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Ohio state capitol building - Reagan Tokes Act GPS ankle monitor reform legislation
AI in Criminal Justice

Ohio’s Reagan Tokes Act: How GPS Ankle Monitor Reform Targets Violent Offender Parole Failures

Ohio Rep. Cindy Abrams framed the Reagan Tokes and Patrick Heringer Act (April 2026) as a response to lethal parole-supervision gaps: real-time GPS, consolidated vendor procurement, tighter law-enforcement data access, and a 48-hour warrant expectation after violations. This third-party industry analysis maps those policy levers to electronic-monitoring architecture, procurement trade-offs, and the wider 2026 U.S. legislative wave.

· 9 min read
Budget community corrections technology
AI in Criminal Justice

12% of Budget, 69% of Population: How Technology Tackles Community Corrections’ Funding Gap

Roughly 69% of the U.S. correctional population is under community supervision, yet historical budget snapshots show only about 12% of corrections spending flowing to probation and parole operations (BJS 2018; Pew 2009). This column explains how electronic monitoring, smartphone supervision, and analytics act as fiscal force multipliers when legislatures refuse to hire proportional staff.

· 9 min read
Smartphone supervision application used in community corrections programs
AI in Criminal Justice

Smartphone Apps for Community Supervision: APPA Technology Review and Industry Assessment

The American Probation and Parole Association’s 2020 technology committee paper remains a benchmark for how agencies evaluate smartphone monitoring for community supervision. This independent assessment translates APPA’s BYOD versus corporate-owned analysis, identity-verification architectures, behavioral-support capabilities, and legal risk factors into procurement-ready language for 2026.

· 9 min read
Cybersecurity vulnerabilities and BYOD risks in electronic monitoring devices
AI in Criminal Justice

BYOD Risks in Electronic Monitoring: 7 Security Vulnerabilities Agencies Must Address

Smartphone-based supervision under bring-your-own-device (BYOD) models is spreading as agencies seek lower per-client hardware costs. The American Probation and Parole Association (APPA) Technology Committee’s vendor-neutral white paper analysis flags seven structural weaknesses—from power and radio control to spoofing, biometrics, sleep-hour gaps, and exclusion-zone timing—that procurement teams must weigh against offender risk tiers.

· 7 min read