Revalidation of the Federal Pretrial Risk Assessment Instrument (PTRA): Testing the PTRA for Predictive Biases

50 Pages Posted: 6 Jun 2018 Last revised: 23 Oct 2018

See all articles by Thomas H. Cohen

Thomas H. Cohen

Government of the United States of America - Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts

Christopher Lowenkamp

University of Missouri Kansas City; CCS, LLC

Date Written: June 5, 2018

Abstract

The Pretrial Risk Assessment (PTRA) instrument was developed for use in the U.S. federal pretrial system. Specifically, this instrument was constructed to help federal officers assess the likelihood that defendants will commit pretrial violations including being re-arrested for any or violent crimes, failing to make court appearances, or having a revocation while on pretrial release. While previous studies have demonstrated the PTRA’s predictive validity, these efforts primarily used development and validation samples and did not investigate the PTRA for predictive bias by defendant demographic characteristics. The current research evaluates the PTRA’s capacity to predict various forms of pretrial violations on 85,369 defendants with officer completed PTRA assessments. Bivariate and multivariate models were estimated by race, ethnicity, and sex. Results show that the PTRA performs well at predicting pretrial violations as the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve ranged from 0.65 to 0.73 depending upon the subsamples and outcomes being predicted. Moreover, the PTRA manifested strong predictive capacities irrespective of defendant race, ethnicity, or sex.

Suggested Citation

Cohen, Thomas H. and Lowenkamp, Christopher, Revalidation of the Federal Pretrial Risk Assessment Instrument (PTRA): Testing the PTRA for Predictive Biases (June 5, 2018). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3191533 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3191533

Thomas H. Cohen (Contact Author)

Government of the United States of America - Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts ( email )

One Columbus Circle N.E.
Washington, DC 20544
United States

Christopher Lowenkamp

University of Missouri Kansas City ( email )

CCS, LLC ( email )

3867 West Market Street
#300
Fairlawn, OH 44333
United States

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