- Nineteen state prison systems have contracted with San Francisco nonprofit Recidiviz, which uses AI and digital dashboards to consolidate scattered prisoner records — court files, parole notes, mental-health data — into a single view, replacing a patchwork of paper files and legacy databases.
- Recidiviz claims recidivism has fallen 16% across the prison population its systems track, though broader national recidivism data is outdated — multi-state figures stop at 2019 for many states, and four states’ data stops at 2016.
- States spent $8 billion to reincarcerate 193,000 people in 2021, and an estimated 40% of released inmates return to prison within three years — making the case-management data gap a costly public safety and fiscal failure.
- Recidiviz CEO Clementine Jacoby, a former Google product manager, wants to shift corrections from measuring failure (recidivism rates) to tracking success metrics like stable housing and employment within 90 days of release.
What Happened?
Nineteen state prison systems — including California, North Carolina, Missouri, Pennsylvania, and Texas — are using digital tools and AI from nonprofit Recidiviz to consolidate prisoner data that has long been scattered across paper files, parole-board notes, court records, and siloed legacy databases. The platform creates a unified dashboard for corrections staff, allowing case managers to assess a prisoner’s full history, risk factors, treatment needs, and available community resources in a single view. North Dakota’s corrections director says his state’s annual report, which used to take until May to compile manually, can now be pulled up on January 1 with one click.
Why It Matters?
With roughly 40% of released inmates returning to prison within three years, and states spending $8 billion on reincarceration in a single year, the data fragmentation problem is not just administrative — it’s a public safety and fiscal crisis. Prisoners who don’t get matched to the right support systems on release are more likely to relapse, fail to find housing, and cycle back through the system. Recidiviz’s early numbers — a claimed 16% reduction in recidivism across its tracked population — suggest that simply connecting the dots between existing data points can move the needle before advanced AI even enters the picture.
What’s Next?
Recidiviz rolled out a new data tool in May 2026 connecting case managers with local housing, employment, and social services to help former inmates navigate reentry. Eight states have joined Reentry 2030, an initiative targeting a 30% reduction in recidivism by 2030. CEO Jacoby wants the field to shift its scorecard from “how many people returned to prison” to “how many people have stable housing and a job within 90 days of release” — a framing that would fundamentally redefine what success looks like in American criminal justice.
Source: The Wall Street Journal












