Which offender populations are appropriate for Day Reporting?

BI can manage a wide range of offenders at its Day Reporting Centers, including:

  • Individuals who are failing traditional supervision methods
  • Repeat/chronic offenders
  • Parole and probation violators
  • Sentenced offenders
  • High-risk pretrial defendants
  • Domestic violence offenders
  • Drug offenders who have relapsed and are at risk of being returned to jail or prison
  • Probation clients who are not responding to traditional supervision methods


BI assesses each referred participant with an objective tool (LSI-R) to determine the risks and needs of the offender. Levels of supervision, treatment, and training are then established.


A BI Day Reporting Center targets these criminal behaviors:

  • Anti-social attitudes, values, and beliefs (criminal thinking)
  • Pro-criminal associates and isolation from pro-social associates
  • Particular temperament and behavioral characteristics (e.g., egocentrism)
  • Weak problem-solving and social skills
  • Criminal history
  • Negative family factors (i.e., abuse, unstructured or undisciplined environment, criminality in the family, and substance abuse in the family)
  • Low levels of vocational and educational skills
  • Substance abuse


The intensive BI case management system, ongoing check-ins at the Center, as well as regular drug and alcohol testing for all participants, will reveal participants not committed to behavior change. BI can address these problems immediately and develop an intervention strategy with the supervising parole or probation officer.



Contact us to discuss your jail management issues.