Department of Correction searching for Wilmington work release offender

Wilmington – The Department of Correction announces that it is currently searching for a Wilmington Work Release offender. On the evening of November 21, 2015 Offender Cagney Brittingham was discovered to be missing during an evening offender count at the Plummer Community Corrections Center. Immediate attempts were undertaken to make contact with the offender and an escape warrant for his arrest was issued. Brittingham has made no attempt to return to the Plummer Center and his whereabouts are unknown at this time.

Date of Departure: November 21
Offender Name: Cagney Brittingham
Age: 19
Last Known address: Newark, DE
Race/Gender: White male
Height: 5’0”
Weight: 90
Eyes: Blue
Hair: Blonde
Mustache/Beard/Goatee: N/A
Scarfs/Marks/Tattoos: Tattoos left wrist
Current Offense: Brittingham is currently serving a 1-year sentence of level 4 work release for a Violation of Probation of a conviction for theft.

Cagney Brittingham
Cagney Brittingham

Community Corrections Centers are Level 4 facilities where the Department of Correction manages offenders who are transitioning back into the community. These centers are not secured like Level 5 prisons, as offenders are permitted to the leave the facility to go to work, seek jobs or attend approved treatment sessions.

Anyone with information on this offender is asked to call (800) 542-9524 or their local police department.


Governor, state officials, service providers mark success of community-based pretrial supervision initiatives

Wilmington – Governor Jack Markell, corrections officials, and non-profit service providers today visited the Rick VanStory Resource Center (RVRC) in Wilmington to mark the one year anniversary of an innovative partnership with the Department of Correction and highlight the state’s ongoing efforts to strengthen community-based pretrial supervision programs for low risk defendants whose needs for treatment and services outweigh their risks to public safety.

Last November the Department of Correction awarded a contract to RVRC in an innovative pilot program funded through a grant in the Fiscal Year 2015 budget to provide supervision to low risk defendants facing trial. Through this program, case workers conduct detailed needs assessments and use that data to connect defendants immediately to treatment and other social services, ensure that their clients appear for court as required, and monitor their compliance with other conditions of their release. The RVRC program frees up the Probation Officers in DOC’s pre-trial services unit to help protect the community by focusing on the higher risk defendants who have posted bail. Over the past seven years, the number of defendants ordered to pre-trial supervision has nearly tripled statewide, while over the last twelve months, Delaware’s incarcerated population has dropped 3 percent, mostly among pre-trial detainees. Today, the Department of Correction monitors more than 500 defendants statewide who are subject to court-ordered community-based supervision while they await trial.

“Detaining individuals before trial imposes significant costs on our justice system and can lead to higher recidivism rates,” said Markell. “That’s why we have worked hard to make better informed bail decisions and to build effective community-based pre-trial programs. Together, these programs can make a tremendous difference in outcomes for offenders and have a positive impact on public safety.”

For low risk individuals who come into the criminal justice system, remaining in the community enhances their chances of success in the long term. Effective community-based supervision while they await trial can ensure that they appear for court as required and that they comply with other conditions of their release that keep the public safe. Community-based supervision also preserves those individuals’ strong bonds with family and community supports, allows them to maintain or obtain employment, and enables them to begin to receive treatment and social services that they would not have access to in prison.

“Under Governor Markell’s leadership we have invested considerable resources into building a community-based pretrial supervision system that can better support defendants’ efforts to forge a new path for their lives and become positive contributors to our state,” said Department of Correction Commissioner Robert Coupe.

Across Delaware the number of individuals detained in prison while they await trial has grown exponentially over the past two decades. Since 1983, while the state’s population grew by 50%, the detained population ballooned by more than 450%. During Markell’s, term state government has been working to implement reforms that are beginning to bend the curve down while maintaining public safety as a guiding principle. Through the Justice Reinvestment Initiative, for example, Delaware now emphasizes an evidence-based model for assessing risk in setting bail and imposing sentences, rewards those who complete rehabilitation programs with good time credits for early release, and reforms our probation system to incorporate risk and needs assessments, graduated sanctions, and compliance credits to end supervision for those who are succeeding in the community.

Allen Conover, CEO of the Rick VanStory Resource Center, emphasized that by providing treatment and services to defendants, the RVRC pre-trial program has experienced a high rate of success. “Therapeutic interventions outweigh punitive interventions when the needs outweigh the risk,” Conover said today.

During their visit, officials highlighted other steps being taken by the state to make more informed bail decisions and build the capacity to effectively supervise defendants in the community in order to ensure that limited and expensive prison space is reserved for high risk defendants who pose a public safety risk:

• Delaware’s courts now use a risk assessment tool to identify defendants who are good candidates for pre-trial release or community-based supervision by the Department of Correction or community based organizations.
• Earlier this year the Department of Correction, Public Defender’s office, and Attorney General’s office initiated a pilot program to identify low risk defendants charged with lower level offenses who are being held on low bail in order to consider appropriate cases where the Court should be petitioned to modify the bail and allow a defendant to return to the community while they await trial. This bail review initiative has identified more than two dozen cases for review and has resulted in several bail modifications and releases to the community.
• Delaware is participating in the Smart Pretrial Initiative, a federally-funded program that is bringing police, prosecutors, the public defender, and judiciary together to recommend ways we can build a better pretrial system to reduce the prison population, ensure public safety, and reduce recidivism.

Kate Parker West from the Delaware Center for Justice (DCJ) who coordinates Delaware’s Smart Pretrial Demonstration Initiative acknowledged that the Initiative has experienced progress during the planning process as a result of the broad support among criminal justice stakeholders statewide who come together to consider strategically how best to improve our system. “From DCJs perspective, the unnecessary detention of low and moderate risk arrestees presents just as big of a public safety concern as the under-supervised release of high risk arrestees,” she said.


Department of Correction announces search for Wilmington work release offenders

Wilmington – The Department of Correction announces that it is currently searching for two Wilmington Work Release offenders. On November 3, 2015 Offender Tyrone Baines absconded over the perimeter wall at the Plummer Community Corrections Center at approximately 1:00 p.m., heading east on 32nd Street. Video surveillance revealed that he entered a dark colored four-door sedan which continued east on 32nd Street. Baines was last seen wearing a white long-sleeve shirt, dark/black pants, and white shoes. Separately, on the evening of November 3, 2015, Offender Jerrin Herring failed to return as required to the Plummer Community Corrections Center from an approved job seeking pass.

Immediate attempts were undertaken to make contact with both offenders and escape warrants for their arrests were issued on November 3. Neither offender has made an attempt to return to the Plummer Center and their whereabouts are unknown at this time.

Date of Departure: November 3
Offender Name: Tyrone Baines
Age: 20
Last Known address: Bear, DE
Race/Gender: Black male
Height: 6’1”
Weight: 170
Eyes: Brown
Hair: Black
Mustache/Beard/Goatee: Mustache, goatee
Scarfs/Marks/Tattoos: Scar left arm, tattoos left arm, tattoos chest
Current Offense: Baines is currently serving a 6-month sentence of level 4 work release for a Violation of Probation of a conviction for illegal possessing a firearm and ammunition.

Date of Departure: November 3
Offender Name: Jerrin Herring
Age: 21
Last Known address: Wilmington, DE
Race/Gender: Black male
Height: 6’1”
Weight: 175
Eyes: Brown
Hair: Black
Mustache/Beard/Goatee: None
Scarfs/Marks/Tattoos: Scar right ankle, tattoos right arm, tattoos left forearm
Current Offense: Herring is currently serving a 3-month sentence of level 4 work release following a period of incarceration for a Violation of Probation of convictions for Resisting Arrest, Theft, and Terroristic Threatening.

Community Corrections Centers are Level 4 facilities where the Department of Correction manages offenders who are transitioning back into the community. These centers are not secured like Level 5 prisons, as offenders are permitted to the leave the facility to go to work, seek jobs or attend approved treatment sessions.

Anyone with information on these offenders is asked to call (800) 542-9524 or their local police department.


Probation officers acting to keep Delaware kids safe this Halloween

Dover – Tomorrow night, as children and families celebrate Halloween in neighborhoods across Delaware, registered sex offenders under the supervision of probation officers are being ordered to stay off the streets, the Department of Correction announced today.

On Halloween night each year, the Department of Correction (DOC) imposes special restrictions on all high risk sex offenders and sex offenders with child victims who are under the supervision of the DOC’s Bureau of Community Corrections. These restrictions require designated offenders to remain inside their home with outside lights turned off beginning at 6:00 p.m. and prohibit them from distributing candy, participating in Halloween-related activities, or displaying Halloween decorations. Moreover, designated homeless sex offenders under Department of Correction supervision will be required to report to a Probation and Parole Office or other location in their county at 5:30 p.m. Saturday, where they will remain until 9:00 p.m.

“The Department of Correction is taking reasonable precautions to ensure that children and families enjoy a safe trick-or-treating experience,” Commissioner Robert Coupe said today. “Probation officers will be on patrol in our communities to verify that sex offenders under our supervision are following the restrictions on their movement and activities on Halloween night.”

To ensure compliance with these restrictions, teams of Probation and Parole officers will be out on the streets in each county Saturday night to conduct residence checks at the homes of designated sex offenders. On Halloween night last year Probation Officers made 347 residence visits and took 5 offenders into custody for violating the terms of their probation.

The DOC’s Bureau of Community Corrections provides community-based supervision, programs and treatment services to approximately 16,000 adult offenders in Delaware. In addition, 18 probation officers statewide are assigned full-time to specialized local crime-fighting task forces, including Governor’s Task Force and Safe Streets patrols in designated communities, and DEA, FBI, and US Marshalls task forces. In addition, a half-dozen probation officers are assigned to the DOC’s pre-trial services unit, which supervises more than 500 defendants facing trial who have been ordered by the Court to be supervised as a condition of bail.


Department of Correction announces search for Dover work release offender

Dover – The Department of Correction announces that it is searching for Work Release offender Joel Miller, who departed the Morris Community Corrections Center in Dover without authorization on October 16. Attempts to make contact with him were undertaken and ongoing efforts to locate Miller were unsuccessful. An escape warrant for his arrest was issued on October 16.

Date of Departure: October 16
Offender Name: Joel Miller
Age: 31
Last Known address: Dover area
Race/Gender: White male
Height: 5’10”
Weight: 230
Eyes: Brown
Hair: Black
Mustache/Beard/Goatee: Beard
Scarfs/Marks/Tattoos: Tattoos on left and right arms
Current Offense: Miller is currently serving a 6-month sentence of level 4 work release for a Violation of Probation of a conviction for Theft.

Community Corrections Centers are Level 4 facilities where the Department of Correction manages offenders who are transitioning back into the community. These centers are not secured like Level 5 prisons, as offenders are permitted to the leave the facility to go to work, seek jobs or attend approved treatment sessions.

Anyone with information on this offender is asked to call (800) 542-9524 or their local police department.