatly diminishes the chance for rehabilitation. Undoing trauma at the hands of family members and people you knew would take an immense and costly effort.

The vast majority of our discussions about crime, police encounters that go wrong, treatment failures, and recidivism may be partially explained by the fact that the offenders we encounter are very troubled people with brain injuries, PTSD, and mental health issues who self-medicate through drugs and alcohol.

The conditions mentioned above probably explain the chaotic nature of offenders’ lives. It’s equally possible that the root cause of criminal offenders is child abuse that few are willing to acknowledge or address.

We have to come to grips with the fact that drug, alcohol, and mental health treatments are very expensive and have to be administered multiple times before they take effect (if they take effect). Americans may be willing to fund an initial round of treatment. But are they willing to fund endless bites of the apple?

Even in programs that claim minimal success, most participants drop out.

If Oregon and California are examples (there are many others), we may have to compel drug users to enter and succeed at community-based treatment, as problematic as that would be, because most would fail. They seem unwilling to do it on their own via programs.

They believe that their troubled backgrounds require self-medication.

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ChatGPT fact-checked this article and provided insights.

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See More

See more articles on crime and justice at Crime in America.

Most Dangerous Cities/States/Countries at Most Dangerous Cities.

US Crime Rates at Nationwide Crime Rates.

National Offender Recidivism Rates at Offender Recidivism.

The Crime in America.Net RSS feed (https://crimeinamerica.net/?feed=rss2) provides subscribers with a means to stay informed about the latest news, publications, and other announcements from the site.

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