Psychopathy Scores Predict Recidivism in High-risk Youth: A Five-year Follow-up Study

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Abstract

Psychopathic traits have been associated with rearrest in adolescents involved in the criminal legal system. Much of the prior work has focused on White samples, short follow-up windows, and relatively low-risk youth. The current study aimed to evaluate the utility of the Hare Psychopathy Checklist: Youth Version (PCL:YV) for predicting general and violent felony recidivism in a large sample of high-risk, predominantly Hispanic/Latino, male adolescents (n = 254) with a five-year follow-up period. Results indicated higher PCL:YV scores and lower full-scale estimated IQ scores were significantly associated with a shorter time to felony and violent felony rearrest. These effects generalized to Hispanic/Latino adolescents (n = 193)—a group that faces disproportionate risk of being detained or committed to juvenile correctional facilities in the U.S. These results suggest that expert-rated measures of psychopathic traits and IQ are reliable predictors of subsequent felony and violent felony rearrest among high-risk male adolescents.

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Allen, C. H., Gullapalli, A. R., Milillo, M., Ulrich, D. M., Rodriguez, S. N., Maurer, J. M., … Kiehl, K. A. (2024). Psychopathy Scores Predict Recidivism in High-risk Youth: A Five-year Follow-up Study. Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology, 52(7), 1089–1103. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-024-01169-x

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