37 LLM calls
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Generate 10 concrete document subjects within the domain of: `court system and legal proceedings`
Each subject should describe a specific dataset, report, or collection of measurable facts that would contain many probabilities, rates, counts, and statistics.
Be specific — not just 'brewery production' but 'local brewery production yields and quality defect rates' or 'craft beer festival vendor sales and customer satisfaction surveys'.
Each subject should be distinct from the others and cover a different angle of the domain.
1. Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction
2. Bail bond amounts, pretrial detention rates, and defendant appearance compliance statistics
3. Civil litigation filing volumes, settlement rates, and median damage award amounts by case category
4. Jury selection demographics, deliberation times, and verdict outcome patterns in felony trials
5. Court appointed attorney caseloads, conviction rates, and client satisfaction survey results
6. Appellate court reversal rates, appeal filing volumes, and case processing times by circuit
7. Small claims court filing frequencies, judgment amounts, and debt collection success rates
8. Juvenile court case outcomes, recidivism rates, and rehabilitation program completion statistics
9. Court continuance request frequencies, granted postponement rates, and reasons for delay by case type
10. Probation violation rates, supervision completion percentages, and revocation hearing outcomes
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Generate 10 concrete document subjects within the domain of: `beverage production`
Each subject should describe a specific dataset, report, or collection of measurable facts that would contain many probabilities, rates, counts, and statistics.
Be specific — not just 'brewery production' but 'local brewery production yields and quality defect rates' or 'craft beer festival vendor sales and customer satisfaction surveys'.
Each subject should be distinct from the others and cover a different angle of the domain.
1. Daily batch-level production logs for a cold-brew coffee facility, including yield by roast and grind size, extraction time distributions, TDS/strength measurements, and batch rejection/contamination rates
2. Brewery fermentation performance report by yeast strain and temperature profile, including attenuation rates, gravity drop curves, off-flavor incidence probabilities, and tank utilization statistics
3. Bottling and canning line efficiency dataset, including units per minute, downtime causes and frequencies, fill-volume variance, seam/closure defect counts, and overall equipment effectiveness (OEE) metrics
4. Carbonation and dissolved CO2 quality-control dataset for sparkling water production, including target vs actual carbonation levels, out-of-spec rates by line and shift, and CO2 consumption per thousand liters
5. HACCP and microbiological testing records for kombucha production, including pH and Brix distributions, lab test pass/fail rates, contamination event counts, and corrective action completion rates
6. Supply chain and ingredient loss report for juice manufacturing, including fruit lot acceptance rates, spoilage/trim loss percentages, concentrate yield by supplier, and lead-time variability statistics
7. Sensory panel and consumer taste-test dataset for flavored soda formulations, including preference share probabilities, defect descriptor frequencies, acceptability scores by demographic segment, and reformulation win rates
8. Energy and water intensity benchmarking dataset for a beverage plant, including kWh and liters per hectoliter by process step, peak-demand event counts, CIP cycle frequency, and savings rates after interventions
9. Allergen and label compliance audit dataset for ready-to-drink tea production, including label error counts by SKU, allergen cross-contact incident rates, rework frequency, and recall probability estimates by risk tier
10. Distribution and shelf-life performance report for dairy-based drinks, including cold-chain temperature excursion rates, spoilage returns per route, sell-through percentages by retailer, and days-to-expiry waste statistics
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Generate 10 diverse document formats for presenting data about:
Subject: `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`
Domain: `court system and legal proceedings`
Each format should be a specific, realistic document that someone would actually encounter — not just a generic format like 'report' or 'CSV'.
Examples (for a brewery production subject):
- 'Annual quality assurance report submitted to the state alcohol control board'
- 'Brewmaster batch log with yield, gravity readings, and defect flags'
- 'Insurance claim filing after a contaminated batch, citing production and defect history'
- 'Investor pitch deck for a Series A round with production growth and quality metrics'
- 'HACCP audit findings from a third-party food safety inspector'
- 'Local newspaper feature article profiling the brewery first year of operations'
- 'Reddit AMA transcript where the head brewer answers questions about yield and quality'
- 'Supplier contract renewal negotiation email thread referencing production volumes'
- 'City council public comment transcript during a zoning hearing citing economic output'
- 'Internal Slack channel export where the production team discusses a bad batch'
Maximize diversity: mix regulatory filings, internal comms, journalism, social media, legal documents, investor materials, audit reports, meeting transcripts, etc.
1. Annual Statistical Report submitted by the State Court Administrator to the Conference of Chief Justices detailing case clearance rates and median time-to-disposition across felony categories
2. Prosecuting Attorney's internal memo to assistant DAs analyzing backlog trends in assault and drug cases with recommendations for plea bargain strategies to reduce trial duration
3. Legislative Budget Committee hearing transcript where the Public Defender's Office justifies increased funding by citing rising caseloads and prolonged pretrial detention periods for property crimes
4. Investigative journalism piece published in the state capital newspaper exposing racial disparities in case processing times between urban and rural jurisdictions for identical offense types
5. Federal Bureau of Justice Statistics grant application from a county court system proposing implementation of a case management software system, citing current disposition rate benchmarks and performance gaps
6. Criminal justice reform advocacy group's Twitter thread with infographics comparing average trial wait times for violent offenses across five neighboring counties, calling for judicial appointments
7. Accreditation site visit report from the American Bar Association evaluating a jurisdiction's compliance with speedy trial standards, including statistical appendices on case aging by offense class
8. District Court Judge's chambers email exchange with the Trial Court Administrator expressing concern about DUI case disposition rates falling below state targets and requesting additional courtroom hours
9. Expert witness report prepared by a criminal justice professor for a class action lawsuit alleging systemic speedy trial violations, analyzing five years of disposition data across misdemeanor and felony categories
10. Quarterly performance dashboard presentation delivered by the Court Services Director to the County Board of Supervisors showing color-coded metrics on case clearance rates and average days-to-trial by crime type
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Generate 10 diverse document formats for presenting data about:
Subject: `Bail bond amounts, pretrial detention rates, and defendant appearance compliance statistics`
Domain: `court system and legal proceedings`
Each format should be a specific, realistic document that someone would actually encounter — not just a generic format like 'report' or 'CSV'.
Examples (for a brewery production subject):
- 'Annual quality assurance report submitted to the state alcohol control board'
- 'Brewmaster batch log with yield, gravity readings, and defect flags'
- 'Insurance claim filing after a contaminated batch, citing production and defect history'
- 'Investor pitch deck for a Series A round with production growth and quality metrics'
- 'HACCP audit findings from a third-party food safety inspector'
- 'Local newspaper feature article profiling the brewery first year of operations'
- 'Reddit AMA transcript where the head brewer answers questions about yield and quality'
- 'Supplier contract renewal negotiation email thread referencing production volumes'
- 'City council public comment transcript during a zoning hearing citing economic output'
- 'Internal Slack channel export where the production team discusses a bad batch'
Maximize diversity: mix regulatory filings, internal comms, journalism, social media, legal documents, investor materials, audit reports, meeting transcripts, etc.
1. State court administrator annual pretrial services performance report to the legislature, summarizing bail bond amounts, detention rates, and court-appearance compliance by county
2. County pretrial services “release decision worksheet” attached to a judge’s bail hearing packet, listing recommended bond amount, risk score, and historical failure-to-appear rates
3. U.S. Department of Justice (BJS) standardized data submission form for state courts, reporting aggregate bail amounts, pretrial detention duration, and appearance outcomes
4. Legislative committee hearing transcript on bail reform, with witnesses citing statistics on bond schedules, detention rates, and appearance compliance
5. A civil rights impact litigation expert report (declaration) filed in federal court, analyzing bond amounts and detention/appearance outcomes by charge type and demographics
6. Internal court executive dashboard printout for the chief judge and court manager, showing weekly bail amounts set, detention population, and appearance compliance KPIs
7. Surety bail bond company underwriting and risk assessment memo for a high-volume jurisdiction, referencing average bond amounts and defendant appearance compliance trends
8. Municipal budget office “program evaluation brief” for funding pretrial supervision, comparing detention costs against appearance compliance outcomes under different bond practices
9. Investigative newspaper data story with an accompanying methodology sidebar, visualizing bail bond amounts and pretrial detention rates and relating them to missed-court appearances
10. Public defender office client advisory handout and FAQ distributed in arraignment court, explaining typical bail amounts, likelihood of pretrial detention, and appearance compliance requirements
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Generate 10 diverse document formats for presenting data about:
Subject: `Civil litigation filing volumes, settlement rates, and median damage award amounts by case category`
Domain: `court system and legal proceedings`
Each format should be a specific, realistic document that someone would actually encounter — not just a generic format like 'report' or 'CSV'.
Examples (for a brewery production subject):
- 'Annual quality assurance report submitted to the state alcohol control board'
- 'Brewmaster batch log with yield, gravity readings, and defect flags'
- 'Insurance claim filing after a contaminated batch, citing production and defect history'
- 'Investor pitch deck for a Series A round with production growth and quality metrics'
- 'HACCP audit findings from a third-party food safety inspector'
- 'Local newspaper feature article profiling the brewery first year of operations'
- 'Reddit AMA transcript where the head brewer answers questions about yield and quality'
- 'Supplier contract renewal negotiation email thread referencing production volumes'
- 'City council public comment transcript during a zoning hearing citing economic output'
- 'Internal Slack channel export where the production team discusses a bad batch'
Maximize diversity: mix regulatory filings, internal comms, journalism, social media, legal documents, investor materials, audit reports, meeting transcripts, etc.
1. Annual statistical report submitted to the state judicial council analyzing case resolution trends and backlog reduction efforts
2. Law firm partner compensation committee memo evaluating associate performance based on settlement success rates and recovery amounts
3. Legal malpractice insurance underwriting questionnaire requiring disclosure of historical litigation outcomes by practice area
4. Investigative journalism exposé published in the local legal newspaper examining racial disparities in damage awards across case types
5. Court administrator budget justification presentation to county commissioners citing caseload volume projections and resource needs
6. Plaintiff attorney CLE seminar handout comparing venue shopping strategies using multi-jurisdiction settlement rate data
7. LinkedIn post from a litigation analytics consultant showcasing predictive modeling of case outcomes based on historical filing patterns
8. Discovery response in a class action lawsuit attaching Excel spreadsheets of defendant's prior settlement history in similar cases
9. Law school empirical research paper analyzing the correlation between case complexity, time to settlement, and award amounts
10. Closed-door arbitration provider pitch email to corporate counsel highlighting faster resolution times and lower average awards compared to traditional litigation
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Generate 114 diverse measurable facts for:
Subject: `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`
Document type: `Annual Statistical Report submitted by the State Court Administrator to the Conference of Chief Justices detailing case clearance rates and median time-to-disposition across felony categories`
A 'measurable fact' should be a specific measurable phenomenon, event, behavior, outcome, or attribute within this subject that could plausibly be expressed as a probability, rate, frequency, likelihood, or proportion.
Focus on WHAT could be measured, not the value itself.
The facts should be the kind of thing you'd expect to find in this document type.
Make the topics diverse and cover different aspects of the subject.
Give me a wide variety of facts, both semantically and syntactically diverse. Avoid near-duplicates, overlap, or overly broad topics.
1. Percentage of felony drug possession cases disposed within 180 days of filing
2. Average number of days from arraignment to final disposition for violent felony cases
3. Case clearance rate for property crime felonies in urban jurisdictions
4. Proportion of aggravated assault cases resolved through plea agreements
5. Median time from indictment to trial commencement for murder cases
6. Percentage of burglary cases that proceed to jury trial
7. Rate of case dismissals prior to trial for fraud offenses
8. Average duration of jury deliberation in sexual assault trials
9. Proportion of robbery cases disposed through bench trial versus jury trial
10. Case clearance rate for white-collar crime prosecutions in metropolitan counties
11. Percentage of domestic violence felony cases resulting in conviction
12. Median number of continuances granted per case in drug trafficking prosecutions
13. Rate of pretrial diversion acceptance for first-time felony offenders
14. Average time from arrest to preliminary hearing in rural jurisdictions
15. Proportion of vehicular homicide cases resolved within one year
16. Percentage of felony DUI cases that exceed statutory time limits for disposition
17. Case clearance rate for weapons possession offenses
18. Median trial duration for complex financial crime cases
19. Rate of competency evaluation requests in felony mental health cases
20. Percentage of kidnapping cases disposed through negotiated settlement
21. Average time from motion filing to suppression hearing in drug cases
22. Proportion of arson cases pending longer than 18 months
23. Case clearance rate for human trafficking prosecutions
24. Percentage of child abuse felony cases with expedited processing
25. Median time between guilty plea entry and sentencing hearing
26. Rate of interlocutory appeals filed in homicide cases
27. Proportion of elder abuse cases dismissed for insufficient evidence
28. Average number of pretrial motions filed per organized crime case
29. Percentage of identity theft cases resolved within six months
30. Case clearance rate for cybercrime prosecutions across all jurisdictions
31. Median age of pending felony cases in suburban court systems
32. Rate of mandatory minimum sentence applicability in drug distribution cases
33. Proportion of manslaughter cases requiring expert witness testimony
34. Percentage of felony cases where defendant fails to appear at scheduled hearings
35. Average number of days between arrest and formal charging for sex offenses
36. Case clearance rate for terrorism-related prosecutions
37. Median duration of sentencing proceedings in capital murder cases
38. Rate of successful motion for change of venue in high-profile cases
39. Proportion of extortion cases with multiple co-defendants
40. Percentage of felony assault cases reopened on appeal
41. Average time from grand jury indictment to first appearance
42. Case clearance rate for hate crime prosecutions by jurisdiction size
43. Median number of court appearances per defendant in embezzlement cases
44. Rate of pretrial detention for defendants charged with violent felonies
45. Proportion of carjacking cases resulting in acquittal
46. Percentage of racketeering cases exceeding two years to disposition
47. Average jury selection duration for death penalty eligible cases
48. Case clearance rate for public corruption prosecutions
49. Median time to disposition for felony cases with retained counsel versus public defenders
50. Rate of witness unavailability causing case continuances in assault trials
51. Proportion of stalking cases with protective orders in effect
52. Percentage of felony theft cases diverted to drug court programs
53. Average number of days from verdict to judgment entry
54. Case clearance rate for environmental crime prosecutions
55. Median duration of evidentiary hearings in firearm possession cases
56. Rate of forensic evidence analysis delays impacting case timelines
57. Proportion of money laundering cases involving multi-jurisdictional coordination
58. Percentage of second-degree murder cases with plea bargains to lesser charges
59. Average time from preliminary hearing to arraignment in rural versus urban courts
60. Case clearance rate for gang-related felony offenses
61. Median number of discovery motions filed per complex fraud case
62. Rate of speedy trial violations across all felony categories
63. Proportion of animal cruelty felony cases resulting in suspended sentences
64. Percentage of RICO cases with superseding indictments
65. Average duration from filing to disposition for methamphetamine manufacturing cases
66. Case clearance rate for felony driving offenses by county population
67. Median time for bail review hearings following arrest
68. Rate of mental health court diversion for qualifying felony defendants
69. Proportion of wrongful imprisonment cases with compensation claims
70. Percentage of felony escape cases prosecuted in conjunction with underlying charges
71. Average number of trial days for first-degree sexual assault cases
72. Case clearance rate for prescription fraud prosecutions
73. Median time from motion for discovery to compliance by prosecution
74. Rate of mistrial declarations across all felony jury trials
75. Proportion of residential burglary cases with restitution requirements
76. Percentage of felony intimidation cases linked to domestic violence
77. Average time between consecutive trial date settings per case
78. Case clearance rate for counterfeiting prosecutions
79. Median duration of competency restoration proceedings
80. Rate of successful appeals resulting in case remand for retrial
81. Proportion of child pornography cases with federal versus state prosecution
82. Percentage of felony obstruction of justice cases filed as additional charges
83. Average number of days cases remain on trial-ready docket before commencement
84. Case clearance rate for felony perjury prosecutions
85. Median time from conviction to completion of presentence investigation report
86. Rate of witness immunity grants in organized crime trials
87. Proportion of felony cases with court-appointed language interpreters
88. Percentage of check fraud cases consolidated with related charges
89. Average duration of probation revocation hearings for felony violations
90. Case clearance rate for felony tampering with evidence charges
91. Median number of status conferences held per pending felony case
92. Rate of defendant requests for speedy trial assertion
93. Proportion of involuntary manslaughter cases arising from vehicular incidents
94. Percentage of felony solicitation cases prosecuted to verdict
95. Average time from arrest to bail determination hearing
96. Case clearance rate for felony cases in specialized drug courts
97. Median duration of voir dire examination in multi-defendant trials
98. Rate of Brady material disclosure disputes delaying trials
99. Proportion of forgery cases with institutional victim entities
100. Percentage of felony cases with DNA evidence requiring external laboratory analysis
101. Average number of judicial reassignments per felony case due to recusals
102. Case clearance rate for offenses against vulnerable adults
103. Median time from indictment to plea agreement finalization
104. Rate of consecutive versus concurrent sentencing in multi-count convictions
105. Proportion of felony cases with sealed or expunged records post-disposition
106. Percentage of negligent homicide cases with commercial vehicle involvement
107. Average duration of restitution hearings following conviction
108. Case clearance rate for felonies committed within correctional facilities
109. Median time between conviction and appeal filing
110. Rate of jury nullification in drug possession trials
111. Proportion of bribery cases involving public officials
112. Percentage of felony cases with video evidence requiring authentication
113. Average number of defense-requested expert evaluations per capital case
114. Case clearance rate variation between elected and appointed judicial districts
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Generate 114 diverse measurable facts for:
Subject: `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`
Document type: `Prosecuting Attorney's internal memo to assistant DAs analyzing backlog trends in assault and drug cases with recommendations for plea bargain strategies to reduce trial duration`
A 'measurable fact' should be a specific measurable phenomenon, event, behavior, outcome, or attribute within this subject that could plausibly be expressed as a probability, rate, frequency, likelihood, or proportion.
Focus on WHAT could be measured, not the value itself.
The facts should be the kind of thing you'd expect to find in this document type.
Make the topics diverse and cover different aspects of the subject.
Give me a wide variety of facts, both semantically and syntactically diverse. Avoid near-duplicates, overlap, or overly broad topics.
1. Percentage of assault cases resolved through plea bargains in the current fiscal year
2. Average trial duration for aggravated assault cases in our jurisdiction
3. Rate of case dismissals for drug possession charges due to evidentiary issues
4. Proportion of drug trafficking cases pending beyond 180 days
5. Frequency of continuances requested by defense counsel in assault cases
6. Percentage of simple assault cases that proceed to jury trial
7. Average time from arraignment to disposition for misdemeanor drug offenses
8. Rate of guilty verdicts in felony assault trials over the past two years
9. Proportion of drug cases resolved within speedy trial timeframes
10. Likelihood of accepting a plea offer when first proposed in domestic assault cases
11. Percentage of cases in the current backlog categorized as drug-related offenses
12. Average number of pre-trial motions filed per assault case
13. Rate of witness non-appearance in scheduled drug case hearings
14. Proportion of assault cases involving repeat offenders
15. Frequency of plea negotiations resulting in charge reductions for drug crimes
16. Percentage of assault trials lasting more than five days
17. Average sentence length accepted in drug possession plea agreements
18. Rate of conviction for assault with a deadly weapon charges
19. Proportion of drug cases diverted to treatment programs
20. Likelihood of case resolution before preliminary hearing in assault matters
21. Percentage of backlogged cases older than one year
22. Average number of court appearances per drug trafficking case
23. Rate of successful motion to suppress evidence in drug cases
24. Proportion of assault cases involving identified victims who cooperate with prosecution
25. Frequency of bench trials versus jury trials for drug offenses
26. Percentage of assault cases resulting in acquittal
27. Average time spent in jury selection for drug trafficking trials
28. Rate of plea withdrawal after initial acceptance in assault cases
29. Proportion of drug cases with lab analysis delays exceeding 90 days
30. Likelihood of trial when defendant has prior convictions for similar offenses
31. Percentage of assault cases with multiple defendants
32. Average reduction in charges offered in drug possession plea deals
33. Rate of successful Fourth Amendment challenges in our drug prosecutions
34. Proportion of domestic violence assault cases resulting in protective orders
35. Frequency of expert witness testimony required in assault trials
36. Percentage of drug cases involving confidential informants
37. Average trial preparation time for assistant DAs handling assault cases
38. Rate of deferred adjudication agreements in first-time drug offender cases
39. Proportion of assault cases settled during the week before trial
40. Likelihood of appealing a conviction in drug trafficking cases
41. Percentage of cases resolved through alternative dispute resolution programs
42. Average caseload per assistant DA for drug-related prosecutions
43. Rate of victim impact statement presentations in assault sentencing hearings
44. Proportion of drug cases with concurrent state and federal jurisdiction
45. Frequency of competency evaluations ordered in assault cases
46. Percentage of assault trials with hung juries
47. Average negotiation period from initial plea offer to acceptance in drug cases
48. Rate of probation violations among assault offenders with prior plea agreements
49. Proportion of drug cases involving mandatory minimum sentences
50. Likelihood of case resolution at arraignment for simple assault charges
51. Percentage of assault cases requiring medical expert testimony
52. Average incarceration time versus probation offers in drug plea bargains
53. Rate of successful witness impeachment in assault trials
54. Proportion of drug cases with chain of custody issues
55. Frequency of victim restitution orders in assault case dispositions
56. Percentage of drug trials utilizing surveillance video evidence
57. Average delay attributed to discovery disputes in assault cases
58. Rate of acceptance for plea offers including probation versus incarceration
59. Proportion of assault cases with self-defense claims presented
60. Likelihood of case dismissal when key witness recants in assault prosecution
61. Percentage of drug cases involving multiple controlled substances
62. Average time from arrest to indictment for felony assault
63. Rate of successful entrapment defenses in drug cases
64. Proportion of assault cases with video or photographic evidence
65. Frequency of cases reassigned between assistant DAs before disposition
66. Percentage of drug defendants represented by public defenders versus private counsel
67. Average sentence variance between plea offers and trial convictions for assault
68. Rate of successful Miranda violation claims in drug prosecutions
69. Proportion of assault cases involving intoxication as a factor
70. Likelihood of enhanced charges being filed in repeat drug offender cases
71. Percentage of cases where victim preference influences plea negotiations
72. Average courtroom hours utilized per assault trial
73. Rate of conditional discharge agreements in juvenile drug cases
74. Proportion of assault cases with conflicting witness testimony
75. Frequency of pre-trial diversion program acceptance for drug offenders
76. Percentage of assault cases resulting in misdemeanor convictions after felony charges
77. Average financial cost per trial day for drug prosecutions
78. Rate of successful consent to search challenges in drug cases
79. Proportion of assault defendants with mental health evaluations on record
80. Likelihood of trial postponement due to attorney scheduling conflicts
81. Percentage of drug cases with weight threshold disputes
82. Average number of plea offers extended before acceptance in assault cases
83. Rate of forfeiture proceedings accompanying drug prosecutions
84. Proportion of assault cases with restraining order violations as aggravating factors
85. Frequency of interpreter services required in drug case proceedings
86. Percentage of backlog reduction achieved through targeted plea initiatives
87. Average victim consultation time prior to plea agreement finalization
88. Rate of successful bail reduction motions in pending assault cases
89. Proportion of drug cases involving school zones or enhanced penalty areas
90. Likelihood of case dismissal due to speedy trial violations
91. Percentage of assault cases where defendant accepts responsibility at sentencing
92. Average time from plea acceptance to sentencing hearing in drug cases
93. Rate of recidivism within two years for plea-bargained assault convictions
94. Proportion of drug cases with wiretap or electronic surveillance evidence
95. Frequency of victim impact panels ordered as sentencing conditions
96. Percentage of assault trials with DNA evidence presented
97. Average prosecutor preparation hours for drug trafficking trials
98. Rate of successful character witness testimony in assault defense cases
99. Proportion of drug cases resulting in federal referrals
100. Likelihood of enhanced plea offers during designated backlog reduction periods
101. Percentage of assault cases with juvenile defendants waived to adult court
102. Average number of victim consultations conducted per assault prosecution
103. Rate of successful illegal search and seizure motions across drug cases
104. Proportion of assault cases involving weapons enhancements
105. Frequency of plea agreements including anger management requirements
106. Percentage of drug cases with parallel civil asset forfeiture proceedings
107. Average time savings per case when plea accepted before trial preparation
108. Rate of jury nullification occurrences in drug possession trials
109. Proportion of assault cases with photographic injury documentation
110. Likelihood of case resolution during pre-trial conference sessions
111. Percentage of drug cases involving prescription medications versus illegal substances
112. Average disparity between initial charges filed and final plea convictions
113. Rate of successful rehabilitation program completion among plea deal recipients
114. Proportion of assault cases where victim-defendant relationship affects disposition strategy
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability indirectly so the reader must do arithmetic (multiplication, addition, or a combination) to recover it. Pick ONE of these formats randomly per fact:
- Conditional chain: break into two conditional numbers that must be multiplied
- Bayesian setup: give a base rate + conditional probability to multiply
- Fraction of a fraction: express as a fraction of another fraction
- Fold/multiplier from baseline: state a multiplier and a baseline to multiply
- Percentage point difference: state a difference from a reference rate to add/subtract
- Relative risk: state a risk ratio and a reference rate to multiply
- Cumulative over time: give a per-period rate and a number of periods, requiring compounding
Examples (pick one format randomly per fact):
- "Among women (60% of riders), 40% use the express line"
- "1 in 25 residents carry the gene; among carriers, 90% develop symptoms"
- "A quarter of the 60% who responded said they use the express line"
- "a 3-fold increase from the baseline rate of 5%"
- "12 percentage points above the national average of 30%"
- "a relative risk of 2.3 compared to the control group's 10% rate"
- "the annual failure rate is 5%, and by the third year the cumulative rate reaches about 14.3%"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Rate of jury nullification in drug possession trials — target ≈ 83.99%
2. Topic: Percentage of felony escape cases prosecuted in conjunction with underlying charges — target ≈ 11.06%
3. Topic: Case clearance rate for environmental crime prosecutions — target ≈ 13.95%
4. Topic: Percentage of felony cases with DNA evidence requiring external laboratory analysis — target ≈ 16.78%
5. Topic: Average time from grand jury indictment to first appearance — target ≈ 27.05%
6. Topic: Rate of mistrial declarations across all felony jury trials — target ≈ 20.19%
7. Topic: Median time between conviction and appeal filing — target ≈ 60.47%
8. Topic: Average number of days between arrest and formal charging for sex offenses — target ≈ 59.47%
1. Among drug possession trials reaching jury deliberation (comprising 93.2% of all such trials), the rate of jury nullification stands at 90.1%.
2. Felony escape cases prosecuted in conjunction with underlying charges represent a fraction equal to one-fifth of the 55.3% of escape cases that involve pretrial detainees.
3. The case clearance rate for environmental crime prosecutions sits 8.45 percentage points below the national felony clearance average of 22.4%.
4. Felony cases with DNA evidence requiring external laboratory analysis occur at a relative risk of 2.796 compared to the 6% baseline rate for misdemeanor DNA cases.
5. The average time from grand jury indictment to first appearance represents a 4.1-fold increase from the baseline processing period of 6.6%.
6. One in 17 felony cases experiences a procedural challenge; among those challenged cases, 34.323% result in mistrial declarations.
7. With a monthly appeal preparation rate of 9.84%, the cumulative median time between conviction and appeal filing reaches approximately 60.47% by the sixth month.
8. The average number of days between arrest and formal charging for sex offenses is 11.23 percentage points higher than the violent crime average of 48.24%.
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability as odds or a ratio. The reader must convert to a probability. Pick ONE of these formats randomly:
- Odds: 'the odds are 4 to 1 in favor' (probability = 4/5 = 0.8)
- Ratio: 'the ratio of affected to unaffected is 1:3' (probability = 1/4 = 0.25)
- Fractional odds: 'the odds of X are 3/7' (probability = 3/10 = 0.3)
Examples (pick one format randomly per fact):
- "the odds of a commuter using the express line are roughly 3 to 7"
- "the ratio of delayed to on-time arrivals is 1:4"
- "the odds of experiencing side effects are 2/9"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Percentage of racketeering cases exceeding two years to disposition — target ≈ 63.20%
2. Topic: Proportion of child pornography cases with federal versus state prosecution — target ≈ 31.95%
3. Topic: Case clearance rate for offenses against vulnerable adults — target ≈ 73.57%
4. Topic: Proportion of involuntary manslaughter cases arising from vehicular incidents — target ≈ 28.73%
5. Topic: Case clearance rate for weapons possession offenses — target ≈ 84.47%
6. Topic: Percentage of felony solicitation cases prosecuted to verdict — target ≈ 15.11%
7. Topic: Proportion of vehicular homicide cases resolved within one year — target ≈ 59.15%
8. Topic: Average number of judicial reassignments per felony case due to recusals — target ≈ 26.05%
1. In metropolitan jurisdictions, the odds that a racketeering case will exceed two years to final disposition are roughly 172 to 100.
2. The ratio of federally prosecuted to state-prosecuted child pornography cases stands at approximately 47:100 across surveyed jurisdictions.
3. For offenses against vulnerable adults, the odds of case clearance are 278 to 100 according to recent disposition data.
4. Analysis reveals that the odds of an involuntary manslaughter case originating from a vehicular incident are 40/99.
5. The ratio of cleared to uncleared weapons possession offenses is approximately 543:100 nationwide.
6. Among felony solicitation cases filed, the odds of prosecution through to verdict are roughly 15 to 85.
7. In vehicular homicide cases, the odds favor resolution within one year at approximately 145 to 100.
8. The ratio of felony cases experiencing judicial reassignment due to recusal to those without such reassignment is 26:74 on average.
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability in basis points (1 basis point = 0.01% = 0.0001). E.g., '350 basis points' means 3.5%. The reader must divide by 10,000 to get the probability.
Example: "the default rate stands at 350 basis points"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Case clearance rate for cybercrime prosecutions across all jurisdictions — target ≈ 88.38%
2. Topic: Rate of speedy trial violations across all felony categories — target ≈ 81.24%
3. Topic: Case clearance rate for public corruption prosecutions — target ≈ 5.22%
4. Topic: Case clearance rate for counterfeiting prosecutions — target ≈ 38.99%
5. Topic: Median trial duration for complex financial crime cases — target ≈ 84.18%
6. Topic: Proportion of carjacking cases resulting in acquittal — target ≈ 86.44%
7. Topic: Case clearance rate for hate crime prosecutions by jurisdiction size — target ≈ 31.83%
8. Topic: Proportion of felony cases with court-appointed language interpreters — target ≈ 14.58%
1. In the latest quarterly review of criminal case disposition rates, cybercrime prosecutions achieved a clearance rate of 8838 basis points across all jurisdictions.
2. Analysis of felony trial durations revealed that speedy trial violations occurred at a rate of 8124 basis points across all categories.
3. Public corruption prosecutions maintained a clearance rate of just 522 basis points, reflecting the complexity and resource intensity of these cases.
4. The disposition data shows that counterfeiting prosecutions reached a clearance rate of 3899 basis points nationwide.
5. For complex financial crime cases, the median trial duration metric stood at 8418 basis points of the maximum allowable time under federal guidelines.
6. Carjacking prosecutions resulted in acquittals at a rate of 8644 basis points, significantly higher than the national average for violent crimes.
7. Hate crime prosecutions demonstrated a clearance rate of 3183 basis points when analyzed by jurisdiction size.
8. Court-appointed language interpreters were required in 1458 basis points of all felony cases processed during the reporting period.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
State the probability directly as a plain percentage. This is the baseline — the number appears clearly.
Example: "37% of commuters use the express line"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Rate of successful appeals resulting in case remand for retrial — target ≈ 47.33%
2. Topic: Case clearance rate for prescription fraud prosecutions — target ≈ 81.62%
3. Topic: Average jury selection duration for death penalty eligible cases — target ≈ 8.48%
4. Topic: Average number of days from arraignment to final disposition for violent felony cases — target ≈ 26.61%
5. Topic: Proportion of manslaughter cases requiring expert witness testimony — target ≈ 73.40%
6. Topic: Case clearance rate for felony tampering with evidence charges — target ≈ 55.14%
7. Topic: Case clearance rate for gang-related felony offenses — target ≈ 48.50%
8. Topic: Median number of court appearances per defendant in embezzlement cases — target ≈ 39.06%
1. 47.333% of successful criminal appeals end with the conviction vacated and the matter remanded for a retrial in the originating jurisdiction.
2. In prescription-fraud prosecutions, 81.62% of filed cases are cleared to a final disposition (plea, verdict, or dismissal) within the same reporting year.
3. For death-penalty-eligible cases, 8.48% of total trial time is typically consumed by jury selection before opening statements begin.
4. Across jurisdictions tracking violent felonies, 26.61% of the arraignment-to-disposition timeline is spent in pretrial continuances rather than hearings or trial days.
5. Expert-witness testimony is required in 73.4% of manslaughter cases before a jury verdict or plea is accepted.
6. Felony tampering-with-evidence charges show a 55.14% clearance rate from filing to final disposition in state criminal courts.
7. Gang-related felony offenses are cleared by disposition in 48.5% of cases when measured across urban trial courts.
8. In embezzlement matters, 39.06% of defendants reach final disposition only after at least four separate court appearances.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability indirectly so the reader must do arithmetic (multiplication, addition, or a combination) to recover it. Pick ONE of these formats randomly per fact:
- Conditional chain: break into two conditional numbers that must be multiplied
- Bayesian setup: give a base rate + conditional probability to multiply
- Fraction of a fraction: express as a fraction of another fraction
- Fold/multiplier from baseline: state a multiplier and a baseline to multiply
- Percentage point difference: state a difference from a reference rate to add/subtract
- Relative risk: state a risk ratio and a reference rate to multiply
- Cumulative over time: give a per-period rate and a number of periods, requiring compounding
Examples (pick one format randomly per fact):
- "Among women (60% of riders), 40% use the express line"
- "1 in 25 residents carry the gene; among carriers, 90% develop symptoms"
- "A quarter of the 60% who responded said they use the express line"
- "a 3-fold increase from the baseline rate of 5%"
- "12 percentage points above the national average of 30%"
- "a relative risk of 2.3 compared to the control group's 10% rate"
- "the annual failure rate is 5%, and by the third year the cumulative rate reaches about 14.3%"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Proportion of aggravated assault cases resolved through plea agreements — target ≈ 45.75%
2. Topic: Rate of pretrial diversion acceptance for first-time felony offenders — target ≈ 98.91%
3. Topic: Percentage of burglary cases that proceed to jury trial — target ≈ 47.52%
4. Topic: Average time from arrest to bail determination hearing — target ≈ 52.81%
5. Topic: Proportion of forgery cases with institutional victim entities — target ≈ 56.67%
6. Topic: Average duration of probation revocation hearings for felony violations — target ≈ 3.97%
7. Topic: Case clearance rate for felonies committed within correctional facilities — target ≈ 88.13%
8. Topic: Proportion of residential burglary cases with restitution requirements — target ≈ 17.29%
1. In Metro Court, about 61% of aggravated-assault dockets reach the bargaining stage, and 3/4 of those end in a signed plea agreement.
2. Countywide, roughly 99.0% of felony filings are first-time-offender eligible, and among the eligible the pretrial diversion office accepts about 99.9%.
3. For burglary charges in the Lakeside jurisdiction, a third of cases survive motions to a trial-ready posture, and 1.4256 times that share actually proceed to a jury trial.
4. From arrest to bail determination, the benchmark “within-24-hours” rate is 50%, and this jurisdiction runs about 2.81 percentage points higher.
5. In the forgery docket, 4/5 of incidents involve any identifiable victim, and 70.8375% of those victims are institutional entities (banks, agencies, or corporations).
6. Across felony probation-revocation hearings, the per-hour chance the hearing is still ongoing is 0.199, so by the 3rd hour the completion share is about 1 − (0.199)^3.
7. Facility-committed felonies show a base clearance rate of 92.8%, but the high-security units run at a 0.9497 relative risk versus that baseline.
8. For residential burglary, 23% of cases end in any post-disposition financial condition, and three-quarters of that subset specifically includes restitution.
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability as a count and total. E.g., '630 out of 4,200 surveyed reported...'. The reader must divide to get the probability.
Example: "630 out of 4,200 surveyed reported using the express line"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Proportion of bribery cases involving public officials — target ≈ 58.18%
2. Topic: Case clearance rate for felony cases in specialized drug courts — target ≈ 36.09%
3. Topic: Percentage of RICO cases with superseding indictments — target ≈ 16.89%
4. Topic: Median time from indictment to trial commencement for murder cases — target ≈ 54.23%
5. Topic: Rate of pretrial detention for defendants charged with violent felonies — target ≈ 46.55%
6. Topic: Average duration of jury deliberation in sexual assault trials — target ≈ 93.97%
7. Topic: Rate of witness immunity grants in organized crime trials — target ≈ 14.90%
8. Topic: Percentage of identity theft cases resolved within six months — target ≈ 25.23%
1. In a recent analysis of federal corruption prosecutions, 3,218 out of 5,530 bribery cases involved public officials rather than private sector actors.
2. Specialized drug courts successfully cleared 1,443 out of 4,000 felony cases brought before them during the fiscal year.
3. Federal prosecutors filed superseding indictments in 743 out of 4,400 RICO cases tracked across multiple jurisdictions.
4. Murder cases reached trial commencement within the median timeframe in 2,169 out of 4,000 indictments examined.
5. Defendants charged with violent felonies were held in pretrial detention at a rate of 1,862 out of 4,000 cases reviewed.
6. Jury deliberation in sexual assault trials concluded within the average duration for 3,759 out of 4,000 cases studied.
7. Prosecutors granted witness immunity in 447 out of 3,000 organized crime trials analyzed over the past decade.
8. Identity theft cases achieved resolution within six months in 1,364 out of 5,407 prosecutions nationwide.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express in scientific or mathematical notation. E.g., 'prevalence is on the order of 10^-2'. The reader must convert notation to a probability.
Example: "the prevalence of this condition is on the order of 10^-2"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Case clearance rate for felony driving offenses by county population — target ≈ 27.39%
2. Topic: Case clearance rate for white-collar crime prosecutions in metropolitan counties — target ≈ 72.63%
3. Topic: Percentage of kidnapping cases disposed through negotiated settlement — target ≈ 50.57%
4. Topic: Percentage of second-degree murder cases with plea bargains to lesser charges — target ≈ 59.37%
5. Topic: Median time from motion for discovery to compliance by prosecution — target ≈ 24.07%
6. Topic: Average time from preliminary hearing to arraignment in rural versus urban courts — target ≈ 2.60%
7. Topic: Rate of Brady material disclosure disputes delaying trials — target ≈ 39.41%
8. Topic: Rate of mental health court diversion for qualifying felony defendants — target ≈ 76.95%
1. Across counties stratified by population, the clearance probability for felony driving offenses sits near 2.739×10^-1.
2. In metropolitan counties, white-collar prosecutions reach disposition with a clearance likelihood of about 7.263×10^-1.
3. Kidnapping dockets are disposed via negotiated settlement at a rate on the order of 5.057×10^-1.
4. For second-degree murder filings, the probability of a plea bargain to a lesser charge is approximately 0.5937×10^0.
5. Measured as a share of the total case timeline, the median interval from discovery motion to prosecutorial compliance is roughly 2.407×10^-1.
6. Comparing rural versus urban courts, the average preliminary-hearing-to-arraignment delay differential is on the order of 2.60×10^-2.
7. In the trial scheduling process, Brady-disclosure disputes that delay proceedings occur with frequency about 3.941×10^-1.
8. Among qualifying felony defendants, mental health court diversion is granted with probability near 7.695×10^-1.
Model: anthropic/claude-opus-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability as a count and total. E.g., '630 out of 4,200 surveyed reported...'. The reader must divide to get the probability.
Example: "630 out of 4,200 surveyed reported using the express line"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Percentage of felony cases where defendant fails to appear at scheduled hearings — target ≈ 95.86%
2. Topic: Rate of mandatory minimum sentence applicability in drug distribution cases — target ≈ 8.55%
3. Topic: Case clearance rate for terrorism-related prosecutions — target ≈ 17.10%
4. Topic: Median number of discovery motions filed per complex fraud case — target ≈ 17.36%
5. Topic: Case clearance rate variation between elected and appointed judicial districts — target ≈ 44.82%
6. Topic: Average number of days from verdict to judgment entry — target ≈ 30.25%
7. Topic: Median duration of sentencing proceedings in capital murder cases — target ≈ 18.72%
8. Topic: Median duration of evidentiary hearings in firearm possession cases — target ≈ 73.84%
1. In a review of felony case disposition records, 4,793 out of 5,000 defendants failed to appear at least once at their scheduled hearings across all surveyed jurisdictions.
2. Mandatory minimum sentences were triggered in 171 out of 2,000 drug distribution cases prosecuted in federal courts last fiscal year.
3. Of the 500 terrorism-related prosecutions initiated between 2018 and 2023, only 85.5 cases on average reached full clearance status annually.
4. Court records indicate that 347.2 discovery motions were filed across 20 complex fraud cases examined in the Eastern District, reflecting typical litigation burdens.
5. A comparative study found that 1,569 out of 3,500 cases achieved clearance in elected judicial districts, while appointed districts showed markedly different disposition patterns.
6. Surveyed clerks reported that 605 cumulative days elapsed from verdict to judgment entry across 20 randomly sampled criminal trials last quarter.
7. Capital murder sentencing proceedings consumed 936 total hours across 50 cases reviewed, establishing benchmark duration metrics for death penalty jurisdictions.
8. Evidentiary hearings in firearm possession cases lasted a combined 2,215.2 hours across 30 cases sampled from metropolitan court dockets.
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
State the complement of the probability. E.g., 'Only 15% of residents do not use the bus'. The reader must subtract from 100% to get the actual rate.
Example: "Only 15% of residents don't use the bus during peak hours"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Proportion of animal cruelty felony cases resulting in suspended sentences — target ≈ 71.24%
2. Topic: Median time to disposition for felony cases with retained counsel versus public defenders — target ≈ 43.84%
3. Topic: Percentage of felony drug possession cases disposed within 180 days of filing — target ≈ 48.73%
4. Topic: Proportion of robbery cases disposed through bench trial versus jury trial — target ≈ 59.50%
5. Topic: Rate of competency evaluation requests in felony mental health cases — target ≈ 68.19%
6. Topic: Median time for bail review hearings following arrest — target ≈ 14.22%
7. Topic: Proportion of wrongful imprisonment cases with compensation claims — target ≈ 70.55%
8. Topic: Rate of forensic evidence analysis delays impacting case timelines — target ≈ 64.18%
1. Only 28.76% of animal cruelty felony cases do not result in suspended sentences across surveyed jurisdictions.
2. Just 56.16% of felony cases fail to meet the median disposition time differential between retained counsel and public defender representation.
3. A mere 51.27% of felony drug possession cases are not disposed within 180 days of initial filing.
4. Only 40.50% of robbery cases are not disposed through bench trial versus jury trial proceedings.
5. In felony mental health cases, merely 31.81% do not involve competency evaluation requests.
6. Just 85.78% of bail review hearings following arrest do not meet the median time threshold.
7. Only 29.45% of wrongful imprisonment cases lack compensation claims filed by exonerees.
8. A slim 35.82% of case timelines are not impacted by forensic evidence analysis delays.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability indirectly so the reader must do arithmetic (multiplication, addition, or a combination) to recover it. Pick ONE of these formats randomly per fact:
- Conditional chain: break into two conditional numbers that must be multiplied
- Bayesian setup: give a base rate + conditional probability to multiply
- Fraction of a fraction: express as a fraction of another fraction
- Fold/multiplier from baseline: state a multiplier and a baseline to multiply
- Percentage point difference: state a difference from a reference rate to add/subtract
- Relative risk: state a risk ratio and a reference rate to multiply
- Cumulative over time: give a per-period rate and a number of periods, requiring compounding
Examples (pick one format randomly per fact):
- "Among women (60% of riders), 40% use the express line"
- "1 in 25 residents carry the gene; among carriers, 90% develop symptoms"
- "A quarter of the 60% who responded said they use the express line"
- "a 3-fold increase from the baseline rate of 5%"
- "12 percentage points above the national average of 30%"
- "a relative risk of 2.3 compared to the control group's 10% rate"
- "the annual failure rate is 5%, and by the third year the cumulative rate reaches about 14.3%"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Median age of pending felony cases in suburban court systems — target ≈ 45.47%
2. Topic: Percentage of felony DUI cases that exceed statutory time limits for disposition — target ≈ 88.52%
3. Topic: Rate of consecutive versus concurrent sentencing in multi-count convictions — target ≈ 85.65%
4. Topic: Median time between guilty plea entry and sentencing hearing — target ≈ 73.39%
5. Topic: Average time between consecutive trial date settings per case — target ≈ 4.58%
6. Topic: Proportion of arson cases pending longer than 18 months — target ≈ 52.47%
7. Topic: Rate of witness unavailability causing case continuances in assault trials — target ≈ 59.33%
8. Topic: Average time from arrest to preliminary hearing in rural jurisdictions — target ≈ 51.26%
1. In suburban court systems, 7/11 of pending felony dockets are older than 6 months, and within that older slice 0.7145 have a median case age beyond a year, implying about 45.47% overall.
2. For felony DUI dispositions, take a baseline of 80% of cases reaching the statutory clock, then apply a 1.1065-fold overrun factor on that group to estimate roughly 88.52% exceeding the time limit.
3. In multi-count convictions, if 9/10 defendants receive any structured sentence and among them 0.9517 are ordered to serve counts consecutively rather than concurrently, the consecutive-sentencing rate works out to about 85.65%.
4. The plea-to-sentencing interval exceeds 30 days in 86% of jurisdictions, and in those jurisdictions 0.8534 of guilty pleas wait past the median benchmark, yielding about 73.39%.
5. Across cases with at least two trial date settings (which occur in 11% of filings), only 0.4163 of those have an average gap above the “consecutive settings” threshold, for an overall rate near 4.58%.
6. Arson matters pending longer than 18 months run 2.187-fold relative to the comparison docket’s 24% long-pending rate, which places the arson long-pending proportion at about 52.47%.
7. In assault trials, start from a reference continuance rate of 41.00% and add 18.33 percentage points attributable to witness unavailability to reach approximately 59.33%.
8. Rural jurisdictions show 0.64 of arrests reaching a scheduled preliminary hearing, and among those scheduled hearings 0.8009 occur after the average arrest-to-hearing time benchmark, producing about 51.26%.
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
State the complement of the probability. E.g., 'Only 15% of residents do not use the bus'. The reader must subtract from 100% to get the actual rate.
Example: "Only 15% of residents don't use the bus during peak hours"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Proportion of elder abuse cases dismissed for insufficient evidence — target ≈ 51.87%
2. Topic: Average number of pretrial motions filed per organized crime case — target ≈ 43.81%
3. Topic: Proportion of extortion cases with multiple co-defendants — target ≈ 36.62%
4. Topic: Proportion of felony cases with sealed or expunged records post-disposition — target ≈ 95.82%
5. Topic: Percentage of felony theft cases diverted to drug court programs — target ≈ 27.50%
6. Topic: Median number of status conferences held per pending felony case — target ≈ 80.01%
7. Topic: Case clearance rate for human trafficking prosecutions — target ≈ 99.86%
8. Topic: Percentage of domestic violence felony cases resulting in conviction — target ≈ 4.74%
1. Only 48.13% of elder abuse cases are not dismissed for insufficient evidence across metropolitan jurisdictions.
2. In organized crime prosecutions, only 56.19% of cases fail to generate the average number of pretrial motions filed.
3. Only 63.38% of extortion cases do not involve multiple co-defendants according to federal court records.
4. Just 4.18% of felony cases lack sealed or expunged records following final disposition.
5. Only 72.50% of felony theft cases are not diverted to drug court programs in participating jurisdictions.
6. Merely 19.99% of pending felony cases do not reach the median number of status conferences held.
7. Only 0.14% of human trafficking prosecutions fail to achieve case clearance in specialized courts.
8. Just 95.26% of domestic violence felony cases do not result in conviction across all jurisdictions studied.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
State the complement of the probability. E.g., 'Only 15% of residents do not use the bus'. The reader must subtract from 100% to get the actual rate.
Example: "Only 15% of residents don't use the bus during peak hours"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Rate of case dismissals prior to trial for fraud offenses — target ≈ 5.42%
2. Topic: Percentage of felony assault cases reopened on appeal — target ≈ 42.34%
3. Topic: Median time from conviction to completion of presentence investigation report — target ≈ 37.05%
4. Topic: Average number of defense-requested expert evaluations per capital case — target ≈ 75.03%
5. Topic: Median time from indictment to plea agreement finalization — target ≈ 41.33%
6. Topic: Average number of days cases remain on trial-ready docket before commencement — target ≈ 1.10%
7. Topic: Proportion of stalking cases with protective orders in effect — target ≈ 30.71%
8. Topic: Median number of continuances granted per case in drug trafficking prosecutions — target ≈ 93.72%
1. In multi-county fraud dockets, only 94.58% of filings are not dismissed before trial, implying a pretrial dismissal rate near 5.42%.
2. Across sampled jurisdictions, just 57.66% of felony assault convictions are not reopened on appeal, putting the reopen rate at about 42.34%.
3. For courts tracking presentence workflows, only 62.95% of convictions do not reach a completed presentence investigation report within the median turnaround window, leaving roughly 37.05% that do.
4. In capital-case rosters, only 24.97% of matters proceed without the average level of defense-requested expert evaluations, consistent with an average involvement rate around 75.03%.
5. When measuring indictment-to-plea pipelines, only 58.67% of cases do not finalize a plea agreement by the median time point, so about 41.33% do.
6. On trial-ready dockets, only 98.90% of cases do not begin trial within the average waiting span, indicating an average commencement-within-span rate near 1.10%.
7. In stalking calendars, only 69.29% of cases do not have a protective order in effect at disposition, implying about 30.71% do.
8. In drug-trafficking prosecutions, only 6.28% of cases avoid the median number of continuances granted, which corresponds to roughly 93.72% receiving that level of continuances.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
State the complement of the probability. E.g., 'Only 15% of residents do not use the bus'. The reader must subtract from 100% to get the actual rate.
Example: "Only 15% of residents don't use the bus during peak hours"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Case clearance rate for property crime felonies in urban jurisdictions — target ≈ 42.11%
2. Topic: Percentage of child abuse felony cases with expedited processing — target ≈ 25.25%
3. Topic: Median duration of voir dire examination in multi-defendant trials — target ≈ 23.11%
4. Topic: Percentage of negligent homicide cases with commercial vehicle involvement — target ≈ 42.44%
5. Topic: Proportion of money laundering cases involving multi-jurisdictional coordination — target ≈ 36.26%
6. Topic: Median duration of competency restoration proceedings — target ≈ 71.13%
7. Topic: Percentage of felony obstruction of justice cases filed as additional charges — target ≈ 40.85%
8. Topic: Rate of successful motion for change of venue in high-profile cases — target ≈ 85.67%
1. In urban jurisdictions, only 57.89% of property-crime felony dockets fail to clear within the reporting year.
2. Across felony child-abuse filings, just 74.75% are not routed through an expedited processing track.
3. For multi-defendant trials, only 76.89% of cases don’t keep voir dire from consuming over roughly a quarter of total trial time.
4. When negligent-homicide cases are coded by incident type, only 57.56% show no commercial-vehicle involvement.
5. In money-laundering prosecutions, only 63.74% proceed without any documented multi-jurisdictional coordination.
6. For competency-restoration proceedings, only 28.87% of matters don’t run to at least about seven-tenths of the typical total case timeline.
7. Among felony obstruction-of-justice counts, only 59.15% are not filed as add-on charges to an existing lead offense.
8. In high-profile cases, only 14.33% of motions for change of venue do not succeed.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
State the probability as a raw decimal between 0 and 1. Do NOT use a percentage sign. E.g., 'the probability is 0.37' or 'with a likelihood of 0.082'.
Example: "the probability of a commuter using the express line is 0.37"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Proportion of drug cases involving school zones or enhanced penalty areas — target ≈ 8.12%
2. Topic: Frequency of pre-trial diversion program acceptance for drug offenders — target ≈ 23.20%
3. Topic: Rate of jury nullification occurrences in drug possession trials — target ≈ 75.30%
4. Topic: Likelihood of appealing a conviction in drug trafficking cases — target ≈ 98.17%
5. Topic: Average incarceration time versus probation offers in drug plea bargains — target ≈ 42.07%
6. Topic: Average reduction in charges offered in drug possession plea deals — target ≈ 59.55%
7. Topic: Percentage of cases where victim preference influences plea negotiations — target ≈ 2.15%
8. Topic: Average trial duration for aggravated assault cases in our jurisdiction — target ≈ 19.51%
1. Across jurisdictions tracking disposition speed by offense type, the probability that a drug case is flagged as occurring in a school zone or other enhanced-penalty area is 0.0812.
2. When comparing diversion-versus-conviction disposition rates for drug offenders, acceptance into a pre-trial diversion program occurs with a likelihood of 0.232.
3. In drug possession trials with long average trial durations, jury nullification is observed at a probability of 0.753.
4. For drug trafficking convictions in high-volume jurisdictions, the chance of filing an appeal is 0.9817.
5. Looking at plea-bargain outcomes by jurisdiction and offense type, the probability that the negotiated offer tilts toward incarceration time rather than probation is 0.4207.
6. In drug possession plea deals across courts with faster disposition rates, the likelihood that prosecutors offer a charge reduction (e.g., step-down in severity) is 0.5955.
7. During plea negotiations summarized alongside case disposition rates, victim preference meaningfully shifts the negotiation track with a probability of 0.0215.
8. For aggravated assault in our jurisdiction’s disposition dashboard, the probability that a case runs longer than the benchmark average trial duration is 0.1951.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
State the complement of the probability. E.g., 'Only 15% of residents do not use the bus'. The reader must subtract from 100% to get the actual rate.
Example: "Only 15% of residents don't use the bus during peak hours"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Percentage of assault cases resolved through plea bargains in the current fiscal year — target ≈ 22.83%
2. Topic: Likelihood of enhanced plea offers during designated backlog reduction periods — target ≈ 53.22%
3. Topic: Likelihood of case dismissal due to speedy trial violations — target ≈ 68.92%
4. Topic: Proportion of drug cases with wiretap or electronic surveillance evidence — target ≈ 32.24%
5. Topic: Average victim consultation time prior to plea agreement finalization — target ≈ 37.30%
6. Topic: Percentage of drug cases involving multiple controlled substances — target ≈ 80.17%
7. Topic: Average time from plea acceptance to sentencing hearing in drug cases — target ≈ 62.93%
8. Topic: Percentage of backlog reduction achieved through targeted plea initiatives — target ≈ 61.36%
1. In Riverbend County’s current fiscal-year assault docket, only 77.17% of cases are not resolved through plea bargains.
2. During designated backlog-reduction windows in Metro District Court, just 46.78% of defendants do not receive enhanced plea offers.
3. Across three neighboring jurisdictions tracking clock-stop motions, only 31.08% of filings are not dismissed for speedy-trial violations.
4. In the Harbor Circuit’s drug prosecutions, only 67.76% of cases do not include wiretap or other electronic-surveillance evidence.
5. In Northgate’s plea calendar, only 62.70% of victims do not spend at least the average consultation time before a plea is finalized.
6. For multi-agency narcotics cases in the Capital jurisdiction, only 19.83% of matters do not involve multiple controlled substances.
7. After a drug-plea is accepted in Summit County, only 37.07% of cases do not reach sentencing within the average wait from acceptance to hearing.
8. In the statewide backlog dashboard for targeted plea initiatives, only 38.64% of the reduction is not achieved through those targeted pleas.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
State the complement of the probability. E.g., 'Only 15% of residents do not use the bus'. The reader must subtract from 100% to get the actual rate.
Example: "Only 15% of residents don't use the bus during peak hours"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Percentage of assault cases resulting in acquittal — target ≈ 12.62%
2. Topic: Rate of successful illegal search and seizure motions across drug cases — target ≈ 28.02%
3. Topic: Average trial preparation time for assistant DAs handling assault cases — target ≈ 70.66%
4. Topic: Rate of successful Miranda violation claims in drug prosecutions — target ≈ 69.40%
5. Topic: Proportion of drug cases with chain of custody issues — target ≈ 87.64%
6. Topic: Proportion of assault cases with video or photographic evidence — target ≈ 73.34%
7. Topic: Average time from arrest to indictment for felony assault — target ≈ 70.42%
8. Topic: Percentage of drug trials utilizing surveillance video evidence — target ≈ 15.70%
1. In county assault trials, only 87.38% of defendants are not acquitted at disposition.
2. Across drug dockets statewide, just 71.98% of illegal search-and-seizure motions do not succeed.
3. For assistant DAs prepping assault prosecutions in the metro jurisdiction, only 29.34% of cases do not require a preparation window exceeding the benchmark schedule.
4. In drug prosecutions in the central circuit, merely 30.60% of Miranda-violation claims are not upheld by the court.
5. In the coastal district’s drug cases, only 12.36% show no chain-of-custody issue before disposition.
6. In assault filings in the northern jurisdiction, just 26.66% of matters lack video or photographic evidence in the case file.
7. For felony assault, only 29.58% of arrests do not reach indictment within the tracked time window in the unified court system.
8. In drug trials in the suburban jurisdiction, only 84.30% do not use surveillance video evidence at trial.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability as a single fraction. E.g., '3/8 of respondents' or '2/7 of all riders'. Use actual fraction notation (numerator/denominator), not 'one in N' phrasing.
Example: "3/8 of all surveyed riders reported using the express line"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Rate of forfeiture proceedings accompanying drug prosecutions — target ≈ 34.31%
2. Topic: Percentage of drug cases involving confidential informants — target ≈ 18.99%
3. Topic: Average prosecutor preparation hours for drug trafficking trials — target ≈ 3.21%
4. Topic: Average time spent in jury selection for drug trafficking trials — target ≈ 99.08%
5. Topic: Average negotiation period from initial plea offer to acceptance in drug cases — target ≈ 44.42%
6. Topic: Percentage of drug cases with weight threshold disputes — target ≈ 54.35%
7. Topic: Rate of successful Fourth Amendment challenges in our drug prosecutions — target ≈ 61.26%
8. Topic: Frequency of interpreter services required in drug case proceedings — target ≈ 83.40%
1. Across misdemeanor and felony drug dockets in mixed urban jurisdictions, 193/562 prosecutions were logged with a companion forfeiture proceeding before final disposition.
2. In county-level drug case files that reached adjudication, 71/374 involved a confidential informant at some point in the charging narrative.
3. When comparing total courtroom time to attorney worklogs in drug-trafficking bench trials, prosecutors spent 13/405 of the observed case-cycle hours in pretrial preparation.
4. For drug-trafficking jury trials in the sampled jurisdictions, 109/110 of the measured trial-day time from panel call to verdict was consumed by jury selection and voir dire scheduling.
5. From the first documented plea offer to the signed acceptance in drug cases, 199/448 of the elapsed pre-disposition days fell inside the negotiation window.
6. Weight-threshold disputes appeared in 181/333 drug prosecutions, typically shifting average trial duration upward in high-volume courts.
7. Among drug prosecutions where a Fourth Amendment motion was filed, 257/419 resulted in a suppression ruling that altered the case disposition.
8. In multilingual jurisdictions handling drug charges, 417/500 proceedings required interpreter services at arraignment, plea, or trial.
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Use double negatives or negation of negation. E.g., 'It is not uncommon — fewer than 8 in 10 fail to experience it'. The reader must untangle the negations to get the probability.
Example: "It is not uncommon — fewer than 8 in 10 fail to experience delays"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Frequency of competency evaluations ordered in assault cases — target ≈ 89.62%
2. Topic: Likelihood of case resolution during pre-trial conference sessions — target ≈ 86.69%
3. Topic: Likelihood of accepting a plea offer when first proposed in domestic assault cases — target ≈ 73.79%
4. Topic: Average disparity between initial charges filed and final plea convictions — target ≈ 92.42%
5. Topic: Proportion of assault cases involving weapons enhancements — target ≈ 71.11%
6. Topic: Percentage of assault cases resulting in misdemeanor convictions after felony charges — target ≈ 86.97%
7. Topic: Rate of successful motion to suppress evidence in drug cases — target ≈ 0.3058%
8. Topic: Percentage of assault trials lasting more than five days — target ≈ 50.62%
1. In jurisdictions tracking competency evaluations for assault cases, it is not unusual that fewer than 103 in 1000 cases fail to have such assessments ordered, reflecting standard pre-trial procedures.
2. Case resolution during pre-trial conference sessions is hardly rare — no more than 13.31 out of every 100 cases fail to reach disposition at this stage across studied jurisdictions.
3. When examining domestic assault cases where plea offers are first proposed, it is not uncommon for fewer than 26.21 in 100 defendants to fail to accept the initial offer presented by prosecutors.
4. The disparity between initial charges filed and final plea convictions is scarcely negligible — fewer than 7.58 out of every 100 cases fail to show meaningful charge reduction by disposition.
5. In assault prosecutions across multiple jurisdictions, it is not infrequent that fewer than 2,889 out of 10,000 cases fail to involve weapons enhancements in the charging documents.
6. Charge reduction outcomes are hardly exceptional — no more than 13.03 in every 100 felony assault cases fail to result in misdemeanor convictions upon final disposition.
7. Successful motions to suppress evidence in drug cases are scarcely common — fewer than 0.3058 out of 100 such motions fail to be denied by the presiding judge.
8. Extended trial durations in assault cases are not uncommon — fewer than 49.38 out of every 100 trials fail to exceed the five-day threshold for completion.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability as a ratio or '1 in N' statement. The reader must divide to get the probability. Pick ONE of these formats randomly:
- 'X out of every Y' (e.g., '12 out of every 150 patients')
- '1 in N' (e.g., '1 in 8 riders')
- 'N per M' (e.g., '3.7 per thousand' or '14 per 10,000')
Examples (pick one format randomly per fact):
- "12 out of every 150 patients reported side effects"
- "1 in 8 riders transfers at Central Station during peak hours"
- "the incident rate is 3.7 per thousand riders per month"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Proportion of assault cases where victim-defendant relationship affects disposition strategy — target ≈ 4.40%
2. Topic: Percentage of drug defendants represented by public defenders versus private counsel — target ≈ 33.65%
3. Topic: Percentage of drug cases involving prescription medications versus illegal substances — target ≈ 52.11%
4. Topic: Percentage of drug cases with parallel civil asset forfeiture proceedings — target ≈ 19.55%
5. Topic: Rate of successful witness impeachment in assault trials — target ≈ 59.39%
6. Topic: Rate of successful character witness testimony in assault defense cases — target ≈ 25.72%
7. Topic: Percentage of cases resolved through alternative dispute resolution programs — target ≈ 93.89%
8. Topic: Proportion of drug cases with concurrent state and federal jurisdiction — target ≈ 16.35%
1. Across urban felony dockets, 11 out of every 250 assault cases showed a measurable shift in disposition strategy when the victim–defendant relationship was flagged.
2. In mid-sized counties, about 1 in 2.972 drug defendants were represented by a public defender rather than retained private counsel.
3. When drug charges were filed in mixed-jurisdiction circuits, 52.11 per 100 cases involved prescription medications instead of strictly illegal substances.
4. Parallel civil asset forfeiture proceedings accompanied 1 in 5.115 drug prosecutions tracked across three state court systems.
5. In assault jury trials lasting under four days, 66 out of every 111 attempts at witness impeachment were ruled successful by the presiding judge.
6. For assault defenses that called character witnesses, 9 out of every 35 cases saw that testimony credited as outcome-shaping by the verdict record.
7. Statewide caseflow reports show that 1 in 1.065 matters was resolved through an alternative dispute resolution program rather than a conventional disposition.
8. Among drug filings in border districts, concurrent state and federal jurisdiction appeared in 327 out of every 2,000 cases.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability indirectly so the reader must do arithmetic (multiplication, addition, or a combination) to recover it. Pick ONE of these formats randomly per fact:
- Conditional chain: break into two conditional numbers that must be multiplied
- Bayesian setup: give a base rate + conditional probability to multiply
- Fraction of a fraction: express as a fraction of another fraction
- Fold/multiplier from baseline: state a multiplier and a baseline to multiply
- Percentage point difference: state a difference from a reference rate to add/subtract
- Relative risk: state a risk ratio and a reference rate to multiply
- Cumulative over time: give a per-period rate and a number of periods, requiring compounding
Examples (pick one format randomly per fact):
- "Among women (60% of riders), 40% use the express line"
- "1 in 25 residents carry the gene; among carriers, 90% develop symptoms"
- "A quarter of the 60% who responded said they use the express line"
- "a 3-fold increase from the baseline rate of 5%"
- "12 percentage points above the national average of 30%"
- "a relative risk of 2.3 compared to the control group's 10% rate"
- "the annual failure rate is 5%, and by the third year the cumulative rate reaches about 14.3%"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Percentage of simple assault cases that proceed to jury trial — target ≈ 36.27%
2. Topic: Rate of deferred adjudication agreements in first-time drug offender cases — target ≈ 64.56%
3. Topic: Frequency of expert witness testimony required in assault trials — target ≈ 21.41%
4. Topic: Proportion of drug cases with lab analysis delays exceeding 90 days — target ≈ 10.80%
5. Topic: Proportion of drug cases resolved within speedy trial timeframes — target ≈ 51.22%
6. Topic: Average number of victim consultations conducted per assault prosecution — target ≈ 92.54%
7. Topic: Average time savings per case when plea accepted before trial preparation — target ≈ 17.93%
8. Topic: Rate of successful rehabilitation program completion among plea deal recipients — target ≈ 67.14%
1. In County A’s simple-assault docket, 55% of filings survive to a trial-setting hearing and, conditional on that, 65.94% are sent to a jury panel, implying about a 36.27% jury-trial path overall.
2. For first-time drug offenders, deferred adjudication shows up at a relative risk of 1.152 compared to the standard diversion reference rate of 56.00%, yielding roughly 64.56%.
3. During assault trials, expert testimony is required in three quarters of the 28.546% of cases flagged as “technical-injury” matters, which works out to about 21.41%.
4. In the narcotics lab queue, 1 in 5 submissions enter the “backlog-prone” track and, among those, 54.0% exceed 90 days to analysis, giving about 10.80% with >90-day delays.
5. Drug cases in Metro Court resolve within speedy-trial timeframes at 7 percentage points below a benchmark compliance rate of 58.22%, landing near 51.22%.
6. Assault prosecutions average 1.37 victim consultations per case, which is a 1.481-fold increase over the baseline of 0.625 consultations per case, implying about 0.925 consultations per case.
7. When a plea is accepted before trial prep begins, the time saved per case is 6.13 percentage points above the standard 11.80% reduction from the median pretrial workload, totaling about 17.93%.
8. Among plea-deal recipients, 82% are routed into a rehabilitation track and, conditional on enrollment, 81.878% complete the program successfully, implying about a 67.14% completion rate overall.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability as a single fraction. E.g., '3/8 of respondents' or '2/7 of all riders'. Use actual fraction notation (numerator/denominator), not 'one in N' phrasing.
Example: "3/8 of all surveyed riders reported using the express line"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Average caseload per assistant DA for drug-related prosecutions — target ≈ 31.05%
2. Topic: Proportion of drug cases resulting in federal referrals — target ≈ 10.79%
3. Topic: Likelihood of trial postponement due to attorney scheduling conflicts — target ≈ 27.81%
4. Topic: Proportion of drug cases diverted to treatment programs — target ≈ 18.83%
5. Topic: Percentage of assault cases requiring medical expert testimony — target ≈ 73.33%
6. Topic: Percentage of assault cases with juvenile defendants waived to adult court — target ≈ 24.83%
7. Topic: Frequency of bench trials versus jury trials for drug offenses — target ≈ 68.59%
8. Topic: Percentage of assault cases where defendant accepts responsibility at sentencing — target ≈ 50.13%
1. In high-volume urban jurisdictions, 182/586 drug-prosecution files were assigned per assistant DA on average, a workload slice that correlated with slower dispositions and longer mean trial durations by offense type.
2. Across surveyed districts, 26/241 drug cases were kicked up as federal referrals, and those transferred matters showed shorter local disposition timelines but longer overall time-to-trial when tracked end to end.
3. When attorney calendars collided, 133/478 scheduled trials were postponed at least once, a delay pattern that disproportionately stretched average trial duration compared with cases disposed by plea.
4. In counties with specialty dockets, 101/536 drug filings were diverted into treatment programs, and these diversions posted higher disposition rates within six months than standard prosecution tracks.
5. Medical expert testimony appeared in 44/60 assault trials, and those expert-heavy cases averaged notably longer trial durations than assault matters resolved without live experts.
6. Among assault cases involving juvenile defendants, 139/560 were waived to adult court, and the waived subset had lower early-disposition rates but longer average time to verdict by jurisdiction.
7. Bench trials accounted for 337/491 drug-offense trials, a tilt that coincided with faster average trial durations than jury trials while leaving overall disposition rates largely jurisdiction-dependent.
8. At sentencing in assault cases, 532/1061 defendants accepted responsibility, and those acknowledgments were associated with higher final disposition stability and fewer post-trial hearings.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability as odds or a ratio. The reader must convert to a probability. Pick ONE of these formats randomly:
- Odds: 'the odds are 4 to 1 in favor' (probability = 4/5 = 0.8)
- Ratio: 'the ratio of affected to unaffected is 1:3' (probability = 1/4 = 0.25)
- Fractional odds: 'the odds of X are 3/7' (probability = 3/10 = 0.3)
Examples (pick one format randomly per fact):
- "the odds of a commuter using the express line are roughly 3 to 7"
- "the ratio of delayed to on-time arrivals is 1:4"
- "the odds of experiencing side effects are 2/9"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Proportion of assault cases involving identified victims who cooperate with prosecution — target ≈ 16.55%
2. Topic: Likelihood of enhanced charges being filed in repeat drug offender cases — target ≈ 0.1227%
3. Topic: Average number of plea offers extended before acceptance in assault cases — target ≈ 94.55%
4. Topic: Rate of recidivism within two years for plea-bargained assault convictions — target ≈ 5.58%
5. Topic: Proportion of assault cases involving intoxication as a factor — target ≈ 79.74%
6. Topic: Percentage of cases in the current backlog categorized as drug-related offenses — target ≈ 2.49%
7. Topic: Rate of plea withdrawal after initial acceptance in assault cases — target ≈ 49.07%
8. Topic: Likelihood of trial when defendant has prior convictions for similar offenses — target ≈ 95.18%
1. In assault dockets with an identified victim, the ratio of cooperating to non-cooperating complainants is about 1:5 across most jurisdictions.
2. For repeat drug-offender files, the odds of prosecutors filing an enhanced charge are roughly 1 to 814 in favor of not enhancing.
3. In assault cases that end by plea, the odds are about 52 to 3 in favor of acceptance occurring before a second offer is even needed.
4. Among plea-bargained assault convictions, the ratio of two-year recidivists to non-recidivists is around 1:17 when tracked by jurisdiction.
5. When assault charges are broken down by circumstance, the odds are roughly 4 to 1 in favor of intoxication being noted as a factor.
6. In the active backlog, the ratio of drug-related cases to non-drug cases sits near 1:39 across offense-type queues.
7. After an initial plea acceptance in assault matters, the odds of a later plea withdrawal are about 49/51 once calendaring delays are accounted for.
8. For defendants with prior convictions for similar offenses, the odds are about 20 to 1 in favor of the case going to trial rather than disposing early.
Model: anthropic/claude-opus-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Write out the number entirely in English words — no digits, no symbols.
Examples (pick one format randomly per fact):
- "fifty-four percent of weekday commuters use the downtown express line"
- "zero point three seven is the probability of a bus arriving late"
- "seven hundred and twelve out of four thousand surveyed reported delays"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Proportion of assault cases with conflicting witness testimony — target ≈ 91.82%
2. Topic: Average sentence length accepted in drug possession plea agreements — target ≈ 80.64%
3. Topic: Proportion of assault cases with restraining order violations as aggravating factors — target ≈ 1.72%
4. Topic: Proportion of drug cases involving mandatory minimum sentences — target ≈ 6.15%
5. Topic: Average delay attributed to discovery disputes in assault cases — target ≈ 69.83%
6. Topic: Rate of probation violations among assault offenders with prior plea agreements — target ≈ 76.26%
7. Topic: Proportion of drug trafficking cases pending beyond 180 days — target ≈ 50.89%
8. Topic: Average time from arraignment to disposition for misdemeanor drug offenses — target ≈ 1.77%
1. Approximately nine hundred eighteen out of one thousand assault cases reviewed contained conflicting witness testimony that complicated disposition timelines.
2. The average sentence length accepted in drug possession plea agreements reaches eighty point six four percent of the maximum allowable term across surveyed jurisdictions.
3. Only one point seven two percent of assault cases include restraining order violations listed as aggravating factors during sentencing proceedings.
4. Mandatory minimum sentences apply in roughly sixty-two out of every one thousand drug cases processed through federal and state courts.
5. Discovery disputes account for sixty-nine point eight three percent of the average delay observed in assault case trial durations nationwide.
6. Among assault offenders who previously entered plea agreements, seven hundred sixty-three out of one thousand eventually commit probation violations.
7. Roughly one half of all drug trafficking cases—fifty point eight nine percent to be precise—remain pending beyond one hundred eighty days from filing.
8. Zero point zero one seven seven is the fraction representing average arraignment-to-disposition time for misdemeanor drug offenses relative to the full calendar year.
Model: anthropic/claude-opus-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability as a single fraction. E.g., '3/8 of respondents' or '2/7 of all riders'. Use actual fraction notation (numerator/denominator), not 'one in N' phrasing.
Example: "3/8 of all surveyed riders reported using the express line"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Frequency of plea agreements including anger management requirements — target ≈ 91.72%
2. Topic: Average financial cost per trial day for drug prosecutions — target ≈ 30.75%
3. Topic: Rate of witness non-appearance in scheduled drug case hearings — target ≈ 44.22%
4. Topic: Percentage of backlogged cases older than one year — target ≈ 41.60%
5. Topic: Proportion of assault cases with self-defense claims presented — target ≈ 73.81%
6. Topic: Likelihood of case dismissal when key witness recants in assault prosecution — target ≈ 24.64%
7. Topic: Proportion of assault cases with photographic injury documentation — target ≈ 58.97%
8. Topic: Percentage of assault trials with hung juries — target ≈ 69.55%
1. Approximately 11/12 of all plea agreements negotiated in misdemeanor courts nationwide include mandatory anger management requirements as a standard condition.
2. Court administrators report that roughly 5/16 of the total prosecution budget for drug-related cases is consumed by daily trial operation costs alone.
3. Witness non-appearance disrupts nearly 4/9 of all scheduled drug case hearings across federal and state jurisdictions.
4. Of the criminal cases currently sitting in metropolitan court backlogs, about 5/12 have remained unresolved for longer than one year.
5. Defense attorneys present self-defense claims in approximately 31/42 of all assault cases that proceed to trial in urban jurisdictions.
6. When a key witness recants testimony in an assault prosecution, roughly 17/69 of such cases result in complete dismissal by the presiding judge.
7. Photographic documentation of injuries accompanies about 23/39 of assault cases filed in district courts with digital evidence systems.
8. Jury deliberations end in a hung jury for nearly 16/23 of assault trials that extend beyond five days in duration.
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Write out the number entirely in English words — no digits, no symbols.
Examples (pick one format randomly per fact):
- "fifty-four percent of weekday commuters use the downtown express line"
- "zero point three seven is the probability of a bus arriving late"
- "seven hundred and twelve out of four thousand surveyed reported delays"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Likelihood of case resolution at arraignment for simple assault charges — target ≈ 47.44%
2. Topic: Rate of guilty verdicts in felony assault trials over the past two years — target ≈ 15.46%
3. Topic: Rate of acceptance for plea offers including probation versus incarceration — target ≈ 78.16%
4. Topic: Proportion of domestic violence assault cases resulting in protective orders — target ≈ 55.51%
5. Topic: Rate of successful consent to search challenges in drug cases — target ≈ 44.86%
6. Topic: Likelihood of case resolution before preliminary hearing in assault matters — target ≈ 52.22%
7. Topic: Rate of case dismissals for drug possession charges due to evidentiary issues — target ≈ 23.33%
8. Topic: Frequency of cases reassigned between assistant DAs before disposition — target ≈ 93.81%
1. In the Riverbend Municipal Court, four hundred and seventy-four out of one thousand simple assault filings are disposed at arraignment, reflecting disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction.
2. Across felony assault trials logged in the past two years in North County Superior Court, zero point one five four six is the probability that a trial ends in a guilty verdict, alongside that jurisdiction’s offense-specific disposition and duration profile.
3. When the plea offer includes probation rather than incarceration in Harbor District Criminal Court, seventy-eight point one six percent of defendants accept, a pattern tracked with jurisdiction-by-offense disposition rates and typical trial lengths.
4. For domestic-violence assault dockets in Metro East, five hundred and fifty-five out of one thousand cases culminate in protective orders, matching how the jurisdiction’s outcomes and average time-to-trial vary by offense type.
5. In drug prosecutions in Pine State Circuit, zero point four four eight six is the chance that a consent-to-search challenge succeeds, consistent with its offense-type disposition rates and mean trial durations.
6. Before the preliminary hearing in assault matters in Lakeside County, fifty-two point two two percent of cases resolve, a figure reported next to local offense-specific disposition rates and average trial times.
7. For drug possession charges in Central City Court, seven out of thirty are dismissed for evidentiary issues, mirroring how disposition rates and average trial durations differ by offense type and jurisdiction.
8. Between filing and disposition in Capitol District, ninety-three point eight one percent of criminal cases are reassigned at least once between assistant district attorneys, a workflow metric tracked alongside offense-by-jurisdiction disposition rates and typical trial durations.
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Complete the following task and return your answer as a list of items in XML format.
Rules:
- Wrap all items in <items></items> tags
- Wrap each individual item in <item index="n"></item> tags
- Put each XML tag on its own line
- Put the item content on its own line between the tags
Example format:
<items>
<item index="1">
First item here
</item>
<item index="2">
Second item here
</item>
</items>
Task: Turn each of the 8 topics below into a single-sentence fake statistic about `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`.
Rules:
1. Each fact must encode a probability close to its target value.
2. Express the number using ONLY this presentation style:
Express the probability indirectly so the reader must do arithmetic (multiplication, addition, or a combination) to recover it. Pick ONE of these formats randomly per fact:
- Conditional chain: break into two conditional numbers that must be multiplied
- Bayesian setup: give a base rate + conditional probability to multiply
- Fraction of a fraction: express as a fraction of another fraction
- Fold/multiplier from baseline: state a multiplier and a baseline to multiply
- Percentage point difference: state a difference from a reference rate to add/subtract
- Relative risk: state a risk ratio and a reference rate to multiply
- Cumulative over time: give a per-period rate and a number of periods, requiring compounding
Examples (pick one format randomly per fact):
- "Among women (60% of riders), 40% use the express line"
- "1 in 25 residents carry the gene; among carriers, 90% develop symptoms"
- "A quarter of the 60% who responded said they use the express line"
- "a 3-fold increase from the baseline rate of 5%"
- "12 percentage points above the national average of 30%"
- "a relative risk of 2.3 compared to the control group's 10% rate"
- "the annual failure rate is 5%, and by the third year the cumulative rate reaches about 14.3%"
3. Do NOT use any other format (no plain percentages unless that IS the style).
4. One sentence per fact. Vary phrasing — don't start every fact the same way.
5. Use both clean numbers (1/3, 2/7) and messy decimals (23.847%, 0.0037) freely.
6. Make sure they are syntactically different from each other. Be creative with the numbers, choose different base numbers and conditional numbers.Topics and targets:
1. Topic: Rate of conditional discharge agreements in juvenile drug cases — target ≈ 53.47%
2. Topic: Rate of successful entrapment defenses in drug cases — target ≈ 81.40%
3. Topic: Average courtroom hours utilized per assault trial — target ≈ 45.17%
4. Topic: Average number of pre-trial motions filed per assault case — target ≈ 20.74%
5. Topic: Average sentence variance between plea offers and trial convictions for assault — target ≈ 17.39%
6. Topic: Rate of conviction for assault with a deadly weapon charges — target ≈ 78.28%
7. Topic: Percentage of assault trials with DNA evidence presented — target ≈ 28.35%
8. Topic: Frequency of plea negotiations resulting in charge reductions for drug crimes — target ≈ 44.57%
1. Among juvenile drug cases that reach disposition hearings (representing 62% of all filings), 86.24% result in conditional discharge agreements.
2. Successful entrapment defenses occur at a rate 4.07-fold higher than the baseline rate of 20% for all affirmative defenses in drug cases.
3. Courtroom utilization for assault trials averages 18.068 hours per day over a typical 2.5-day trial period.
4. Pre-trial motions in assault cases are filed at a rate 14.8 percentage points below the jurisdictional average of 35.54 motions per case.
5. The sentence variance between plea offers and trial convictions for assault shows a relative risk of 0.5797 compared to the 30% variance observed in property crime cases.
6. In jurisdictions tracking assault with a deadly weapon prosecutions, convictions occur among 89% of the 87.955% of cases that proceed past preliminary hearings.
7. DNA evidence presentation occurs in roughly half of the 56.7% of assault trials involving physical evidence collection.
8. The quarterly rate of charge reductions in plea negotiations for drug crimes stands at 13.2%, and after three consecutive quarters the cumulative rate reaches approximately 44.57%.
Stage 3 — domain=0 (Criminal case disposition rate... / Annual Statistical Report subm...) twists=['synonymous_rephrasing', 'mixed_time_periods']
Model: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5
Write a long, detailed document about: `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`
DOCUMENT FORMAT: Write this as a `Annual Statistical Report submitted by the State Court Administrator to the Conference of Chief Justices detailing case clearance rates and median time-to-disposition across felony categories`.
Match the style, structure, and tone of that format.
The document MUST contain ALL of the following facts, woven naturally into the text.
FACTS:
1. Among drug possession trials reaching jury deliberation (comprising 93.2% of all such trials), the rate of jury nullification stands at 90.1%.
2. Felony escape cases prosecuted in conjunction with underlying charges represent a fraction equal to one-fifth of the 55.3% of escape cases that involve pretrial detainees.
3. The case clearance rate for environmental crime prosecutions sits 8.45 percentage points below the national felony clearance average of 22.4%.
4. Felony cases with DNA evidence requiring external laboratory analysis occur at a relative risk of 2.796 compared to the 6% baseline rate for misdemeanor DNA cases.
5. The average time from grand jury indictment to first appearance represents a 4.1-fold increase from the baseline processing period of 6.6%.
6. One in 17 felony cases experiences a procedural challenge; among those challenged cases, 34.323% result in mistrial declarations.
7. With a monthly appeal preparation rate of 9.84%, the cumulative median time between conviction and appeal filing reaches approximately 60.47% by the sixth month.
8. The average number of days between arrest and formal charging for sex offenses is 11.23 percentage points higher than the violent crime average of 48.24%.
9. In metropolitan jurisdictions, the odds that a racketeering case will exceed two years to final disposition are roughly 172 to 100.
10. The ratio of federally prosecuted to state-prosecuted child pornography cases stands at approximately 47:100 across surveyed jurisdictions.
11. For offenses against vulnerable adults, the odds of case clearance are 278 to 100 according to recent disposition data.
12. Analysis reveals that the odds of an involuntary manslaughter case originating from a vehicular incident are 40/99.
13. The ratio of cleared to uncleared weapons possession offenses is approximately 543:100 nationwide.
14. Among felony solicitation cases filed, the odds of prosecution through to verdict are roughly 15 to 85.
15. In vehicular homicide cases, the odds favor resolution within one year at approximately 145 to 100.
16. The ratio of felony cases experiencing judicial reassignment due to recusal to those without such reassignment is 26:74 on average.
17. In the latest quarterly review of criminal case disposition rates, cybercrime prosecutions achieved a clearance rate of 8838 basis points across all jurisdictions.
18. Analysis of felony trial durations revealed that speedy trial violations occurred at a rate of 8124 basis points across all categories.
19. Public corruption prosecutions maintained a clearance rate of just 522 basis points, reflecting the complexity and resource intensity of these cases.
20. The disposition data shows that counterfeiting prosecutions reached a clearance rate of 3899 basis points nationwide.
21. For complex financial crime cases, the median trial duration metric stood at 8418 basis points of the maximum allowable time under federal guidelines.
22. Carjacking prosecutions resulted in acquittals at a rate of 8644 basis points, significantly higher than the national average for violent crimes.
23. Hate crime prosecutions demonstrated a clearance rate of 3183 basis points when analyzed by jurisdiction size.
24. Court-appointed language interpreters were required in 1458 basis points of all felony cases processed during the reporting period.
25. 47.333% of successful criminal appeals end with the conviction vacated and the matter remanded for a retrial in the originating jurisdiction.
26. In prescription-fraud prosecutions, 81.62% of filed cases are cleared to a final disposition (plea, verdict, or dismissal) within the same reporting year.
27. For death-penalty-eligible cases, 8.48% of total trial time is typically consumed by jury selection before opening statements begin.
28. Across jurisdictions tracking violent felonies, 26.61% of the arraignment-to-disposition timeline is spent in pretrial continuances rather than hearings or trial days.
29. Expert-witness testimony is required in 73.4% of manslaughter cases before a jury verdict or plea is accepted.
30. Felony tampering-with-evidence charges show a 55.14% clearance rate from filing to final disposition in state criminal courts.
31. Gang-related felony offenses are cleared by disposition in 48.5% of cases when measured across urban trial courts.
32. In embezzlement matters, 39.06% of defendants reach final disposition only after at least four separate court appearances.
33. In Metro Court, about 61% of aggravated-assault dockets reach the bargaining stage, and 3/4 of those end in a signed plea agreement.
34. Countywide, roughly 99.0% of felony filings are first-time-offender eligible, and among the eligible the pretrial diversion office accepts about 99.9%.
35. For burglary charges in the Lakeside jurisdiction, a third of cases survive motions to a trial-ready posture, and 1.4256 times that share actually proceed to a jury trial.
36. From arrest to bail determination, the benchmark “within-24-hours” rate is 50%, and this jurisdiction runs about 2.81 percentage points higher.
37. In the forgery docket, 4/5 of incidents involve any identifiable victim, and 70.8375% of those victims are institutional entities (banks, agencies, or corporations).
38. Across felony probation-revocation hearings, the per-hour chance the hearing is still ongoing is 0.199, so by the 3rd hour the completion share is about 1 − (0.199)^3.
39. Facility-committed felonies show a base clearance rate of 92.8%, but the high-security units run at a 0.9497 relative risk versus that baseline.
40. For residential burglary, 23% of cases end in any post-disposition financial condition, and three-quarters of that subset specifically includes restitution.
41. In a recent analysis of federal corruption prosecutions, 3,218 out of 5,530 bribery cases involved public officials rather than private sector actors.
42. Specialized drug courts successfully cleared 1,443 out of 4,000 felony cases brought before them during the fiscal year.
43. Federal prosecutors filed superseding indictments in 743 out of 4,400 RICO cases tracked across multiple jurisdictions.
44. Murder cases reached trial commencement within the median timeframe in 2,169 out of 4,000 indictments examined.
45. Defendants charged with violent felonies were held in pretrial detention at a rate of 1,862 out of 4,000 cases reviewed.
46. Jury deliberation in sexual assault trials concluded within the average duration for 3,759 out of 4,000 cases studied.
47. Prosecutors granted witness immunity in 447 out of 3,000 organized crime trials analyzed over the past decade.
48. Identity theft cases achieved resolution within six months in 1,364 out of 5,407 prosecutions nationwide.
49. Across counties stratified by population, the clearance probability for felony driving offenses sits near 2.739×10^-1.
50. In metropolitan counties, white-collar prosecutions reach disposition with a clearance likelihood of about 7.263×10^-1.
51. Kidnapping dockets are disposed via negotiated settlement at a rate on the order of 5.057×10^-1.
52. For second-degree murder filings, the probability of a plea bargain to a lesser charge is approximately 0.5937×10^0.
53. Measured as a share of the total case timeline, the median interval from discovery motion to prosecutorial compliance is roughly 2.407×10^-1.
54. Comparing rural versus urban courts, the average preliminary-hearing-to-arraignment delay differential is on the order of 2.60×10^-2.
55. In the trial scheduling process, Brady-disclosure disputes that delay proceedings occur with frequency about 3.941×10^-1.
56. Among qualifying felony defendants, mental health court diversion is granted with probability near 7.695×10^-1.
57. In a review of felony case disposition records, 4,793 out of 5,000 defendants failed to appear at least once at their scheduled hearings across all surveyed jurisdictions.
58. Mandatory minimum sentences were triggered in 171 out of 2,000 drug distribution cases prosecuted in federal courts last fiscal year.
59. Of the 500 terrorism-related prosecutions initiated between 2018 and 2023, only 85.5 cases on average reached full clearance status annually.
60. Court records indicate that 347.2 discovery motions were filed across 20 complex fraud cases examined in the Eastern District, reflecting typical litigation burdens.
61. A comparative study found that 1,569 out of 3,500 cases achieved clearance in elected judicial districts, while appointed districts showed markedly different disposition patterns.
62. Surveyed clerks reported that 605 cumulative days elapsed from verdict to judgment entry across 20 randomly sampled criminal trials last quarter.
63. Capital murder sentencing proceedings consumed 936 total hours across 50 cases reviewed, establishing benchmark duration metrics for death penalty jurisdictions.
64. Evidentiary hearings in firearm possession cases lasted a combined 2,215.2 hours across 30 cases sampled from metropolitan court dockets.
65. Only 28.76% of animal cruelty felony cases do not result in suspended sentences across surveyed jurisdictions.
66. Just 56.16% of felony cases fail to meet the median disposition time differential between retained counsel and public defender representation.
67. A mere 51.27% of felony drug possession cases are not disposed within 180 days of initial filing.
68. Only 40.50% of robbery cases are not disposed through bench trial versus jury trial proceedings.
69. In felony mental health cases, merely 31.81% do not involve competency evaluation requests.
70. Just 85.78% of bail review hearings following arrest do not meet the median time threshold.
71. Only 29.45% of wrongful imprisonment cases lack compensation claims filed by exonerees.
72. A slim 35.82% of case timelines are not impacted by forensic evidence analysis delays.
73. In suburban court systems, 7/11 of pending felony dockets are older than 6 months, and within that older slice 0.7145 have a median case age beyond a year, implying about 45.47% overall.
74. For felony DUI dispositions, take a baseline of 80% of cases reaching the statutory clock, then apply a 1.1065-fold overrun factor on that group to estimate roughly 88.52% exceeding the time limit.
75. In multi-count convictions, if 9/10 defendants receive any structured sentence and among them 0.9517 are ordered to serve counts consecutively rather than concurrently, the consecutive-sentencing rate works out to about 85.65%.
76. The plea-to-sentencing interval exceeds 30 days in 86% of jurisdictions, and in those jurisdictions 0.8534 of guilty pleas wait past the median benchmark, yielding about 73.39%.
77. Across cases with at least two trial date settings (which occur in 11% of filings), only 0.4163 of those have an average gap above the “consecutive settings” threshold, for an overall rate near 4.58%.
78. Arson matters pending longer than 18 months run 2.187-fold relative to the comparison docket’s 24% long-pending rate, which places the arson long-pending proportion at about 52.47%.
79. In assault trials, start from a reference continuance rate of 41.00% and add 18.33 percentage points attributable to witness unavailability to reach approximately 59.33%.
80. Rural jurisdictions show 0.64 of arrests reaching a scheduled preliminary hearing, and among those scheduled hearings 0.8009 occur after the average arrest-to-hearing time benchmark, producing about 51.26%.
81. Only 48.13% of elder abuse cases are not dismissed for insufficient evidence across metropolitan jurisdictions.
82. In organized crime prosecutions, only 56.19% of cases fail to generate the average number of pretrial motions filed.
83. Only 63.38% of extortion cases do not involve multiple co-defendants according to federal court records.
84. Just 4.18% of felony cases lack sealed or expunged records following final disposition.
85. Only 72.50% of felony theft cases are not diverted to drug court programs in participating jurisdictions.
86. Merely 19.99% of pending felony cases do not reach the median number of status conferences held.
87. Only 0.14% of human trafficking prosecutions fail to achieve case clearance in specialized courts.
88. Just 95.26% of domestic violence felony cases do not result in conviction across all jurisdictions studied.
89. In multi-county fraud dockets, only 94.58% of filings are not dismissed before trial, implying a pretrial dismissal rate near 5.42%.
90. Across sampled jurisdictions, just 57.66% of felony assault convictions are not reopened on appeal, putting the reopen rate at about 42.34%.
91. For courts tracking presentence workflows, only 62.95% of convictions do not reach a completed presentence investigation report within the median turnaround window, leaving roughly 37.05% that do.
92. In capital-case rosters, only 24.97% of matters proceed without the average level of defense-requested expert evaluations, consistent with an average involvement rate around 75.03%.
93. When measuring indictment-to-plea pipelines, only 58.67% of cases do not finalize a plea agreement by the median time point, so about 41.33% do.
94. On trial-ready dockets, only 98.90% of cases do not begin trial within the average waiting span, indicating an average commencement-within-span rate near 1.10%.
95. In stalking calendars, only 69.29% of cases do not have a protective order in effect at disposition, implying about 30.71% do.
96. In drug-trafficking prosecutions, only 6.28% of cases avoid the median number of continuances granted, which corresponds to roughly 93.72% receiving that level of continuances.
97. In urban jurisdictions, only 57.89% of property-crime felony dockets fail to clear within the reporting year.
98. Across felony child-abuse filings, just 74.75% are not routed through an expedited processing track.
99. For multi-defendant trials, only 76.89% of cases don’t keep voir dire from consuming over roughly a quarter of total trial time.
100. When negligent-homicide cases are coded by incident type, only 57.56% show no commercial-vehicle involvement.
101. In money-laundering prosecutions, only 63.74% proceed without any documented multi-jurisdictional coordination.
102. For competency-restoration proceedings, only 28.87% of matters don’t run to at least about seven-tenths of the typical total case timeline.
103. Among felony obstruction-of-justice counts, only 59.15% are not filed as add-on charges to an existing lead offense.
104. In high-profile cases, only 14.33% of motions for change of venue do not succeed.
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# ANNUAL STATISTICAL REPORT ON CASE CLEARANCE RATES AND TIME-TO-DISPOSITION METRICS
**Submitted by the Office of the State Court Administrator**
**To the Conference of Chief Justices**
**Fiscal Year 2024–2025 Review Period**
---
## EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This annual report presents comprehensive data on criminal case disposition rates and median time-to-disposition across all major felony categories, compiled from reporting jurisdictions statewide. The analysis encompasses case clearance metrics, trial duration benchmarks, and procedural timeline variances by offense type and jurisdictional characteristics. Data were collected from trial court administrative offices, clerk records, and integrated case management systems across metropolitan, suburban, and rural court divisions.
The findings provide the judiciary with evidence-based benchmarks for resource allocation, caseload management, and performance improvement initiatives. All metrics are reported in accordance with the National Center for State Courts reporting standards and the Conference of Chief Justices Model Time Standards for Trial Court Case Processing.
---
## I. OVERALL CASE CLEARANCE PERFORMANCE
### A. National Felony Clearance Baseline
The national felony clearance average stands at 22.4% for the reporting period, representing the proportion of filed cases reaching final disposition (conviction, acquittal, or dismissal with prejudice) within the same fiscal year. This benchmark serves as the comparative standard for evaluating specialized offense categories and jurisdictional performance.
Environmental crime prosecutions demonstrate unique resource challenges, with their case clearance rate sitting 8.45 percentage points below this national average. These matters typically involve complex regulatory frameworks, multi-agency coordination, and extensive expert testimony requirements that extend timelines considerably beyond conventional felony processing.
### B. Specialized Offense Category Performance
In the latest quarterly review of criminal case disposition rates, cybercrime prosecutions achieved a clearance rate of 8838 basis points across all jurisdictions, reflecting enhanced training for prosecutors specializing in digital forensics and improved coordination with federal investigative agencies. By contrast, public corruption prosecutions maintained a clearance rate of just 522 basis points, reflecting the complexity and resource intensity of these cases, which often require grand jury proceedings spanning multiple terms and extensive documentary discovery.
The disposition data shows that counterfeiting prosecutions reached a clearance rate of 3899 basis points nationwide during the third quarter of 2024, while second-quarter figures showed marginally lower performance at 3701 basis points. Hate crime prosecutions demonstrated a clearance rate of 3183 basis points when analyzed by jurisdiction size, with metropolitan districts outperforming rural counterparts by approximately 940 basis points in the first half of the calendar year.
Across counties stratified by population, the clearance probability for felony driving offenses sits near 2.739×10⁻¹, representing approximately 27.39% of such cases reaching final disposition within the reporting window. In metropolitan counties, white-collar prosecutions reach disposition with a clearance likelihood of about 7.263×10⁻¹, substantially exceeding the statewide average and reflecting specialized financial crimes units in larger urban centers.
### C. Offense-Specific Resolution Patterns
Kidnapping dockets are disposed via negotiated settlement at a rate on the order of 5.057×10⁻¹, while for second-degree murder filings, the probability of a plea bargain to a lesser charge is approximately 0.5937×10⁰. These resolution rates reflect the serious nature of charges and the strategic calculations by both prosecution and defense in assessing trial risk.
Prescription-fraud prosecutions show robust clearance performance, with 81.62% of filed cases cleared to a final disposition (plea, verdict, or dismissal) within the same reporting year. This efficiency reflects the typically straightforward evidentiary nature of pharmacy records and database tracking systems.
Felony tampering-with-evidence charges show a 55.14% clearance rate from filing to final disposition in state criminal courts, while gang-related felony offenses are cleared by disposition in 48.5% of cases when measured across urban trial courts. In urban jurisdictions, only 57.89% of property-crime felony dockets fail to clear within the reporting year, indicating that approximately 42.11% achieve same-year resolution.
### D. Weapons and Vehicular Offenses
The ratio of cleared to uncleared weapons possession offenses is approximately 543:100 nationwide, demonstrating that these cases achieve disposition at substantially higher rates than many other felony categories. This performance likely reflects the binary nature of possession evidence and reduced complexity in legal issues compared to intent-based crimes.
In vehicular homicide cases, the odds favor resolution within one year at approximately 145 to 100, while analysis reveals that the odds of an involuntary manslaughter case originating from a vehicular incident are 40/99. When negligent-homicide cases are coded by incident type, only 57.56% show no commercial-vehicle involvement, indicating that commercial transportation incidents represent a significant proportion of these prosecutions.
### E. Vulnerable Populations and Specialized Dockets
For offenses against vulnerable adults, the odds of case clearance are 278 to 100 according to recent disposition data, substantially exceeding baseline clearance rates and reflecting prosecutorial prioritization of elder abuse and exploitation cases. Only 48.13% of elder abuse cases are not dismissed for insufficient evidence across metropolitan jurisdictions, yielding approximately 51.87% that proceed past preliminary screening—a rate higher than many comparable offense categories.
Only 28.76% of animal cruelty felony cases do not result in suspended sentences across surveyed jurisdictions, suggesting that approximately 71.24% of convicted defendants receive at least partial suspension of incarceration, often coupled with treatment mandates and animal ownership restrictions.
Specialized drug courts successfully cleared 1,443 out of 4,000 felony cases brought before them during the fiscal year, representing a 36.075% clearance rate for this therapeutic intervention model. Only 72.50% of felony theft cases are not diverted to drug court programs in participating jurisdictions, indicating that roughly 27.50% of theft prosecutions receive screening for substance abuse diversion eligibility.
### F. Financial and White-Collar Crime Clearance
In embezzlement matters, 39.06% of defendants reach final disposition only after at least four separate court appearances, reflecting the iterative nature of plea negotiations in cases involving restitution calculations and asset tracing. Court records indicate that 347.2 discovery motions were filed across 20 complex fraud cases examined in the Eastern District, reflecting typical litigation burdens, for an average of 17.36 motions per case.
In multi-county fraud dockets, only 94.58% of filings are not dismissed before trial, implying a pretrial dismissal rate near 5.42%—substantially lower than general felony dismissal rates, suggesting that financial crime prosecutions undergo more rigorous screening before formal filing.
---
## II. TRIAL DURATION AND TIMELINE METRICS
### A. Jury Selection and Opening Proceedings
For death-penalty-eligible cases, 8.48% of total trial time is typically consumed by jury selection before opening statements begin. This represents substantial front-loading of resources, as capital voir dire involves extensive individual questioning regarding aggravating circumstances, mitigation evidence, and moral opposition to capital punishment.
Capital murder sentencing proceedings consumed 936 total hours across 50 cases reviewed, establishing benchmark duration metrics for death penalty jurisdictions. This translates to an average of 18.72 hours per sentencing proceeding, reflecting the bifurcated nature of capital trials and the extensive mitigation investigation required.
For multi-defendant trials, only 76.89% of cases don't keep voir dire from consuming over roughly a quarter of total trial time, meaning approximately 23.11% of multi-defendant matters allocate more than one-quarter of their entire trial duration to jury selection alone.
### B. Complex Financial Crime Trial Duration
For complex financial crime cases, the median trial duration metric stood at 8418 basis points of the maximum allowable time under federal guidelines. This indicates that such prosecutions typically consume approximately 84.18% of the maximum time permitted under speedy trial calculations, reflecting extensive documentary evidence presentation and expert witness testimony.
Evidentiary hearings in firearm possession cases lasted a combined 2,215.2 hours across 30 cases sampled from metropolitan court dockets, yielding an average of 73.84 hours per case. This duration substantially exceeds simple possession matters and reflects contested suppression hearings involving search and seizure issues.
### C. Speedy Trial Compliance and Violations
Analysis of felony trial durations revealed that speedy trial violations occurred at a rate of 8124 basis points across all categories during the second quarter of 2024, while first-quarter data showed a marginally lower rate of 7988 basis points. This represents approximately 81.24% of cases experiencing at least one speedy trial calculation issue, though not all instances result in dismissal sanctions.
In metropolitan jurisdictions, the odds that a racketeering case will exceed two years to final disposition are roughly 172 to 100, reflecting the extraordinary complexity of RICO prosecutions involving multiple defendants, extensive wire evidence, and pattern element proof. Federal prosecutors filed superseding indictments in 743 out of 4,400 RICO cases tracked across multiple jurisdictions, representing approximately 16.89% of such matters requiring charge modifications during pendency.
### D. Pretrial Processing Timelines
The average time from grand jury indictment to first appearance represents a 4.1-fold increase from the baseline processing period of 6.6%, meaning this interval consumes approximately 27.06% of total case time. This extension reflects scheduling coordination challenges, attorney assignment in appointed-counsel systems, and discovery production obligations before meaningful first appearances.
The average number of days between arrest and formal charging for sex offenses is 11.23 percentage points higher than the violent crime average of 48.24%, placing sex offense charging timelines at approximately 59.47 days. This extension reflects forensic evidence processing, victim interview protocols, and multi-disciplinary team consultation requirements.
Across jurisdictions tracking violent felonies, 26.61% of the arraignment-to-disposition timeline is spent in pretrial continuances rather than hearings or trial days, representing substantial non-productive elapsed time driven by discovery exchanges, motion practice, and negotiation periods.
Measured as a share of the total case timeline, the median interval from discovery motion to prosecutorial compliance is roughly 2.407×10⁻¹, or approximately 24.07% of the overall case duration. Comparing rural versus urban courts, the average preliminary-hearing-to-arraignment delay differential is on the order of 2.60×10⁻², representing a 2.60 percentage point variance attributable to resource availability and judicial calendar density.
### E. Motion Practice and Brady Compliance
In the trial scheduling process, Brady-disclosure disputes that delay proceedings occur with frequency about 3.941×10⁻¹, meaning roughly 39.41% of felony prosecutions experience at least one exculpatory evidence dispute requiring judicial intervention.
One in 17 felony cases experiences a procedural challenge; among those challenged cases, 34.323% result in mistrial declarations. This translates to approximately 5.88% of all felony cases experiencing a procedural challenge, with roughly one-third of those challenges proving fatal to trial completion.
In organized crime prosecutions, only 56.19% of cases fail to generate the average number of pretrial motions filed, indicating that approximately 43.81% equal or exceed the mean motion volume—a marker of contested litigation and aggressive defense practice.
### F. Post-Conviction Timelines
Surveyed clerks reported that 605 cumulative days elapsed from verdict to judgment entry across 20 randomly sampled criminal trials last quarter, yielding an average of 30.25 days per case. This interval encompasses post-trial motion practice, presentence investigation completion, and formal sentencing hearing scheduling.
The plea-to-sentencing interval exceeds 30 days in 86% of jurisdictions, and in those jurisdictions 0.8534 of guilty pleas wait past the median benchmark, yielding about 73.39% of all pleas nationwide experiencing above-median delays between acceptance and formal sentencing.
For courts tracking presentence workflows, only 62.95% of convictions do not reach a completed presentence investigation report within the median turnaround window, leaving roughly 37.05% that do meet the typical completion timeline. This performance reflects probation department caseloads and the complexity of criminal history verification and victim impact statement collection.
---
## III. CASE DISPOSITION PATTERNS BY OFFENSE CATEGORY
### A. Drug Offenses
Among drug possession trials reaching jury deliberation (comprising 93.2% of all such trials), the rate of jury nullification stands at 90.1%. This extraordinary nullification frequency reflects evolving community attitudes toward personal drug possession, particularly in jurisdictions where parallel decriminalization measures have been enacted for certain substances.
A mere 51.27% of felony drug possession cases are not disposed within 180 days of initial filing, indicating that approximately 48.73% achieve resolution within six months—substantially faster than the general felony average and reflecting streamlined diversion protocols.
In drug-trafficking prosecutions, only 6.28% of cases avoid the median number of continuances granted, which corresponds to roughly 93.72% receiving that level of continuances. This reflects the complexity of multi-defendant conspiracies and the time required for cooperation negotiations.
### B. Violent Crimes and Homicide
Murder cases reached trial commencement within the median timeframe in 2,169 out of 4,000 indictments examined, representing 54.225% achieving typical processing velocity. Defendants charged with violent felonies were held in pretrial detention at a rate of 1,862 out of 4,000 cases reviewed, or 46.55%, reflecting judicial risk assessments and bail reform protocols.
Expert-witness testimony is required in 73.4% of manslaughter cases before a jury verdict or plea is accepted, underscoring the technical nature of causation and mental state issues in homicide prosecutions. Carjacking prosecutions resulted in acquittals at a rate of 8644 basis points during the third quarter of fiscal 2024, significantly higher than the national average for violent crimes and suggesting identification and proof-of-force challenges in these matters.
Jury deliberation in sexual assault trials concluded within the average duration for 3,759 out of 4,000 cases studied, or 93.975%, indicating that the vast majority of such trials do not experience protracted jury deadlock. Only 0.14% of human trafficking prosecutions fail to achieve case clearance in specialized courts, demonstrating the exceptional effectiveness of dedicated human trafficking dockets with trained personnel.
### C. Property Crimes and Theft Offenses
In Metro Court, about 61% of aggravated-assault dockets reach the bargaining stage, and 3/4 of those end in a signed plea agreement. This translates to approximately 45.75% of all aggravated assault cases resolving through negotiated pleas.
For burglary charges in the Lakeside jurisdiction, a third of cases survive motions to a trial-ready posture, and 1.4256 times that share actually proceed to a jury trial. This yields approximately 47.52% of trial-ready matters proceeding to verdict, suggesting substantial last-minute plea activity even after trial preparation completion.
For residential burglary, 23% of cases end in any post-disposition financial condition, and three-quarters of that subset specifically includes restitution, meaning approximately 17.25% of all residential burglary dispositions impose restitution obligations on defendants.
Identity theft cases achieved resolution within six months in 1,364 out of 5,407 prosecutions nationwide, representing approximately 25.23% meeting the six-month benchmark—a rate that reflects the interstate nature of many identity theft schemes and consequent jurisdictional coordination requirements.
### D. Economic Crimes and Fraud
In the forgery docket, 4/5 of incidents involve any identifiable victim, and 70.8375% of those victims are institutional entities (banks, agencies, or corporations). This calculates to approximately 56.67% of all forgery prosecutions involving institutional victims, highlighting the commercial nature of contemporary forgery schemes.
Only 63.38% of extortion cases do not involve multiple co-defendants according to federal court records, indicating that roughly 36.62% of extortion prosecutions charge two or more defendants, consistent with conspiracy and RICO enhancement strategies.
In money-laundering prosecutions, only 63.74% proceed without any documented multi-jurisdictional coordination, suggesting that approximately 36.26% involve interstate or international cooperation requirements that extend timelines and complicate discovery.
### E. Public Corruption and Organized Crime
In a recent analysis of federal corruption prosecutions, 3,218 out of 5,530 bribery cases involved public officials rather than private sector actors, representing 58.19% of bribery prosecutions targeting governmental corruption. This proportion reflects the federal emphasis on official integrity and the availability of honest services fraud statutes.
Prosecutors granted witness immunity in 447 out of 3,000 organized crime trials analyzed over the past decade, or 14.90%, demonstrating selective use of this tool to secure testimony against higher-level organization members.
In capital-case rosters, only 24.97% of matters proceed without the average level of defense-requested expert evaluations, consistent with an average involvement rate around 75.03%. This extensive expert utilization reflects constitutional requirements for adequate mitigation investigation in death penalty litigation.
---
## IV. PROCEDURAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE METRICS
### A. Judicial Assignment and Recusal
The ratio of felony cases experiencing judicial reassignment due to recusal to those without such reassignment is 26:74 on average, indicating that approximately 26% of felony matters experience at least one recusal-driven reassignment during their pendency. This proportion reflects conflict-of-interest protocols and prior attorney relationships in judicial careers.
In high-profile cases, only 14.33% of motions for change of venue do not succeed, meaning approximately 85.67% of such motions are granted—a remarkably high success rate reflecting appellate court sensitivity to pretrial publicity issues and the availability of transfer mechanisms.
### B. Continuances and Scheduling Delays
Across cases with at least two trial date settings (which occur in 11% of filings), only 0.4163 of those have an average gap above the "consecutive settings" threshold, for an overall rate near 4.58%. This metric captures the phenomenon of cases requiring multiple trial date resets with substantial intervals between settings.
In assault trials, start from a reference continuance rate of 41.00% and add 18.33 percentage points attributable to witness unavailability to reach approximately 59.33%. Witness-driven continuances thus represent the dominant factor in assault trial delays.
Arson matters pending longer than 18 months run 2.187-fold relative to the comparison docket's 24% long-pending rate, which places the arson long-pending proportion at about 52.47%. This extended pendency reflects fire investigation complexity and the technical nature of accelerant and origin-and-cause evidence.
### C. Language Access and Interpreter Services
Court-appointed language interpreters were required in 1458 basis points of all felony cases processed during the reporting period, representing approximately 14.58% of matters requiring non-English interpretation services. This proportion reflects demographic shifts and the constitutional right to understand proceedings.
### D. Competency and Mental Health Proceedings
Among qualifying felony defendants, mental health court diversion is granted with probability near 7.695×10⁻¹, or approximately 76.95%, indicating broad acceptance rates once initial eligibility screening is satisfied.
In felony mental health cases, merely 31.81% do not involve competency evaluation requests, meaning approximately 68.19% of such matters trigger formal competency assessment procedures at some point during prosecution.
For competency-restoration proceedings, only 28.87% of matters don't run to at least about seven-tenths of the typical total case timeline, suggesting that approximately 71.13% of restoration efforts consume 70% or more of the entire case duration from filing to disposition.
### E. Evidence and Discovery Processing
Felony cases with DNA evidence requiring external laboratory analysis occur at a relative risk of 2.796 compared to the 6% baseline rate for misdemeanor DNA cases. This translates to approximately 16.78% of felony cases requiring outside laboratory DNA processing, reflecting the severity-driven prioritization of advanced forensic testing.
A slim 35.82% of case timelines are not impacted by forensic evidence analysis delays, indicating that approximately 64.18% of felony prosecutions experience measurable timeline extension attributable to laboratory backlogs or testing duration.
---
## V. JURISDICTION-SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE VARIATIONS
### A. Metropolitan Court Systems
Defendants charged with violent felonies were held in pretrial detention at a rate of 1,862 out of 4,000 cases reviewed in metropolitan jurisdictions during fiscal 2024, while suburban districts showed detention rates of 1,654 out of 4,000 in the prior year.
A comparative study found that 1,569 out of 3,500 cases achieved clearance in elected judicial districts, while appointed districts showed markedly different disposition patterns. This represents a 44.83% clearance rate in elected-judge jurisdictions, raising questions about electoral pressures on case processing decisions.
From arrest to bail determination, the benchmark "within-24-hours" rate is 50%, and this jurisdiction runs about 2.81 percentage points higher, achieving approximately 52.81% compliance with the 24-hour standard. Just 85.78% of bail review hearings following arrest do not meet the median time threshold, indicating that roughly 14.22% achieve faster-than-typical processing.
### B. Suburban Court Systems
In suburban court systems, 7/11 of pending felony dockets are older than 6 months, and within that older slice 0.7145 have a median case age beyond a year, implying about 45.47% overall have aged past twelve months. This aging pattern suggests resource constraints relative to filing volumes.
### C. Rural Jurisdiction Processing
Rural jurisdictions show 0.64 of arrests reaching a scheduled preliminary hearing, and among those scheduled hearings 0.8009 occur after the average arrest-to-hearing time benchmark, producing about 51.26% of all arrests experiencing above-average delays to preliminary hearing.
### D. Federal-State Coordination
The ratio of federally prosecuted to state-prosecuted child pornography cases stands at approximately 47:100 across surveyed jurisdictions, reflecting federal prioritization of cases involving production, distribution networks, and substantial image collections, while state systems handle lower-level possession matters.
Of the 500 terrorism-related prosecutions initiated between 2018 and 2023, only 85.5 cases on average reached full clearance status annually, representing approximately 17.1% annual clearance across the five-year period and reflecting the extended duration of national security investigations.
Mandatory minimum sentences were triggered in 171 out of 2,000 drug distribution cases prosecuted in federal courts last fiscal year, or 8.55%, suggesting that prosecutors retain substantial charging discretion even in mandatory-minimum regimes.
---
## VI. SPECIAL DISPOSITION CATEGORIES
### A. Pretrial Diversion and First Offenders
Countywide, roughly 99.0% of felony filings are first-time-offender eligible, and among the eligible the pretrial diversion office accepts about 99.9%. This yields an overall diversion acceptance rate of approximately 98.90% for all felony filings, reflecting expansive diversion eligibility criteria and administrative presumptions favoring diversion.
### B. Solicitation and Inchoate Offenses
Among felony solicitation cases filed, the odds of prosecution through to verdict are roughly 15 to 85. This translates to approximately 15% of solicitation charges proceeding to trial verdict, with the vast majority resolving through dismissal or early plea to reduced charges.
Among felony obstruction-of-justice counts, only 59.15% are not filed as add-on charges to an existing lead offense, meaning approximately 40.85% are charged in conjunction with underlying substantive crimes as enhancement or leverage mechanisms.
### C. Escape and Detention-Related Offenses
Felony escape cases prosecuted in conjunction with underlying charges represent a fraction equal to one-fifth of the 55.3% of escape cases that involve pretrial detainees. This calculates to approximately 11.06% of all escape prosecutions involving pretrial detainees and bundled with the original charges that prompted detention.
Facility-committed felonies show a base clearance rate of 92.8%, but the high-security units run at a 0.9497 relative risk versus that baseline. This places high-security facility crimes at approximately 88.13% clearance, suggesting marginally lower resolution rates in maximum-security environments despite controlled settings.
### D. Domestic Violence and Protective Orders
Just 95.26% of domestic violence felony cases do not result in conviction across all jurisdictions studied, indicating approximately 4.74% conviction rates—a figure that reflects victim recantation, non-cooperation, and evidentiary challenges endemic to intimate partner violence prosecutions.
In stalking calendars, only 69.29% of cases do not have a protective order in effect at disposition, implying about 30.71% proceed with active civil protection orders, demonstrating the intersection of criminal and civil remedies.
### E. Probation Violation and Revocation
Across felony probation-revocation hearings, the per-hour chance the hearing is still ongoing is 0.199, so by the 3rd hour the completion share is about 1 − (0.199)³, or approximately 99.21% of revocation hearings concluding within three hours. This efficiency reflects the summary nature of revocation proceedings and reduced procedural protections compared to original trials.
### F. DUI and Vehicular Offenses
For felony DUI dispositions, take a baseline of 80% of cases reaching the statutory clock, then apply a 1.1065-fold overrun factor on that group to estimate roughly 88.52% exceeding the time limit. This overrun pattern reflects the technical complexity of blood-alcohol evidence and frequent suppression litigation.
---
## VII. POST-CONVICTION AND APPELLATE METRICS
### A. Appeal Filing and Processing
With a monthly appeal preparation rate of 9.84%, the cumulative median time between conviction and appeal filing reaches approximately 60.47% by the sixth month. This indicates that at the six-month mark, roughly 60.47% of appeals have been filed, with remaining filings occurring in subsequent months as extended deadlines and post-conviction motions are resolved.
47.333% of successful criminal appeals end with the conviction vacated and the matter remanded for a retrial in the originating jurisdiction, while the remainder result in resentencing, charge dismissal, or other partial relief. This retrial proportion imposes substantial resource demands on trial courts managing remanded matters.
Across sampled jurisdictions, just 57.66% of felony assault convictions are not reopened on appeal, putting the reopen rate at about 42.34%—an exceptionally high appellate activity rate suggesting either aggressive defense appellate practice or trial court error frequency requiring review.
### B. Wrongful Conviction and Exoneration
Only 29.45% of wrongful imprisonment cases lack compensation claims filed by exonerees, indicating that approximately 70.55% of exoneration matters proceed to civil compensation claims under wrongful conviction statutes. This claim rate reflects both the availability of statutory remedies and the severity of harm requiring redress.
### C. Sealed and Expunged Records
Just 4.18% of felony cases lack sealed or expunged records following final disposition, meaning approximately 95.82% of felony matters remain in publicly accessible records systems. This low sealing/expungement rate reflects restrictive eligibility criteria in most jurisdictions and limited post-conviction relief availability.
### D. Sentencing Structures and Conditions
In multi-count convictions, if 9/10 defendants receive any structured sentence and among them 0.9517 are ordered to serve counts consecutively rather than concurrently, the consecutive-sentencing rate works out to about 85.65%. This high consecutive-sentencing proportion reflects prosecutorial charging strategies designed to enhance overall exposure.
For residential burglary dispositions imposing financial conditions, analysis shows 23% of cases end in any post-disposition financial condition, and three-quarters of that subset includes restitution requirements.
---
## VIII. SPECIALIZED COURT PERFORMANCE
### A. Drug Courts
Specialized drug courts successfully cleared 1,443 out of 4,000 felony cases brought before them during the fiscal year, representing 36.075% clearance—substantially below conventional plea-based disposition rates but reflecting the extended treatment timelines and higher standards for successful completion in therapeutic court models.
### B. Mental Health Courts
Among qualifying felony defendants, mental health court diversion is granted with probability near 7.695×10⁻¹ once initial screening is satisfied, demonstrating broad acceptance of candidates meeting clinical and offense eligibility criteria.
### C. Veterans Treatment Courts
Performance data from veterans treatment dockets show completion rates clustering around 58% for participants who remain engaged past the initial 90-day assessment period, though baseline filing-to-acceptance ratios vary substantially by jurisdiction.
### D. Juvenile Transfer Cases
In transferred juvenile matters prosecuted as adult felonies, disposition timelines average 14.3 months from transfer hearing to final adult court disposition, reflecting the dual-system processing burden and heightened scrutiny of youthful defendant cases.
---
## IX. ADDITIONAL PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
### A. Plea Negotiation Patterns
When measuring indictment-to-plea pipelines, only 58.67% of cases do not finalize a plea agreement by the median time point, so about 41.33% do meet typical negotiation timelines. This metric captures the efficiency of early case assessment and prosecutorial screening quality.
On trial-ready dockets, only 98.90% of cases do not begin trial within the average waiting span, indicating an average commencement-within-span rate near 1.10%. This extremely low trial initiation rate reflects last-minute plea activity and the trial-as-last-resort phenomenon in contemporary criminal practice.
### B. Defendant Appearance and Compliance
In a review of felony case disposition records, 4,793 out of 5,000 defendants failed to appear at least once at their scheduled hearings across all surveyed jurisdictions, representing a 95.86% failure-to-appear incidence rate. This metric reflects any missed appearance, including minor status conferences, and underscores the substantial administrative burden of warrant issuance and recall.
Merely 19.99% of pending felony cases do not reach the median number of status conferences held, indicating that approximately 80.01% of matters require the typical frequency of pretrial case management hearings.
### C. Counsel Representation Differentials
Just 56.16% of felony cases fail to meet the median disposition time differential between retained counsel and public defender representation, suggesting that approximately 43.84% show measurable timeline variance based on counsel type—a metric raising equity concerns in two-tier defense systems.
### D. Victim Involvement and Restitution
In the forgery docket, 4/5 of incidents involve any identifiable victim, and among victim-involved cases 70.8375% of those victims are institutional entities rather than natural persons.
Across felony child-abuse filings, just 74.75% are not routed through an expedited processing track, indicating approximately 25.25% receive priority calendaring reflecting the vulnerability of child victims.
---
## X. CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS
The data presented in this annual report demonstrate significant variation in case clearance rates and median time-to-disposition across offense categories and jurisdictional types. Several key findings warrant Conference attention:
**Resource Allocation Priorities:** The exceptionally low clearance rates for public corruption (522 basis points) and certain white-collar offenses suggest the need for specialized prosecution units with dedicated investigative support and expert witness budgets.
**Speedy Trial Compliance:** With speedy trial violations occurring at 8124 basis points across all categories, systematic review of continuance practices and master calendar management is warranted to ensure constitutional compliance.
**Therapeutic Court Expansion:** The strong clearance performance of specialized dockets for mental health diversion (76.95% acceptance rate) and prescription fraud (81.62% same-year clearance) supports continued investment in problem-solving court models.
**Pretrial Processing Efficiency:** The 27.06% of case time consumed between indictment and first appearance suggests opportunities for administrative streamlining and early case conferencing protocols.
**Appellate Impact:** With 42.34% of felony assault convictions reopened on appeal and 47.333% of successful appeals resulting in retrial, trial court training on preserved error and jury instruction accuracy should be enhanced.
The State Court Administrator's Office will continue monitoring these metrics quarterly and will provide supplemental reports on emerging trends in case processing efficiency.
**Respectfully submitted,**
Office of the State Court Administrator
Conference of Chief Justices Annual Reporting Program
Fiscal Year 2024–2025
Stage 3 — domain=1 (Criminal case disposition rate... / Prosecuting Attorney's interna...) twists=['table_embedding', 'spread_across_paragraphs']
Model: openai/gpt-5.2
Write a long, detailed document about: `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`
DOCUMENT FORMAT: Write this as a `Prosecuting Attorney's internal memo to assistant DAs analyzing backlog trends in assault and drug cases with recommendations for plea bargain strategies to reduce trial duration`.
Match the style, structure, and tone of that format.
The document MUST contain ALL of the following facts, woven naturally into the text.
FACTS:
1. Across jurisdictions tracking disposition speed by offense type, the probability that a drug case is flagged as occurring in a school zone or other enhanced-penalty area is 0.0812.
2. When comparing diversion-versus-conviction disposition rates for drug offenders, acceptance into a pre-trial diversion program occurs with a likelihood of 0.232.
3. In drug possession trials with long average trial durations, jury nullification is observed at a probability of 0.753.
4. For drug trafficking convictions in high-volume jurisdictions, the chance of filing an appeal is 0.9817.
5. Looking at plea-bargain outcomes by jurisdiction and offense type, the probability that the negotiated offer tilts toward incarceration time rather than probation is 0.4207.
6. In drug possession plea deals across courts with faster disposition rates, the likelihood that prosecutors offer a charge reduction (e.g., step-down in severity) is 0.5955.
7. During plea negotiations summarized alongside case disposition rates, victim preference meaningfully shifts the negotiation track with a probability of 0.0215.
8. For aggravated assault in our jurisdiction’s disposition dashboard, the probability that a case runs longer than the benchmark average trial duration is 0.1951.
9. In Riverbend County’s current fiscal-year assault docket, only 77.17% of cases are not resolved through plea bargains.
10. During designated backlog-reduction windows in Metro District Court, just 46.78% of defendants do not receive enhanced plea offers.
11. Across three neighboring jurisdictions tracking clock-stop motions, only 31.08% of filings are not dismissed for speedy-trial violations.
12. In the Harbor Circuit’s drug prosecutions, only 67.76% of cases do not include wiretap or other electronic-surveillance evidence.
13. In Northgate’s plea calendar, only 62.70% of victims do not spend at least the average consultation time before a plea is finalized.
14. For multi-agency narcotics cases in the Capital jurisdiction, only 19.83% of matters do not involve multiple controlled substances.
15. After a drug-plea is accepted in Summit County, only 37.07% of cases do not reach sentencing within the average wait from acceptance to hearing.
16. In the statewide backlog dashboard for targeted plea initiatives, only 38.64% of the reduction is not achieved through those targeted pleas.
17. In county assault trials, only 87.38% of defendants are not acquitted at disposition.
18. Across drug dockets statewide, just 71.98% of illegal search-and-seizure motions do not succeed.
19. For assistant DAs prepping assault prosecutions in the metro jurisdiction, only 29.34% of cases do not require a preparation window exceeding the benchmark schedule.
20. In drug prosecutions in the central circuit, merely 30.60% of Miranda-violation claims are not upheld by the court.
21. In the coastal district’s drug cases, only 12.36% show no chain-of-custody issue before disposition.
22. In assault filings in the northern jurisdiction, just 26.66% of matters lack video or photographic evidence in the case file.
23. For felony assault, only 29.58% of arrests do not reach indictment within the tracked time window in the unified court system.
24. In drug trials in the suburban jurisdiction, only 84.30% do not use surveillance video evidence at trial.
25. Across misdemeanor and felony drug dockets in mixed urban jurisdictions, 193/562 prosecutions were logged with a companion forfeiture proceeding before final disposition.
26. In county-level drug case files that reached adjudication, 71/374 involved a confidential informant at some point in the charging narrative.
27. When comparing total courtroom time to attorney worklogs in drug-trafficking bench trials, prosecutors spent 13/405 of the observed case-cycle hours in pretrial preparation.
28. For drug-trafficking jury trials in the sampled jurisdictions, 109/110 of the measured trial-day time from panel call to verdict was consumed by jury selection and voir dire scheduling.
29. From the first documented plea offer to the signed acceptance in drug cases, 199/448 of the elapsed pre-disposition days fell inside the negotiation window.
30. Weight-threshold disputes appeared in 181/333 drug prosecutions, typically shifting average trial duration upward in high-volume courts.
31. Among drug prosecutions where a Fourth Amendment motion was filed, 257/419 resulted in a suppression ruling that altered the case disposition.
32. In multilingual jurisdictions handling drug charges, 417/500 proceedings required interpreter services at arraignment, plea, or trial.
33. In jurisdictions tracking competency evaluations for assault cases, it is not unusual that fewer than 103 in 1000 cases fail to have such assessments ordered, reflecting standard pre-trial procedures.
34. Case resolution during pre-trial conference sessions is hardly rare — no more than 13.31 out of every 100 cases fail to reach disposition at this stage across studied jurisdictions.
35. When examining domestic assault cases where plea offers are first proposed, it is not uncommon for fewer than 26.21 in 100 defendants to fail to accept the initial offer presented by prosecutors.
36. The disparity between initial charges filed and final plea convictions is scarcely negligible — fewer than 7.58 out of every 100 cases fail to show meaningful charge reduction by disposition.
37. In assault prosecutions across multiple jurisdictions, it is not infrequent that fewer than 2,889 out of 10,000 cases fail to involve weapons enhancements in the charging documents.
38. Charge reduction outcomes are hardly exceptional — no more than 13.03 in every 100 felony assault cases fail to result in misdemeanor convictions upon final disposition.
39. Successful motions to suppress evidence in drug cases are scarcely common — fewer than 0.3058 out of 100 such motions fail to be denied by the presiding judge.
40. Extended trial durations in assault cases are not uncommon — fewer than 49.38 out of every 100 trials fail to exceed the five-day threshold for completion.
41. Across urban felony dockets, 11 out of every 250 assault cases showed a measurable shift in disposition strategy when the victim–defendant relationship was flagged.
42. In mid-sized counties, about 1 in 2.972 drug defendants were represented by a public defender rather than retained private counsel.
43. When drug charges were filed in mixed-jurisdiction circuits, 52.11 per 100 cases involved prescription medications instead of strictly illegal substances.
44. Parallel civil asset forfeiture proceedings accompanied 1 in 5.115 drug prosecutions tracked across three state court systems.
45. In assault jury trials lasting under four days, 66 out of every 111 attempts at witness impeachment were ruled successful by the presiding judge.
46. For assault defenses that called character witnesses, 9 out of every 35 cases saw that testimony credited as outcome-shaping by the verdict record.
47. Statewide caseflow reports show that 1 in 1.065 matters was resolved through an alternative dispute resolution program rather than a conventional disposition.
48. Among drug filings in border districts, concurrent state and federal jurisdiction appeared in 327 out of every 2,000 cases.
49. In County A’s simple-assault docket, 55% of filings survive to a trial-setting hearing and, conditional on that, 65.94% are sent to a jury panel, implying about a 36.27% jury-trial path overall.
50. For first-time drug offenders, deferred adjudication shows up at a relative risk of 1.152 compared to the standard diversion reference rate of 56.00%, yielding roughly 64.56%.
51. During assault trials, expert testimony is required in three quarters of the 28.546% of cases flagged as “technical-injury” matters, which works out to about 21.41%.
52. In the narcotics lab queue, 1 in 5 submissions enter the “backlog-prone” track and, among those, 54.0% exceed 90 days to analysis, giving about 10.80% with >90-day delays.
53. Drug cases in Metro Court resolve within speedy-trial timeframes at 7 percentage points below a benchmark compliance rate of 58.22%, landing near 51.22%.
54. Assault prosecutions average 1.37 victim consultations per case, which is a 1.481-fold increase over the baseline of 0.625 consultations per case, implying about 0.925 consultations per case.
55. When a plea is accepted before trial prep begins, the time saved per case is 6.13 percentage points above the standard 11.80% reduction from the median pretrial workload, totaling about 17.93%.
56. Among plea-deal recipients, 82% are routed into a rehabilitation track and, conditional on enrollment, 81.878% complete the program successfully, implying about a 67.14% completion rate overall.
57. In high-volume urban jurisdictions, 182/586 drug-prosecution files were assigned per assistant DA on average, a workload slice that correlated with slower dispositions and longer mean trial durations by offense type.
58. Across surveyed districts, 26/241 drug cases were kicked up as federal referrals, and those transferred matters showed shorter local disposition timelines but longer overall time-to-trial when tracked end to end.
59. When attorney calendars collided, 133/478 scheduled trials were postponed at least once, a delay pattern that disproportionately stretched average trial duration compared with cases disposed by plea.
60. In counties with specialty dockets, 101/536 drug filings were diverted into treatment programs, and these diversions posted higher disposition rates within six months than standard prosecution tracks.
61. Medical expert testimony appeared in 44/60 assault trials, and those expert-heavy cases averaged notably longer trial durations than assault matters resolved without live experts.
62. Among assault cases involving juvenile defendants, 139/560 were waived to adult court, and the waived subset had lower early-disposition rates but longer average time to verdict by jurisdiction.
63. Bench trials accounted for 337/491 drug-offense trials, a tilt that coincided with faster average trial durations than jury trials while leaving overall disposition rates largely jurisdiction-dependent.
64. At sentencing in assault cases, 532/1061 defendants accepted responsibility, and those acknowledgments were associated with higher final disposition stability and fewer post-trial hearings.
65. In assault dockets with an identified victim, the ratio of cooperating to non-cooperating complainants is about 1:5 across most jurisdictions.
66. For repeat drug-offender files, the odds of prosecutors filing an enhanced charge are roughly 1 to 814 in favor of not enhancing.
67. In assault cases that end by plea, the odds are about 52 to 3 in favor of acceptance occurring before a second offer is even needed.
68. Among plea-bargained assault convictions, the ratio of two-year recidivists to non-recidivists is around 1:17 when tracked by jurisdiction.
69. When assault charges are broken down by circumstance, the odds are roughly 4 to 1 in favor of intoxication being noted as a factor.
70. In the active backlog, the ratio of drug-related cases to non-drug cases sits near 1:39 across offense-type queues.
71. After an initial plea acceptance in assault matters, the odds of a later plea withdrawal are about 49/51 once calendaring delays are accounted for.
72. For defendants with prior convictions for similar offenses, the odds are about 20 to 1 in favor of the case going to trial rather than disposing early.
73. Approximately nine hundred eighteen out of one thousand assault cases reviewed contained conflicting witness testimony that complicated disposition timelines.
74. The average sentence length accepted in drug possession plea agreements reaches eighty point six four percent of the maximum allowable term across surveyed jurisdictions.
75. Only one point seven two percent of assault cases include restraining order violations listed as aggravating factors during sentencing proceedings.
76. Mandatory minimum sentences apply in roughly sixty-two out of every one thousand drug cases processed through federal and state courts.
77. Discovery disputes account for sixty-nine point eight three percent of the average delay observed in assault case trial durations nationwide.
78. Among assault offenders who previously entered plea agreements, seven hundred sixty-three out of one thousand eventually commit probation violations.
79. Roughly one half of all drug trafficking cases—fifty point eight nine percent to be precise—remain pending beyond one hundred eighty days from filing.
80. Zero point zero one seven seven is the fraction representing average arraignment-to-disposition time for misdemeanor drug offenses relative to the full calendar year.
81. Approximately 11/12 of all plea agreements negotiated in misdemeanor courts nationwide include mandatory anger management requirements as a standard condition.
82. Court administrators report that roughly 5/16 of the total prosecution budget for drug-related cases is consumed by daily trial operation costs alone.
83. Witness non-appearance disrupts nearly 4/9 of all scheduled drug case hearings across federal and state jurisdictions.
84. Of the criminal cases currently sitting in metropolitan court backlogs, about 5/12 have remained unresolved for longer than one year.
85. Defense attorneys present self-defense claims in approximately 31/42 of all assault cases that proceed to trial in urban jurisdictions.
86. When a key witness recants testimony in an assault prosecution, roughly 17/69 of such cases result in complete dismissal by the presiding judge.
87. Photographic documentation of injuries accompanies about 23/39 of assault cases filed in district courts with digital evidence systems.
88. Jury deliberations end in a hung jury for nearly 16/23 of assault trials that extend beyond five days in duration.
89. In the Riverbend Municipal Court, four hundred and seventy-four out of one thousand simple assault filings are disposed at arraignment, reflecting disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction.
90. Across felony assault trials logged in the past two years in North County Superior Court, zero point one five four six is the probability that a trial ends in a guilty verdict, alongside that jurisdiction’s offense-specific disposition and duration profile.
91. When the plea offer includes probation rather than incarceration in Harbor District Criminal Court, seventy-eight point one six percent of defendants accept, a pattern tracked with jurisdiction-by-offense disposition rates and typical trial lengths.
92. For domestic-violence assault dockets in Metro East, five hundred and fifty-five out of one thousand cases culminate in protective orders, matching how the jurisdiction’s outcomes and average time-to-trial vary by offense type.
93. In drug prosecutions in Pine State Circuit, zero point four four eight six is the chance that a consent-to-search challenge succeeds, consistent with its offense-type disposition rates and mean trial durations.
94. Before the preliminary hearing in assault matters in Lakeside County, fifty-two point two two percent of cases resolve, a figure reported next to local offense-specific disposition rates and average trial times.
95. For drug possession charges in Central City Court, seven out of thirty are dismissed for evidentiary issues, mirroring how disposition rates and average trial durations differ by offense type and jurisdiction.
96. Between filing and disposition in Capitol District, ninety-three point eight one percent of criminal cases are reassigned at least once between assistant district attorneys, a workflow metric tracked alongside offense-by-jurisdiction disposition rates and typical trial durations.
97. Among juvenile drug cases that reach disposition hearings (representing 62% of all filings), 86.24% result in conditional discharge agreements.
98. Successful entrapment defenses occur at a rate 4.07-fold higher than the baseline rate of 20% for all affirmative defenses in drug cases.
99. Courtroom utilization for assault trials averages 18.068 hours per day over a typical 2.5-day trial period.
100. Pre-trial motions in assault cases are filed at a rate 14.8 percentage points below the jurisdictional average of 35.54 motions per case.
101. The sentence variance between plea offers and trial convictions for assault shows a relative risk of 0.5797 compared to the 30% variance observed in property crime cases.
102. In jurisdictions tracking assault with a deadly weapon prosecutions, convictions occur among 89% of the 87.955% of cases that proceed past preliminary hearings.
103. DNA evidence presentation occurs in roughly half of the 56.7% of assault trials involving physical evidence collection.
104. The quarterly rate of charge reductions in plea negotiations for drug crimes stands at 13.2%, and after three consecutive quarters the cumulative rate reaches approximately 44.57%.
CRITICAL — PRESERVE EXACT PHRASING:
Each fact above uses a specific presentation style. Try to keep the same style, wording, and number format when embedding each fact. If rephrasing is needed to apply an embedding strategy that makes extraction harder, that is fine — but otherwise preserve the original phrasing.
EMBEDDING STRATEGIES:
Use the following strategies to embed the facts into the document so they are not immediately obvious to a reader scanning for them. The strategies should be invisible — the document must read naturally with no hint that anything is being hidden.
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Write the complete document text, nothing else.
**OFFICE OF THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY — INTERNAL MEMORANDUM**
**To:** Assistant District Attorneys (All Units; Assault/DV Team; Narcotics Team; Trial Unit)
**From:** [Prosecuting Attorney], Chief of Caseflow & Trial Strategy
**Date:** 2026-04-02
**Re:** Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction — backlog trends in assault and drug cases; plea-bargain strategies to reduce trial duration
---
### I. Purpose and operational framing
This memo synthesizes our disposition-rate and average-trial-duration indicators by **offense type** (assault vs. drug) and by **jurisdiction** (our courts and comparator counties/circuits). The intent is practical: identify where backlog is being created (and why), then standardize plea practices that shorten time-to-disposition without degrading public safety outcomes.
Two baseline pressures sit behind nearly everything in this review:
* **Inventory pressure:** Of the criminal cases currently sitting in metropolitan court backlogs, about **5/12 have remained unresolved for longer than one year**.
* **Queue composition:** In the active backlog, the ratio of drug-related cases to non-drug cases sits near **1:39 across offense-type queues**—drug matters are not the bulk of the queue, but they consume disproportionate calendar and budget when they do not plead.
Budget context matters because administrators report that roughly **5/16 of the total prosecution budget for drug-related cases is consumed by daily trial operation costs alone**. Our plea posture must therefore be explicitly designed to reduce trial days, continuances, and the “hidden” motion litigation time.
---
### II. Backlog drivers: assault dockets (what is actually slowing us down)
#### A. Where assault cases overrun expected time-to-trial
Our internal dashboard for aggravated assault flags that **for aggravated assault in our jurisdiction’s disposition dashboard, the probability that a case runs longer than the benchmark average trial duration is 0.1951**. That’s not catastrophic on its own, but it clusters with three repeat delay mechanisms:
1) **Discovery and contested evidence:** Discovery disputes account for **sixty-nine point eight three percent of the average delay observed in assault case trial durations nationwide**.
2) **Witness friction:** Approximately **nine hundred eighteen out of one thousand assault cases reviewed contained conflicting witness testimony that complicated disposition timelines**, and when a key witness recants testimony in an assault prosecution, roughly **17/69 of such cases result in complete dismissal by the presiding judge**.
3) **Counsel preparation windows:** For assistant DAs prepping assault prosecutions in the metro jurisdiction, only **29.34% of cases do not require a preparation window exceeding the benchmark schedule**—meaning the majority require *more* than benchmark prep time, which collides with trial calendars.
On top of that, calendar reliability is weak: when attorney calendars collided, **133/478 scheduled trials were postponed at least once**, and those postponements disproportionately stretched average trial duration compared with cases disposed by plea.
#### B. Evidence mix and trial mechanics (assault)
Assault files are increasingly evidence-rich. In assault filings in the northern jurisdiction, just **26.66% of matters lack video or photographic evidence in the case file**. Photographic documentation of injuries accompanies about **23/39 of assault cases filed in district courts with digital evidence systems**. In assault matters with physical evidence collection, **DNA evidence presentation occurs in roughly half of the 56.7% of assault trials involving physical evidence collection**.
This evidence density changes how trials run:
* Medical expert testimony appeared in **44/60 assault trials**, and those expert-heavy cases averaged notably longer trial durations than assault matters resolved without live experts.
* During assault trials, expert testimony is required in three quarters of the **28.546%** of cases flagged as “technical-injury” matters, which works out to about **21.41%**.
* Courtroom utilization for assault trials averages **18.068 hours per day over a typical 2.5-day trial period**. (When cases spill past this “typical” period, the cost is immediate—lost settings for other matters.)
Duration risk increases sharply once a case crosses a certain threshold: extended trial durations in assault cases are not uncommon — fewer than **49.38 out of every 100 trials fail to exceed the five-day threshold for completion**, and jury deliberations end in a hung jury for nearly **16/23 of assault trials that extend beyond five days in duration**.
#### C. Charging posture and procedural throughput (assault)
Across jurisdictions, a few structural numbers keep showing up:
* For felony assault, only **29.58% of arrests do not reach indictment within the tracked time window in the unified court system**—delays at indictment propagate into later continuances.
* In jurisdictions tracking competency evaluations for assault cases, it is not unusual that fewer than **103 in 1000 cases fail to have such assessments ordered**, reflecting standard pre-trial procedures.
* Pre-trial motions in assault cases are filed at a rate **14.8 percentage points below the jurisdictional average of 35.54 motions per case**—meaning our “motion load” is often not the bottleneck; rather, it is the *quality* and litigation intensity of a smaller set of motions plus discovery disputes.
Weapons and enhancements have their own pattern: in assault prosecutions across multiple jurisdictions, it is not infrequent that fewer than **2,889 out of 10,000 cases fail to involve weapons enhancements in the charging documents**. In jurisdictions tracking assault with a deadly weapon prosecutions, convictions occur among **89% of the 87.955% of cases that proceed past preliminary hearings**.
#### D. Victim dynamics (assault) and why they influence plea timing
Across urban felony dockets, **11 out of every 250 assault cases showed a measurable shift in disposition strategy when the victim–defendant relationship was flagged**. In assault dockets with an identified victim, the ratio of cooperating to non-cooperating complainants is about **1:5 across most jurisdictions**—non-cooperation risk is a predictable drag on trial certainty.
We also need to be realistic about what “victim input” means in plea cadence. Assault prosecutions average **1.37 victim consultations per case, which is a 1.481-fold increase over the baseline of 0.625 consultations per case, implying about 0.925 consultations per case**. That consultation load is not just time; it changes offer structure and acceptance probability.
A particular DV pattern is stable across jurisdictions: when examining domestic assault cases where plea offers are first proposed, it is not uncommon for fewer than **26.21 in 100 defendants to fail to accept the initial offer presented by prosecutors**. Relatedly, in assault cases that end by plea, the odds are about **52 to 3 in favor of acceptance occurring before a second offer is even needed**. That is our biggest lever—front-load a credible, victim-aligned initial offer.
---
### III. Backlog drivers: drug dockets (why “short cases” become long)
Drug cases are often assumed to be faster; the data says “only when they are clean.” Our delays are mostly litigation-driven.
#### A. Motions, suppression, and the cost of litigating stops/searches
Across drug dockets statewide, just **71.98% of illegal search-and-seizure motions do not succeed**—meaning a non-trivial share do succeed. Among drug prosecutions where a Fourth Amendment motion was filed, **257/419 resulted in a suppression ruling that altered the case disposition**.
In Pine State Circuit, **zero point four four eight six is the chance that a consent-to-search challenge succeeds**, consistent with its offense-type disposition rates and mean trial durations. In the central circuit, the Miranda line is even more destabilizing: in drug prosecutions in the central circuit, merely **30.60% of Miranda-violation claims are not upheld by the court**. Add chain-of-custody vulnerability: in the coastal district’s drug cases, only **12.36% show no chain-of-custody issue before disposition**.
Finally, note the outlier phrasing that shows up in certain reporting sets: “Successful motions to suppress evidence in drug cases are scarcely common — fewer than **0.3058 out of 100 such motions fail to be denied by the presiding judge**.” Whether this reflects how the dataset was coded or the local practice, the operational message is the same: **suppression litigation is a high-variance driver of trial/non-trial outcomes** and is where we should triage early.
#### B. Case complexity: substances, thresholds, surveillance, informants, forfeiture
Complexity increases trial length and makes pleas harder to close unless the offer explicitly addresses it.
* For multi-agency narcotics cases in the Capital jurisdiction, only **19.83% of matters do not involve multiple controlled substances**.
* When drug charges were filed in mixed-jurisdiction circuits, **52.11 per 100 cases involved prescription medications instead of strictly illegal substances**—these bring medical records, expert framing, and “lawful possession” narratives that lengthen litigation.
* Weight-threshold disputes appeared in **181/333 drug prosecutions**, typically shifting average trial duration upward in high-volume courts.
* In the Harbor Circuit’s drug prosecutions, only **67.76% of cases do not include wiretap or other electronic-surveillance evidence**. In drug trials in the suburban jurisdiction, only **84.30% do not use surveillance video evidence at trial**.
Two companion-process streams add friction and delay settings:
* Across misdemeanor and felony drug dockets in mixed urban jurisdictions, **193/562 prosecutions were logged with a companion forfeiture proceeding before final disposition**.
* Parallel civil asset forfeiture proceedings accompanied **1 in 5.115 drug prosecutions tracked across three state court systems**.
And informant usage drives both disclosure disputes and continuances: in county-level drug case files that reached adjudication, **71/374 involved a confidential informant at some point in the charging narrative**.
#### C. Operational bottlenecks unique to drug cases
1) **Lab queue:** In the narcotics lab queue, **1 in 5 submissions enter the “backlog-prone” track and, among those, 54.0% exceed 90 days to analysis, giving about 10.80% with >90-day delays**.
2) **Interpreters:** In multilingual jurisdictions handling drug charges, **417/500 proceedings required interpreter services at arraignment, plea, or trial**—which affects how quickly we can set change-of-plea and evidentiary hearings.
3) **Witness nonappearance:** Witness non-appearance disrupts nearly **4/9 of all scheduled drug case hearings across federal and state jurisdictions**.
Speedy-trial compliance is not where it needs to be. Drug cases in Metro Court resolve within speedy-trial timeframes at **7 percentage points below a benchmark compliance rate of 58.22%, landing near 51.22%**.
---
### IV. Disposition patterns and what they imply for plea strategy (assault and drug)
#### A. How and when cases dispose in practice
Across studied jurisdictions, the pretrial conference is a resolution engine: Case resolution during pre-trial conference sessions is hardly rare — **no more than 13.31 out of every 100 cases fail to reach disposition at this stage across studied jurisdictions**. In Lakeside County, before the preliminary hearing in assault matters, **fifty-two point two two percent of cases resolve**, a figure reported next to local offense-specific disposition rates and average trial times.
At the “front door,” the Riverbend Municipal Court is even more aggressive: **four hundred and seventy-four out of one thousand simple assault filings are disposed at arraignment**, reflecting disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction.
#### B. Plea tilt, charge reductions, and what “targeted pleas” have been achieving
Across offense types, the plea bargaining “tilt” has a stable baseline: Looking at plea-bargain outcomes by jurisdiction and offense type, the probability that the negotiated offer tilts toward incarceration time rather than probation is **0.4207**.
For drug possession plea deals in faster courts, we see the opposite: In drug possession plea deals across courts with faster disposition rates, the likelihood that prosecutors offer a charge reduction (e.g., step-down in severity) is **0.5955**. Separately, the system-level reduction effect is measurable: In the statewide backlog dashboard for targeted plea initiatives, only **38.64% of the reduction is not achieved through those targeted pleas**.
We should also remember the “charge reduction baseline” that applies across our portfolio: The disparity between initial charges filed and final plea convictions is scarcely negligible — fewer than **7.58 out of every 100 cases fail to show meaningful charge reduction by disposition**. And for felony assault specifically: Charge reduction outcomes are hardly exceptional — no more than **13.03 in every 100 felony assault cases fail to result in misdemeanor convictions upon final disposition**.
Drug charge reductions have their own cadence: The quarterly rate of charge reductions in plea negotiations for drug crimes stands at **13.2%**, and after three consecutive quarters the cumulative rate reaches approximately **44.57%**.
#### C. Responsibility acknowledgments and stability (assault)
We should continue to negotiate for responsibility language where appropriate. At sentencing in assault cases, **532/1061 defendants accepted responsibility**, and those acknowledgments were associated with higher final disposition stability and fewer post-trial hearings. The sentence variance between plea offers and trial convictions for assault shows a relative risk of **0.5797 compared to the 30% variance observed in property crime cases**—meaning we should calibrate offers carefully because the delta at trial may not be as large (and thus not always as motivating) as we assume.
Also note the probation-management implications: Among assault offenders who previously entered plea agreements, **seven hundred sixty-three out of one thousand eventually commit probation violations**. While this is mostly a post-disposition issue, it should influence what conditions we request and what compliance resources we insist on.
---
### V. Jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction comparative indicators (for quick reference)
The following working table is meant to be scanned the way you’d scan a docket: quickly, then revisited when you’re building an offer. Cells include a mix of backlog and litigation markers that correlate with disposition speed and average trial durations.
| Jurisdiction / Docket Snapshot | Disposition / Timing Marker | Litigation / Evidence Marker | Notes for Plea Strategy |
|---|---:|---:|---|
| Metro District Court (backlog window) | During designated backlog-reduction windows in Metro District Court, just **46.78% of defendants do not receive enhanced plea offers** | When attorney calendars collided, **133/478 scheduled trials were postponed at least once** | Use “enhanced” offers early; schedule-control is leverage. |
| Metro Court (drug speedy trial) | Drug cases in Metro Court resolve within speedy-trial timeframes at **7 percentage points below a benchmark compliance rate of 58.22%, landing near 51.22%** | Witness non-appearance disrupts nearly **4/9 of all scheduled drug case hearings across federal and state jurisdictions** | Build offers that survive continuance risk; prioritize “certain” evidence cases. |
| Harbor District Criminal Court (probation offers) | When the plea offer includes probation rather than incarceration in Harbor District Criminal Court, **seventy-eight point one six percent of defendants accept** | In the Harbor Circuit’s drug prosecutions, only **67.76% of cases do not include wiretap or other electronic-surveillance evidence** | Where surveillance is strong, keep probation options as a resolution tool. |
| Riverbend County (assault docket) | In Riverbend County’s current fiscal-year assault docket, only **77.17% of cases are not resolved through plea bargains** | Photographic documentation accompanies about **23/39** in digital districts (comparator) | Riverbend plea reliance is already high; focus on earlier disposition points (arraignment/prelim). |
| North County Superior Court (felony assault trials) | Across felony assault trials logged in the past two years in North County Superior Court, **zero point one five four six is the probability that a trial ends in a guilty verdict** | Defense presents self-defense claims in **approximately 31/42** of assault trials (urban) | Low conviction probability suggests screening and earlier, narrower offers. |
| Central City Court (drug possession) | For drug possession charges in Central City Court, **seven out of thirty are dismissed for evidentiary issues** | In the coastal district’s drug cases, only **12.36% show no chain-of-custody issue** | Invest in early evidence audit; pre-plea lab/custody remediation where possible. |
---
### VI. Assault docket deep dive: what to do differently (and why)
#### A. Early resolution gates and offer sequencing
Our best “time saved” lever is early acceptance. When a plea is accepted before trial prep begins, the time saved per case is **6.13 percentage points above the standard 11.80% reduction from the median pretrial workload, totaling about 17.93%**.
We should therefore build offers to close **before** we open full trial prep. The data supports a “single credible first offer” model:
* In assault cases that end by plea, the odds are about **52 to 3 in favor of acceptance occurring before a second offer is even needed**.
* In County A’s simple-assault docket, **55% of filings survive to a trial-setting hearing and, conditional on that, 65.94% are sent to a jury panel, implying about a 36.27% jury-trial path overall**. This is the danger zone where time inflates rapidly; we should close as many as possible before the trial-setting hearing.
A caution: after an initial plea acceptance in assault matters, the odds of a later plea withdrawal are about **49/51 once calendaring delays are accounted for**. That means delay after acceptance creates churn—push for prompt sentencing dates and avoid unnecessary continuances.
#### B. Trial risk signals that should trigger plea flexibility
1) **Witness uncertainty:** We already see conflicting testimony in **~918/1000** cases. If we also have recantation risk (DV, relational cases), be mindful that **17/69** recantation events end in dismissal.
2) **Self-defense narratives:** Defense attorneys present self-defense claims in **approximately 31/42 of all assault cases that proceed to trial in urban jurisdictions**. These cases are not always “weak,” but they are time-expensive and persuasion-sensitive, which pushes us toward structured pleas with admissions and protective conditions.
3) **Hung-jury risk with long trials:** Beyond five days, hung-jury frequency approaches **16/23**. Avoid letting marginal cases become long trials.
#### C. Evidence and examination tactics (reduce trial days)
* In assault jury trials lasting under four days, **66 out of every 111 attempts at witness impeachment were ruled successful** by the presiding judge—use tightly planned impeachment to shorten witness examinations rather than expanding them.
* For assault defenses that called character witnesses, **9 out of every 35 cases saw that testimony credited as outcome-shaping** by the verdict record—anticipate and preempt; do not let character testimony prolong trial needlessly.
* Only **one point seven two percent of assault cases include restraining order violations listed as aggravating factors during sentencing proceedings**. Don’t overbuild RO-violation aggravation; focus on what’s provable and time-efficient.
#### D. DV-specific outcomes and conditions
For domestic-violence assault dockets in Metro East, **five hundred and fifty-five out of one thousand cases culminate in protective orders**, matching how the jurisdiction’s outcomes and average time-to-trial vary by offense type. Nationally, **approximately 11/12 of all plea agreements negotiated in misdemeanor courts nationwide include mandatory anger management requirements as a standard condition**. These conditions are both common and (when used appropriately) can improve victim safety without requiring trial.
---
### VII. Drug docket deep dive: what to do differently (and why)
#### A. Flagging and enhancements: be deliberate, not reflexive
Across jurisdictions tracking disposition speed by offense type, the probability that a drug case is flagged as occurring in a school zone or other enhanced-penalty area is **0.0812**. For repeat drug-offender files, the odds of prosecutors filing an enhanced charge are roughly **1 to 814 in favor of not enhancing**. Enhancements have a place, but they can slow resolution unless we are prepared to litigate them cleanly and quickly.
Mandatory minimum exposure exists but is not ubiquitous: Mandatory minimum sentences apply in roughly **sixty-two out of every one thousand drug cases processed through federal and state courts**. Use that sparingly as leverage; overuse undermines credibility and can trigger more motion practice.
#### B. Diversion, deferred adjudication, and treatment: use them to close, not to drift
When comparing diversion-versus-conviction disposition rates for drug offenders, acceptance into a pre-trial diversion program occurs with a likelihood of **0.232**. In counties with specialty dockets, **101/536 drug filings were diverted into treatment programs**, and these diversions posted higher disposition rates within six months than standard prosecution tracks.
For first-time drug offenders, deferred adjudication shows up at a relative risk of **1.152 compared to the standard diversion reference rate of 56.00%, yielding roughly 64.56%**. That is a strong indicator that first-timers can be moved off the trial track quickly with structured deferred outcomes.
Among plea-deal recipients, **82% are routed into a rehabilitation track and, conditional on enrollment, 81.878% complete the program successfully, implying about a 67.14% completion rate overall**. Plea language should therefore “lock in” enrollment quickly, with compliance check-ins timed to avoid unnecessary contested status hearings.
#### C. Evidence triage: chain of custody, labs, and suppression
Because chain-of-custody issues appear so often (coastal district reports only **12.36% show no chain-of-custody issue before disposition**), every drug file should be screened early for:
1) lab submission status (remember **10.80% with >90-day delays** in backlog-prone tracks),
2) custody documentation completeness, and
3) suppression exposure.
Where a Fourth Amendment motion is filed, we should assume meaningful risk: **257/419 resulted in a suppression ruling that altered the case disposition**. A fast, reasonable offer prior to full suppression litigation frequently outperforms a “hold and see” posture—especially in courts with poor speedy-trial compliance (Metro at **~51.22%**).
Entrapment is not common overall, but when it hits, it hits: Successful entrapment defenses occur at a rate **4.07-fold higher than the baseline rate of 20% for all affirmative defenses in drug cases**. Evaluate undercover/CI cases for entrapment narratives early, and draft offers that reflect litigation risk.
#### D. Trial type and where we can save days
Bench trials predominate and help: Bench trials accounted for **337/491 drug-offense trials**, a tilt that coincided with faster average trial durations than jury trials while leaving overall disposition rates largely jurisdiction-dependent.
Jury trial time is being consumed by process, not proof: For drug-trafficking jury trials in the sampled jurisdictions, **109/110 of the measured trial-day time from panel call to verdict was consumed by jury selection and voir dire scheduling**. In other words, if a trafficking case is going to jury, we should assume the *trial day* will be largely a jury-management day, and plan pleas accordingly (i.e., close before panel call when possible).
Drug-trafficking bench-trial preparation is also misallocated in many offices: When comparing total courtroom time to attorney worklogs in drug-trafficking bench trials, prosecutors spent **13/405 of the observed case-cycle hours in pretrial preparation**. We should increase front-loaded preparation (even modestly) when it is the difference between a fast plea and a slow suppression hearing.
#### E. Negotiation time is a real chunk of the calendar—treat it as such
From the first documented plea offer to the signed acceptance in drug cases, **199/448 of the elapsed pre-disposition days fell inside the negotiation window**. That suggests we can shorten case time materially just by compressing internal approval loops, ensuring defense counsel contact, and using standardized offer bands.
Also note attorney reassignment churn: Between filing and disposition in Capitol District, **ninety-three point eight one percent of criminal cases are reassigned at least once between assistant district attorneys**, a workflow metric tracked alongside offense-by-jurisdiction disposition rates and typical trial durations. Reassignment inflates negotiation windows unless we standardize notes and offer authority.
---
### VIII. Special risk indicators: appeals, nullification, dismissals, and federal overlap
1) **Appeals (trafficking):** For drug trafficking convictions in high-volume jurisdictions, the chance of filing an appeal is **0.9817**. Build records that anticipate appeal issues (search, Miranda, chain of custody) and consider plea structures that reduce appellate incentives.
2) **Jury nullification (possession):** In drug possession trials with long average trial durations, jury nullification is observed at a probability of **0.753**. Long possession trials are a bad bet—avoid them with earlier, reasonable reductions where appropriate.
3) **Evidentiary dismissals (possession):** For drug possession charges in Central City Court, **seven out of thirty are dismissed for evidentiary issues**. Early evidence audit is not optional.
4) **Federal overlap:** Among drug filings in border districts, concurrent state and federal jurisdiction appeared in **327 out of every 2,000 cases**. Across surveyed districts, **26/241 drug cases were kicked up as federal referrals**, and those transferred matters showed shorter local disposition timelines but longer overall time-to-trial when tracked end to end. Use referral strategically; don’t use it as a default delay mechanism.
---
### IX. Staffing and workload: what the numbers say about why our timelines slip
In high-volume urban jurisdictions, **182/586 drug-prosecution files were assigned per assistant DA on average**, a workload slice that correlated with slower dispositions and longer mean trial durations by offense type. That aligns with our day-to-day experience: overloaded ADAs negotiate later, prepare later, and respond to discovery slower—which feeds continuances.
Add reassignments (Capitol District’s **93.81% reassignment** rate), and we get longer negotiation windows (**199/448** days inside negotiation) and more postponed trials (**133/478** at least once). This is why the “standard offer band + early conference resolution” approach is not just policy—it is capacity management.
---
### X. Assault and drug: concrete plea bargain recommendations to reduce trial duration
#### A. Universal caseflow moves (apply to both assault and drug)
1) **Close cases at pretrial conference whenever possible.** The cross-jurisdiction indicator—no more than **13.31 out of every 100 cases fail to reach disposition at this stage**—is a reminder that conference is where backlogs are relieved.
2) **Exploit the pre-trial-prep boundary.** When a plea is accepted before trial prep begins, time saved totals about **17.93%** of median pretrial workload. Make initial offers earlier; set internal deadlines for offer approval before the prep window opens.
3) **Control continuances.** Postponements (the **133/478** pattern) extend trial durations; they also increase plea withdrawals (assault pleas drift into the **49/51** withdrawal odds once calendaring delays set in). Push for firm sentencing dates immediately after acceptance.
#### B. Assault-specific plea posture
1) **Front-load the first offer; make it credible and complete.** DV data shows fewer than **26.21 in 100** fail to accept the initial offer; assault pleas accept before a second offer at **52:3** odds. Build the first offer to close.
2) **Use conditions that reduce victim exposure and future hearings.** With Metro East’s **555/1000** protective order outcomes and the national **11/12** anger-management condition norm, keep conditions standardized to prevent renegotiation delays.
3) **Screen for “long-trial predictors.”** Cases with experts (the **44/60** pattern), technical injury (about **21.41%**), and high hung-jury risk (>5 days, **16/23**) should receive earlier, more pragmatic dispositions—even if that means structured misdemeanor reductions consistent with “no more than **13.03 in every 100** fail to result in misdemeanor convictions” for felony assault.
4) **Account for cooperation ratio (1:5).** Where cooperation is doubtful and recantation risk exists (**17/69** dismissal), avoid over-setting for trial. Consider pleas emphasizing responsibility (aligned with **532/1061** accepting responsibility) to stabilize dispositions.
Additional factual anchors to keep in mind: In county assault trials, only **87.38% of defendants are not acquitted at disposition**. Defense leverage is real. In jurisdictions tracking assault with a deadly weapon, conviction rates are strong once past prelim (**89% of the 87.955%**), so we should distinguish weapon cases from non-weapon cases and not apply a single blanket offer approach.
#### C. Drug-specific plea posture
1) **Treat suppression exposure as the primary triage factor.** With **257/419** suppression rulings altering dispositions, and consent/Miranda success rates as high as those reported (e.g., Pine State Circuit **0.4486**; central circuit only **30.60%** of Miranda claims “not upheld”), early offers should be risk-adjusted.
2) **Use charge reductions strategically to avoid long possession trials.** The nullification probability (**0.753**) in long possession trials is too high to justify “trial-first” postures on marginal evidence. In fast courts, charge reduction offers appear at **0.5955** likelihood; mirror that practice here when it meaningfully shortens time. Also keep the plea sentencing reality in view: The average sentence length accepted in drug possession plea agreements reaches **eighty point six four percent of the maximum allowable term** across surveyed jurisdictions—this can be framed as certainty and proportionality to defendants and counsel.
3) **Leverage diversion/treatment for first-timers and appropriate candidates.** Diversion acceptance is **0.232**; deferred adjudication for first-time offenders trends to roughly **64.56%**; and specialty docket diversion (**101/536**) improves six-month dispositions. These are our best non-trial off-ramps, particularly under lab delay pressure.
4) **Minimize enhanced-charge overreach.** School-zone flag rate is **0.0812**, and repeat-offender enhancement odds are **1 to 814** in favor of not enhancing—use enhancements as a targeted tool, not as a bargaining crutch that triggers litigation and delay.
5) **Plan for trafficking delay and appeals.** Roughly one half of all drug trafficking cases—**fifty point eight nine percent to be precise—remain pending beyond one hundred eighty days from filing**, and appeals follow convictions at **0.9817** probability in high-volume jurisdictions. For trafficking, prioritize early plea conferences, narrow litigated issues, and create clean records.
---
### XI. Additional jurisdictional/operational notes worth retaining
* Across three neighboring jurisdictions tracking clock-stop motions, only **31.08% of filings are not dismissed for speedy-trial violations**. Be careful relying on clock stops as a backlog tool; they are often dismissed and can boomerang into dismissal risk.
* Zero point **zero one seven seven** is the fraction representing average arraignment-to-disposition time for misdemeanor drug offenses relative to the full calendar year. This is a reminder that misdemeanor drug can be extremely fast **if** we do not allow evidentiary and nonappearance issues to balloon.
* In mid-sized counties, about **1 in 2.972** drug defendants were represented by a public defender rather than retained private counsel. Offer communication must be structured, predictable, and documented to prevent negotiation windows from expanding.
* Among juvenile drug cases that reach disposition hearings (representing **62% of all filings**), **86.24% result in conditional discharge agreements**. For juveniles, we should coordinate with juvenile counsel early and avoid settings that force unnecessary contested hearings.
* Among assault cases involving juvenile defendants, **139/560 were waived to adult court**, and the waived subset had lower early-disposition rates but longer average time to verdict by jurisdiction. Screen waiver candidates early; if waiver is likely, start adult-court plea posture immediately to avoid duplicative negotiation cycles.
---
### XII. Riverbend and other assault docket anomalies (what to emulate and what to avoid)
Riverbend is useful precisely because it shows both high early disposition and lingering trial exposure:
* In Riverbend Municipal Court, **474/1000** simple assault filings are disposed at arraignment.
* Yet in Riverbend County’s current fiscal-year assault docket, only **77.17% of cases are not resolved through plea bargains**—meaning pleas resolve a significant minority and trials remain a real driver.
This tells us that **front-door resolution** is possible at scale but does not remove the need for midstream plea discipline (especially at trial-setting hearings, where County A shows the **36.27% jury-trial path overall** once cases survive to that point).
---
### XIII. Implementation: standardized plea bands and timing rules (effective next docket cycle)
1) **Assault (non-weapon, non-strangulation, no serious bodily injury):**
* Default initial offer at or before arraignment/pretrial conference; include standardized protective/no-contact conditions and anger-management where appropriate (consistent with the **11/12** misdemeanor-court norm).
* If discovery disputes begin to dominate (recall **69.83%** of delay), escalate to a “close-now” offer rather than “litigate then offer.”
2) **Assault (weapon enhancement / deadly weapon posture):**
* Because conviction rates are strong once past prelim (**89% of the 87.955%**), maintain firmer offers but still aim to close before trial prep for the **17.93%** time-savings effect.
3) **Drug possession:**
* Mandatory early evidence audit (lab status, chain of custody, search/Miranda exposure).
* Where evidence is clean, keep offers predictable; where evidence is borderline (suppression likely), use calibrated charge reductions consistent with the **0.5955** “faster courts” pattern and mindful of the high nullification probability (**0.753**) in long possession trials.
4) **Drug trafficking:**
* Assign early to stable staffing to avoid negotiation churn; do not allow reassignment drift (see Capitol District’s **93.81%** reassignment rate as the cautionary tale).
* Anticipate extended pendency (**50.89% >180 days**) and appeal likelihood (**0.9817**) in how we draft pleas and records.
5) **Backlog windows (Metro District Court):**
* We will expand “enhanced plea offers” beyond the current profile where just **46.78% of defendants do not receive enhanced plea offers**; the point is not leniency but **earlier certainty** and fewer trial days.
---
### XIV. Closing
The data across jurisdictions makes the same point in multiple ways: **cases that do not plead early are not merely “pending”; they become structurally slower and more expensive**, especially when they trigger discovery disputes (assault) or suppression/chain-of-custody litigation (drug). Our goal is to move disposition earlier in the lifecycle—arraignment, pretrial conference, and pre-prep—using standardized, evidence-informed offers that reduce trial duration while protecting community safety and victim interests.
Supervisors will follow up with unit-specific offer bands and a short checklist reflecting the highest-impact predictors identified here (experts/technical injury/self-defense for assault; lab/custody/search/Miranda for drug). Please route edge cases to your bureau chiefs early—before the negotiation window becomes the calendar.
Model: gen_question_text_raw
For each of the following 20 topics, generate a question or statement that asks about the odds of the topic, aka: probability to which something occursThe question will be answered by reading a document with these properties:
Category: `court system and legal proceedings`
Subject: `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`
Document type: `Annual Statistical Report submitted by the State Court Administrator to the Conference of Chief Justices detailing case clearance rates and median time-to-disposition across felony categories`
Topics:
1. Percentage of felony drug possession cases disposed within 180 days of filing
2. Average number of days from arraignment to final disposition for violent felony cases
3. Case clearance rate for property crime felonies in urban jurisdictions
4. Proportion of aggravated assault cases resolved through plea agreements
5. Median time from indictment to trial commencement for murder cases
6. Percentage of burglary cases that proceed to jury trial
7. Rate of case dismissals prior to trial for fraud offenses
8. Average duration of jury deliberation in sexual assault trials
9. Proportion of robbery cases disposed through bench trial versus jury trial
10. Case clearance rate for white-collar crime prosecutions in metropolitan counties
11. Percentage of domestic violence felony cases resulting in conviction
12. Median number of continuances granted per case in drug trafficking prosecutions
13. Rate of pretrial diversion acceptance for first-time felony offenders
14. Average time from arrest to preliminary hearing in rural jurisdictions
15. Proportion of vehicular homicide cases resolved within one year
16. Percentage of felony DUI cases that exceed statutory time limits for disposition
17. Case clearance rate for weapons possession offenses
18. Median trial duration for complex financial crime cases
19. Rate of competency evaluation requests in felony mental health cases
20. Percentage of kidnapping cases disposed through negotiated settlement
Mix between questions, statements, and JSON-style questions:
- If a question: ask 'what is the odds that...'
- If a statement: say 'the odds of ... is...'
- If JSON: break the topic into semantically meaningful keys. Each value should contain ONLY its own dimension — do NOT repeat or summarize other keys' values. No 'ask' or 'question' key that restates the other fields as a sentence. Examples:
{"location": "Michigan", "metric": "bicycle failure rate"}
{"department": "cardiology", "event": "readmission within 30 days"}
{"species": "black bear", "observation": "sighted in alpine zone"}
The JSON keys should reflect the real dimensions of the topic, not generic keys like 'task' or 'format'.
Vary the phrasing. Each item should be answerable with a odds between 0 and 1. Do NOT include the answer or any numbers.
1. {"offense_category":"felony drug possession","outcome_window":"disposed within 180 days of filing","probability_prompt":"what is the odds that a case meets this window?"}
2. What is the odds that a violent felony case’s time from arraignment to final disposition matches the report’s average duration?
3. {"jurisdiction_type":"urban","felony_type":"property crime","metric":"case clearance rate","query":"what is the odds that a property-crime felony is cleared?"}
4. The odds of an aggravated assault case being resolved through a plea agreement is reflected in the annual report.
5. What is the odds that a murder case reaches trial commencement within the median time measured from indictment?
6. {"case_type":"burglary","stage":"disposition path","trial_mode":"jury trial","probability_question":"what is the odds that the case proceeds to a jury trial?"}
7. What is the odds that a fraud offense case is dismissed prior to trial?
8. The odds of a sexual assault trial having a jury deliberation lasting the report’s average duration is measurable from the court statistics.
9. {"offense":"robbery","disposition_method_comparison":["bench trial","jury trial"],"probability_target":"bench trial","prompt":"what is the odds that disposition occurs via the target method?"}
10. What is the odds that a white-collar crime prosecution in a metropolitan county is cleared (as defined by the report’s clearance rate)?
11. {"charge_context":"domestic violence","severity":"felony","case_outcome":"conviction","probability_prompt":"what is the odds that the case results in conviction?"}
12. The odds of a drug trafficking prosecution receiving the median number of continuances per case is captured in the administrator’s report.
13. What is the odds that a first-time felony offender is accepted into a pretrial diversion program?
14. {"setting":"rural jurisdiction","timeline_segment":"arrest to preliminary hearing","reference_point":"report average","probability_query":"what is the odds that the timeline aligns with the average?"}
15. What is the odds that a vehicular homicide case is resolved within one year?
16. The odds of a felony DUI case exceeding statutory time limits for disposition is described by the disposition-timeliness statistics.
17. {"offense_group":"weapons possession","metric":"case clearance rate","probability_prompt":"what is the odds that the offense is cleared?"}
18. What is the odds that a complex financial crime case has a trial duration equal to the report’s median?
19. {"case_context":"felony mental health","procedure":"competency evaluation request","probability_question":"what is the odds that a request is made?"}
20. What is the odds that a kidnapping case is disposed through a negotiated settlement?
Model: gen_question_text_raw
For each of the following 20 topics, generate a question or statement that asks about the rate of the topic, aka: probability to which something occursThe question will be answered by reading a document with these properties:
Category: `court system and legal proceedings`
Subject: `Criminal case disposition rates and average trial durations by offense type and jurisdiction`
Document type: `Annual Statistical Report submitted by the State Court Administrator to the Conference of Chief Justices detailing case clearance rates and median time-to-disposition across felony categories`
Topics:
1. Average time from motion filing to suppression hearing in drug cases
2. Proportion of arson cases pending longer than 18 months
3. Case clearance rate for human trafficking prosecutions
4. Percentage of child abuse felony cases with expedited processing
5. Median time between guilty plea entry and sentencing hearing
6. Rate of interlocutory appeals filed in homicide cases
7. Proportion of elder abuse cases dismissed for insufficient evidence
8. Average number of pretrial motions filed per organized crime case
9. Percentage of identity theft cases resolved within six months
10. Case clearance rate for cybercrime prosecutions across all jurisdictions
11. Median age of pending felony cases in suburban court systems
12. Rate of mandatory minimum sentence applicability in drug distribution cases
13. Proportion of manslaughter cases requiring expert witness testimony
14. Percentage of felony cases where defendant fails to appear at scheduled hearings
15. Average number of days between arrest and formal charging for sex offenses
16. Case clearance rate for terrorism-related prosecutions
17. Median duration of sentencing proceedings in capital murder cases
18. Rate of successful motion for change of venue in high-profile cases
19. Proportion of extortion cases with multiple co-defendants
20. Percentage of felony assault cases reopened on appeal
Mix between questions, statements, and JSON-style questions:
- If a question: ask 'what is the rate that...'
- If a statement: say 'the rate of ... is...'
- If JSON: break the topic into semantically meaningful keys. Each value should contain ONLY its own dimension — do NOT repeat or summarize other keys' values. No 'ask' or 'question' key that restates the other fields as a sentence. Examples:
{"location": "Michigan", "metric": "bicycle failure rate"}
{"department": "cardiology", "event": "readmission within 30 days"}
{"species": "black bear", "observation": "sighted in alpine zone"}
The JSON keys should reflect the real dimensions of the topic, not generic keys like 'task' or 'format'.
Vary the phrasing. Each item should be answerable with a rate between 0 and 1. Do NOT include the answer or any numbers.
1. What is the rate that a drug case has its suppression hearing occur within the typical window following a motion filing?
2. The rate of arson cases that remain pending longer than 18 months is ___.
3. {"offense_type":"human trafficking","metric":"case clearance rate","case_stage":"prosecution disposition"}
4. What is the rate that a child abuse felony case receives expedited processing?
5. The probability that a case’s sentencing hearing is scheduled within the median interval after a guilty plea entry is ___.
6. {"case_category":"homicide","filing_type":"interlocutory appeal","metric":"filing rate"}
7. What is the rate that an elder abuse case is dismissed due to insufficient evidence?
8. The rate of organized crime cases that involve more than the typical number of pretrial motions filed is ___.
9. {"offense":"identity theft","timeframe":"within six months","outcome":"case resolved","metric":"resolution rate"}
10. What is the rate that a cybercrime prosecution is cleared across all jurisdictions?
11. The probability that a pending felony case in a suburban court system exceeds the median pending age is ___.
12. {"drug_offense":"distribution","sentencing_feature":"mandatory minimum applicability","metric":"applicability rate"}
13. What is the rate that a manslaughter case requires expert witness testimony?
14. The rate of felony cases in which the defendant fails to appear at a scheduled hearing is ___.
15. {"offense_class":"sex offenses","interval":"arrest to formal charging","metric":"probability an interval matches the average duration band"}
16. What is the rate that terrorism-related prosecutions achieve case clearance?
17. The probability that sentencing proceedings in a capital murder case exceed the reported median duration is ___.
18. {"case_profile":"high-profile","motion":"change of venue","metric":"success rate"}
19. What is the rate that an extortion case involves multiple co-defendants?
20. The rate of felony assault cases that are reopened on appeal is ___.