Firearm-related injuries are the leading cause of death for children, adolescents, and young adults in the United States, yet empirically evaluated court-based intervention models targeting firearm offenders remain rare in the peer-reviewed literature. This exploratory pilot study evaluates the implementation and pilot outcomes of the Violence Intervention Program (VIP), a court-based specialty docket designed to address gun violence through a trauma-informed, multidisciplinary model. This descriptive pilot evaluation utilized administrative court records, program data, and clinical service logs among 77 enrolled participants with felony-level, non-violent gun-related charges. Participants were entirely male, majority Black (87%), with a median age of 22 years, and primarily residents of high-poverty Cleveland, OH neighborhoods. Descriptive statistics and independent-samples t-tests were used to compare service utilization and drug screen outcomes between program participants who successfully completed and those who were unsuccessfully terminated from the program. Successful completion was contingent upon fulfillment of three program phase requirements, including consistent adherence to court-mandated supervision and active engagement in clinical and program services. Of 48 participants who exited the program during the pilot period, 34 successfully completed (67.3%). The one-year recidivism rate was 29.5%. Successful program completers received significantly higher monthly peer mentorship services than those who were unsuccessfully terminated, while counseling dosage and drug screen results did not significantly differ between groups. Findings suggest that multidisciplinary, trauma-informed, court-based models can safely intervene with justice-involved young adults and may serve as a replicable public health strategy for reducing gun violence.
Bassett et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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