Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Is it any wonder so many of them go on to reoffend?
So only a third of first time and minor offenders go on to reoffend.
Many offenders reoffend, especially those who do not receive treatment while in prison.
How many young offenders that are not sent to prison go on to reoffend?
They say that it does not deal with the problem of people who persistently reoffend while on bail.
If you just chuckled, tried to reach their little misunderstood souls and let them go, how many would reoffend then?
Magistrates also fail when they give bail to dangerous men who are likely to reoffend.
Some have left never to reoffend; others have committed crimes, but of a much less serious nature than before.
Prisoners at one of the country's most progressive jails are less likely to reoffend than those leaving other institutions, according to new research.
The majority of children who commit violent acts won't reoffend in adulthood.
Canadian psychologists have studied not only treatment outcomes but also risk assessment, or determining who is likely to reoffend.
At worst, 40 percent do not reoffend.
Once they left prison they would quickly reoffend.
There's hardly any chance that I'll reoffend.
And she concluded that he was highly likely to reoffend - perhaps, she added, "immediately upon his release."
Clegg says nine out of 10 young men who go to prison on short sentences reoffend within two years.
Yet this ruling will only enhance her feelings of invulnerability, so making her more likely to reoffend.
More than half will reoffend.
Because it punishes individuals, it operates as a specific deterrence to those convicted not to reoffend.
The restorative approach, on the other hand, reintegrates wrongdoers back into their community and reduces the likelihood that they will reoffend.
With the pressure from their fans, drives them to reoffend after 1995, when Zouk Machine split.
One effect of this, evident since 1972, is that the service is unable to ensure that convicts do not reoffend.
I would imagine - although I don't claim to speak for others - that most people would rather criminals did not reoffend.
There would rightly be grave concerns that they would be free to reoffend and could pose a danger to the public.