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WP-00-24

Rethinking the Puzzle of Escalating Penalties for Repeat Offenders

David A. Dana

Abstract

It is well-known that the legal system punishes repeat offenders more severely than non-repeat offenders, second-time offenders more severely than first-time offenders, and those with many previous offenses still more severely than those with a few. To a large extent, the general principle of escalating penalties based on offense history is embedded in formal federal, state, and admini-strative codes and in the enforcement norms of prosecutors and officials at all levels of government. Particularly in the context of regulatory offenses, such as violations of environmental regulations, the phenomenon of escalating penalties for repeat offenders tests the explanatory limits of economics. Standard economic analysis seems to suggest that, contrary to actual practice, penalties should not escalate based on offense history.

This paper explores 1) whether behavioral economics and cognitive psychology can help reconcile the theory of optimal deterrence and the principle of escalating penalties based on offense history; 2) the possible significance of social, extra-legal sanctions in explaining the phenomenon of escalating legal sanctions based on offense history; and 3) whether penalty escalation, through its expressive power to shape popular perceptions of moral wrongfulness, allows society to conserve its resources for investments other than law enforcement. The paper concludes that the gap between economic theory and actual practice is much wider than previously recognized.

David A. Dana, School of Law, Northwestern University



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