West Virginia's Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation is doing something right
A recent report found that West Virginia's recidivism rate is lower than all but four states. (Darrin Klimek | Getty Images)
'Our correctional industry leaders and employees have recognized that operating a successful prison system includes preparing the incarcerated population for a productive life outside of the system. This effort involves parole and probation agencies, social service providers, work-release employers, and support from the community.' — Joe Thornton, former Secretary of the West Virginia Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety (DMAPS)
West Virginia is sometimes unfairly criticized by outsiders that are unaware of the state's many positives, such as its friendly people and beautiful, scenic mountains. But even the state's residents may not be aware of some of West Virginia's other accomplishments. For example, the successful rehabilitation of people exiting state prisons.
A recent report by Suzuki Law found that West Virginia's recidivism rate is lower than all but four states. This positive finding is consistent with a PEW survey taken more than a decade ago which also found West Virginia to have the fourth lowest recidivism rate.
More broadly, the American criminal justice system must do more than just say 'goodbye' to discharged inmates; it must take pro-active steps to help with a very difficult transition. As indicated below, such action results in all of us being safer and lessens our tax burden.
A large portion of the world's total inmates are here in the United States, where almost a half million new inmates enter the system each year. Currently, we have nearly 2 million people incarcerated, the majority in state prisons at tremendous cost to state taxpayers. And 1 out of 5 are in jail due to mostly non-violent drug offenses.
States like West Virginia with lower recidivism rates have more effective programs for dealing with people convicted of crimes and eventually released. While West Virginia's 24% recidivism rate may sound high to the uninformed, it is less than half that of Delaware (65%), the highest state. And West Virginia's historically lower rate did not simply happen by accident, prison reform has been a priority for a while.
In 2013 and 2015, Democratic Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin and West Virginia's Legislature made a very conscious decision to identify and employ 'scientifically validated' 'best practices' to improve the state's justice system, for both youth and adults. In a rare illustration of how government can — and should — work, both the GOP and the Democrats agreed on the need for reform. Then, together, they accomplished it, all without pointing fingers as is so common in 2025.
Senate Bill 371 (2013) enacted reforms regarding the adult offender system. The Justice Reinvestment Initiative employed assessment and treatment of 'behavioral health and substance abuse' to reduce recidivism. Instead of incarceration, the state established 'day report centers,' successfully utilizing 'treatment and recovery services' versus incarceration.
Senate Bill 393 (2015) zeroed in on 'at-risk youth' where they lived, providing them with home-based guidance and mentoring. Previously, these children were committed to youth detention facilities, i.e. jails. As a state planning and budgeting senior analyst, I visited and evaluated such facilities in Georgia in the 1970s. I guarantee you that they were problematic, as well as personally disturbing.
It is a true shame that other red and blue states with high recidivism rates — such as Delaware, Alaska, Arkansas, Rhode Island and Colorado — have not come together to install scientifically based reforms that have been proven to be successful in West Virginia and other more enlightened states. Per one legal expert, 'By adopting evidence-based rehabilitation programs and supporting former inmates in their transition back into society, we can reduce recidivism rates, improve public safety, and ease the economic burden on taxpayers.'
High recidivism can be reduced by providing inmate educational and rehabilitation opportunities, and support after release from prison including employment assistance, housing and education. But the first step is to recognize that there is a problem.
Jim Rubenstein, a past WVDOC Commissioner, once stated, 'I am proud of our staff's commitment to the WVDOC's goal of reducing offender recidivism.' Mr. Rubenstein, everyone reading this column will agree. I just hope other states will follow in your footsteps.
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Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Freed January 6 Prisoner Launches Bid for Congress
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. For Jake Lang, a 29-year-old Donald Trump supporter who spent four years in prison for his alleged involvement in the January 6, 2021, Capitol Hill riot, though he was never convicted of any offenses, January 20, 2025, was "like a Biblical miracle." Sitting in his prison cell, Lang heard Trump had pardoned around 1,500 people convicted over their involvement in the 2021 storming of Congress, with charges dropped against those, like him, still battling through the courts. Speaking to Newsweek, Lang said it was "like the Red Sea was parted," adding: "A guarantee that God had given me years ago that he would save me, that he would not forsake me, came true in that moment." When the pardon was issued, Lang was facing a number of serious charges, including "assaulting, resisting, or impeding" law enforcement and civil disorder, with prosecutors alleging he struck police officers with an aluminum baseball bat and kicked one who fell on the ground. Lang has consistently denied any wrongdoing and insists he acted in self-defense after violence was initiated by the police. Lang is currently running for Congress, hoping to take the Florida Senate seat vacated by Marco Rubio when he was appointed as Secretary of State by Trump and currently occupied by Republican Senator Ashlee Moody on an interim basis. A special election for the seat is scheduled for November 2026 and Lang is hoping to beat Moody in a primary contest to become the official Republican candidate. January 6, 2021 Lang, an e-commerce entrepreneur originally from New York State, was one of tens of thousands of Trump supporters who gathered in Washington, D.C., on January 6, 2021, to protest what the then-president claimed was the "rigged" 2020 presidential election. The day held great significance as Congress was expected to certify the election result, rebuking Trump's allegations of systematic fraud, though some Republicans refused to do so. Like Trump, Lang remains convinced the 2020 presidential election was rigged in favor of Joe Biden, though the federal Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency insisted it had been "the most secure" election in American history. A plethora of legal challenges issued by Trump's team failed to get the election result overturned either nationally or in any single state. The January 6, 2021, demonstration turned violent, with hundreds of Trump supporters storming Congress in a bid to block the election result's certification, sparking chaos in which one demonstrator was shot dead by police whilst dozens of officers were injured. Jake Lang is running for Marco Rubio's old Florida Senate seat following his release from prison. Jake Lang is running for Marco Rubio's old Florida Senate seat following his release from prison. Blessed News According to prosecutors, Lang, wearing a gas mask and wielding a baseball bat, struck officers whilst shouting taunts such as "This is our house, we paid for this f****** building." When interviewed by Newsweek, Lang didn't deny handling a baseball bat and wearing a mask but insisted he didn't take them to the demonstration, adding: "I presume whoever brought that was probably worried about an Antifa gang jumping them." He also said he only acted in self-defense. The Congressional hopeful blamed law enforcement for the violence, commenting: "During the course of the police brutality, it escalated to such a crazy nature, people were literally dying, and in order to stop the loss of human life, me and a group of men literally had to put ourselves between the unarmed protesters and this thuggish police group that killed people." This version of events is contradicted by a 40-minute documentary released by the New York Times and largely based on raw footage, which showed demonstrators approaching a police perimeter outside Congress and attempting to overpower them at what it said was the start of the violence. Lang told Newsweek that at times, police were "shooting things over the crowd," which were "landing in the middle of thousands of people," causing them to surge forward towards the police, though video shared on social media appears to show the police being engaged before any tear gas or pepper spray was deployed. According to Lang, during the ruckus, he attempted to rescue Rosanne Boyland, a Trump supporter who died outside Congress, from "the bottom of the dogpile as she was crushed to death" with his arms. Federal Prison Following the January 6 riot, Lang was arrested and spent four years in federal prison as his legal team successfully battled to push his trial back, in part because of a Supreme Court case he was involved in against the prosecutor's use of Obstructing an Official Proceeding charges which carried a maximum sentence of 20 years. Lang said he was moved between different facilities repeatedly after he continued political campaigning in prison, which, together with coronavirus lockdowns, resulted in him spending hundreds of days in solitary confinement. He said: "They don't want the interviews happening so they'll throw you in solitary and then what we do the second I get in the solitary is we have a call to action go out on like Gateway of people call and inundate the jail and they realize I'm too much of a headache, let's just ship him down the road, tell the U.S. Marshals to come pick me up and they're bring me to Virginia or Pennsylvania or New York, God knows where else, all the way out to Oklahoma one time." According to Lang, Trump was popular in federal prison, in part because he signed the 2018 First Step Act, which introduced additional programs and training for prison officers in a bid to reduce recidivism, but also "because Trump has a swagger that they really like." By contrast, he said: "I only met one Joe Biden supporter the entire time I was in prison." Trump supporters clashing with police and security forces as people try to storm the US Capitol on January 6, 2021 in Washington, DC. Trump supporters clashing with police and security forces as people try to storm the US Capitol on January 6, 2021 in Washington, DC. Brent Stirton/GETTY During Lang's stint in prison, he remained active with both religion and politics, spending time as an unofficial pastor "doing Bible studies" and "baptizing people." He said there was "a big black market in prison" with "the prison smuggling in whatever, and so if I could get my hand on a phone, that's a great weapon on information warfare to use." Lang claimed that in one prison, somebody even told him, "They could get me a cat." Newsweek contacted the Department of Justice for comment on Thursday via online inquiry form. January 6 Love Story During his time in prison, Lang first came across his now fiancé Rachel, another January 6 defendant who was convicted before being released on probation. He said: "It's a J6 love story, the greatest love story every written in the January 6 world. So Rachel was a Jan 6er and I was on a Twitter space I was doing from my prison cell and she was listening. This is one of the times, very rare, where I had a cell Brooklyn Federal Prison, Brooklyn, New York. "We met basically through one of my media interviews...I reached out and we started talking, she started becoming one of the people I trusted and like a right hand of mine while I'm in an amazing woman and I couldn't help but love her and ask her to marry." Run for Congress Following Trump's pardon, Lang quickly re-engaged with politics, announcing his Florida Senate bid in March 2025 after Rubio joined Trump's cabinet. Lang painted Senator Moody, Rubio's replacement, as an establishment figure, commenting: "Ashley's an interesting character because she feigns a lot of Trump's policy positions, but at the end of the day, she is a DeSantis loyalist, and on top of that, she has this extremely established background. 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"The old RINO Republican Party, that Trump obliterated when he came old guard, the uniparty, RINOs, establishment hacks whatever you want to call them, they're no longer in control, and with candidates like myself and other Jan Sixers running were seeing this crazy shift where it's not just Trump, it's more MAGA, its more patriots, that are going to be leading the next generation." While Trump hasn't commented on Lang's campaign, the former January 6 arrestee said he was in touch with the president's team, commenting: "We have a lot of great connections into Team that have been his former attorneys, advisors, now people who are working inside his department of more just giving them information then they do with it what they want." Compensation Asked if he thinks those imprisoned over the January 6 riot should receive compensation, Lang replied: "Of course, 100 percent. 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Yahoo
an hour ago
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Dem Breaks With Party After Noem Security Stunt: ‘Politics as Theater'
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Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Padilla denies claims he lunged at Noem during LA press conference
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