Sourcebook @ 30
Why It Matters
The upgraded Sourcebook and Interactive Data Analyzer give stakeholders real‑time, granular insight into federal sentencing trends, informing policy decisions and promoting transparency in the criminal justice system.
Key Takeaways
- •Commission celebrates 30th Sourcebook, covering 66,000 sentencing records.
- •Interactive Data Analyzer now includes criminal history and demographics.
- •Case load grew from 8,000 to 42,000 between 1984‑1996.
- •Supreme Court’s Booker decision expanded reporting of re‑sentencing data.
- •Print Sourcebook added color charts and crime‑type chapters in 2018.
Summary
The video marks the release of the 30th edition of the Federal Sentencing Statistics Sourcebook, a milestone that encapsulates more than four decades of data collection by the U.S. Sentencing Commission. Launched in 1984, the Commission’s research and data unit has grown from publishing its first annual sentencing report to curating a comprehensive compendium that now covers over 66,000 individuals.
Key developments highlighted include the surge in case volume—from 8,000 cases in the early 1980s to 42,000 by 1996—and the evolution of reporting tools. The Supreme Court’s United States v. Booker decision prompted the Commission to expand annual reporting on re‑sentencing, while the 2013 interactive version of the Sourcebook and the 2019 Interactive Data Analyzer (IDA) dramatically increased user access, allowing customized filtering of crime types, criminal histories, and demographic data.
The video cites the Commission’s own invitation: “We hope that you will visit the Commission Sourcebook or the Interactive Data Analyzer to explore and customize this year’s data and more,” underscoring the agency’s commitment to transparency. Recent print enhancements, such as full‑color figures and dedicated chapters for the four most common crimes introduced in 2018, further illustrate the effort to make complex sentencing data more digestible.
For policymakers, researchers, and the public, the Sourcebook’s expanded digital interface and richer data sets provide a powerful foundation for evidence‑based reforms, trend analysis, and accountability in federal sentencing practices.
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