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Dive into the research topics where Alan J. Drury is active.

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Featured researches published by Alan J. Drury.


Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology | 2010

Murder by numbers: monetary costs imposed by a sample of homicide offenders

Matt DeLisi; Anna Elizabeth Kosloski; Molly Sween; Emily Hachmeister; Matt Moore; Alan J. Drury

Prior research on the monetary costs of criminal careers has neglected to focus on homicide offenders and tended to minimize the public costs associated with crime. Drawing on expanded monetization estimates produced by Cohen and Piquero, this study assessed the monetary costs for five crimes (murder, rape, armed robbery, aggravated assault, and burglary) imposed by a sample of (n = 654) convicted and incarcerated murderers. The average cost per murder exceeded


Crime & Delinquency | 2011

Gangkill: An Exploratory Empirical Assessment of Gang Membership, Homicide Offending, and Prison Misconduct

Alan J. Drury; Matt DeLisi

17.25 million and the average murderer in the current sample posed costs approaching


Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice | 2010

The Cycle of Violence Behind Bars: Traumatization and Institutional Misconduct Among Juvenile Delinquents in Confinement

Matt DeLisi; Alan J. Drury; Anna Elizabeth Kosloski; Jonathan W. Caudill; Peter John Conis; Craig A. Anderson; Michael G. Vaughn; Kevin M. Beaver

24 million. The most violent and prolific offenders singly produced costs greater than


The Prison Journal | 2010

The Past Is Prologue: Prior Adjustment to Prison and Institutional Misconduct

Alan J. Drury; Matthew J. DeLisi

150–160 million in terms of victim costs, criminal justice costs, lost offender productivity, and public willingness-to-pay costs.


Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health | 2008

Juvenile sex offenders and institutional misconduct: the role of thought psychopathology

Matt DeLisi; Michael G. Vaughn; Kevin M. Beaver; John Paul Wright; Andy Hochstetler; Anna Elizabeth Kosloski; Alan J. Drury

Extant research indicates that inmates with street gang history are prone for prison misconduct but that inmates convicted of homicide offenses are less likely to be noncompliant. No research has explored the interaction between street gang history and homicide offending. Based on official infraction data from 1,005 inmates selected from the Southwestern United States, the current study found that inmates with street gang history and convictions for homicide offenses were significantly involved in six types of institutional misconduct, net the effects of homicide offending, offense severity, street and prison gang risk, violence history, and demographics. Implications for theory and research are explored.


Journal of criminal psychology | 2017

Adverse childhood experiences, paraphilias, and serious criminal violence among federal sex offenders

Alan J. Drury; Tim Heinrichs; Michael Elbert; Katherine Tahja; Matt DeLisi; Daniel Caropreso

The prospective link between early life exposure to violence and victimization and subsequent antisocial behaviors is known as the cycle of violence. Although the cycle of violence has been linked to an array of behavioral and psychiatric outcomes, less is known about its relationship to compliance with the juvenile/criminal justice systems. Data from 813 confined delinquents selected from the California Youth Authority and the Traumatic Experiences scale from the Massachusetts Youth Screening Instrument Version 2 (MAYSI-2) were used to examine the cycle of violence and three forms of misconduct. After controlling for other 18 demographics, delinquent history, commitment offense type, and comorbid psychiatric symptoms that are consistent with the importation model of inmate behavior, the authors found that wards with greater exposure to early life trauma evinced more sexual misconduct, suicidal activity, and total misconduct reviewed by the parole board. Implications and discussion for future research are offered.


Journal of criminal psychology | 2016

The dark figure of sexual offending: new evidence from federal sex offenders

Matt DeLisi; Daniel Caropreso; Alan J. Drury; Michael Elbert; Jerry L. Evans; Timothy Heinrichs; Katherine Tahja

In the United States, inmates maintain high rates of recidivism when released from correctional institutions. Although a large body of research addresses indicators of risk for recidivism after release, less is known about the stability of institutional misconduct across periods of incarceration. A limited amount of research has explored the relationship between inmate disciplinary reports incurred during prior terms of incarceration and subsequent institutional misconduct. Based on official infraction data from 1,005 inmates selected from the Arizona Department of Corrections, the current study found that both male and female inmates who have incurred disciplinary reports during prior terms of incarceration participated in violent and nonviolent institutional misconduct during subsequent terms of incarceration. Implications for theory and research are explored.


Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine | 2013

Alias: Lying to the police and pathological criminal behavior

Matt DeLisi; Alan J. Drury; Monic P. Behnken; Michael G. Vaughn; Jonathan W. Caudill; Chad R. Trulson

BACKGROUND Little is known about the institutional behaviour of incarcerated sex offenders. AIM To study the relationships between juvenile sex offending, thought psychopathology and institutional misconduct. METHOD We applied negative binomial regression and Area Under Curve Receiver Operating Characteristic (AUC-ROC) analyses to self-report and records data from institutionalised delinquents (N = 813) committed to the California Youth Authority to explore the links between sex offending and institutional misconduct, controlling for offender demographics, institution, index offence, and self-reported and official criminal history. RESULTS Juvenile sex offending was associated with six forms of institutional misconduct (sexual, general and total misconduct as reviewed by parole board) over 12 and 24 months prior to rating. Two measures of thought psychopathology, which were related to psychosis-like thought, were significantly associated with juvenile sex offender status. These constructs did not, however, mediate the independent predictive effects of adolescent sex offending on institutional misconduct. CONCLUSION Interventions to help incarcerated young offenders are likely to be particularly important for those with a sex offending history as they are otherwise likely to persist with antisocial behaviours of all kinds within and beyond the institution. Attention to their thought processes may be particularly useful.


Journal of Aggression, Conflict and Peace Research | 2017

Sexual sadism and criminal versatility: does sexual sadism spillover into nonsexual crimes?

Matt DeLisi; Alan J. Drury; Michael Elbert; Katherine Tahja; Daniel Caropreso; Timothy Heinrichs

Purpose Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are a broad conceptual framework in the social sciences that have only recently been studied within criminology. The purpose of this paper is to utilize this framework by applying it to one of the most potentially dangerous forensic populations. Design/methodology/approach Archival data from 225 federal sex offenders was used to perform descriptive, correlational, and negative binomial regression models. Findings There was substantial evidence of ACEs including father abandonment/neglect (36 percent), physical abuse (nearly 28 percent), verbal/emotional abuse (more than 24 percent), and sexual abuse (approximately 27 percent). The mean age of sexual victimization was 7.6 years with the youngest age of victimization occurring at the age of 3. Offenders averaged nearly five paraphilias, the most common were pedophilia (57 percent), pornography addiction (43 percent), paraphilia not otherwise specified (35 percent), exhibitionism (26 percent), and voyeurism (21 percent). The offenders averaged 4.7 paraphilias and the range was substantial (0 to 19). Negative binomial regression models indicated that sexual sadism was positively and pornography addiction was negatively associated with serious criminal violence. Offenders with early age of arrest onset and more total arrest charges were more likely to perpetrate kidnaping, rape, and murder. Originality/value ACEs are common in the life history of federal sex offenders, but have differential associations with the most serious forms of crime.


Journal of Drug Issues | 2018

Parent Exposure to Drugs: A “New” Adverse Childhood Experience With Devastating Behavioral Consequences

Matt DeLisi; Alan J. Drury; Michael Elbert

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the dark figure of crime among federal sex offenders from the USA to quantify crime victims and sex crime events among those with no official criminal record. Design/methodology/approach – Using data on 119 offenders selected from a five-year census of sex offenders selected from a federal probation jurisdiction in the Midwestern United States, descriptive, partial correlations, and ROC-AUC models were conducted. Findings – In total, 69 percent of offenders self-reported a contact sexual offense during polygraph examination. In total, 34 offenders had zero official record of sexual abuse but non-zero self-reported history of sexual abuse. These 34 clients offended against 148 victims that potentially denoted a minimum number of 148 sex crime events, a median number of 1,480 sex crime events, a mean number of 32,101 sex crime events, and a maximum number of 827,552 sex crime events. Total paraphilias were not predictive of self-reported sexual offending but...

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Chad R. Trulson

University of North Texas

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