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'''Diversion programs in criminal justice''' are arrangements that route a person accused of a crime out of the ordinary path of prosecution and into a set of conditions instead. The person agrees to do certain things. Complete treatment. Stay employed. Pay restitution. Avoid new arrests. If the conditions are met, the charge is dismissed or never filed. The defendant ends up without a conviction. Diversion exists at the federal level and in nearly every state, though the form it takes differs a great deal depending on the court and the offense.
'''Diversion Programs in Criminal Justice''' are court-supervised alternatives to traditional criminal prosecution that let eligible defendants avoid a formal conviction by completing structured requirements such as substance abuse treatment, mental health counseling, community service, restitution, or educational programs. Rather than relying solely on punishment, these initiatives address underlying issues like addiction, mental illness, or socioeconomic factors that contribute to criminal behavior. Successful completion typically results in dismissal of charges, and in many jurisdictions the arrest record can be sealed or expunged.


These programs operate at federal, state, and local levels. They're most common in state systems, where they handle 18–22 percent of felony arrests nationwide as of 2025.<ref>{{cite web |title=Diversion Programs in the Criminal Justice System |url=https://www.americanprogress.org/article/diversion-programs-in-the-criminal-justice-system/ |publisher=Center for American Progress |date=January 15, 2025 |access-date=November 28, 2025}}</ref> They reduce recidivism by 38–50 percent compared to standard prosecution and save an estimated $4 to $12 for every $1 invested through avoided incarceration and court costs.<ref>{{cite web |title=Drug Courts |url=https://nij.ojp.gov/topics/articles/do-drug-courts-work-findings-drug-court-research |publisher=National Institute of Justice |date=June 1, 2023 |access-date=November 28, 2025}}</ref> For defendants, it's a path to rehabilitation and reintegration. For the justice system, it eases overcrowding and allows smarter resource allocation.
The label covers several distinct mechanisms. Pretrial diversion suspends a prosecution while the defendant completes supervision. A deferred prosecution agreement holds charges in abeyance under a signed contract. Specialty courts such as drug court or veterans court fold supervision and treatment into a single docket overseen by one judge. For companies, prosecutors use deferred prosecution and non-prosecution agreements to resolve corporate cases without a guilty plea. The common thread is that conviction is avoided in exchange for compliance.


The expansion of diversion reflects a shift toward evidence-based reforms. Federal programs have grown rapidly since 2022, and state initiatives now include specialized courts for veterans, youth, and trafficking survivors. Still, access isn't equal. Rural residents and people with prior records face real barriers.
== Overview ==


==How Diversion Programs Work==
Diversion works by trading a deferred or declined prosecution for performance. A prosecutor or a judge identifies a case as a candidate. The defendant accepts conditions. Supervision runs for a fixed term, often somewhere between six months and two years. During that window the person is monitored. At the end, the outcome turns on compliance. Finish the program and the charge goes away. Fail it and the case returns to the normal track, where the defendant faces the original charge.


Eligible defendants get diverted from the standard criminal process at various stages: pre-arrest, pre-charge, post-charge but pre-plea, or post-conviction. They enter supervised rehabilitation or community-based interventions instead. Participants sign a contract outlining conditions, monitored by a multidisciplinary team that includes judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, treatment providers, and case managers. Most programs run 6 to 24 months, with advancement based on hitting milestones.
The appeal is practical on both sides. Courts and prosecutors get to clear lower-level cases without the cost of a trial and without adding to prison populations. Defendants get a path that does not end in a record. The trade-off is that a person who enters diversion gives up time, money, and the leverage that comes with contesting the charge. Many programs require an admission of facts or a waiver of speedy-trial rights as a condition of entry, which raises the stakes of failure.


Weekly or bi-weekly court hearings keep participants accountable. Judges review progress, award incentives (like reduced supervision), or impose sanctions (such as community service for missed appointments). Drug testing, counseling, and vocational training are standard. Fail to comply and you can get kicked out and sent back to regular prosecution. Succeed and your charges get dismissed.
Eligibility is the gatekeeper. Most programs are limited to non-violent offenses and to defendants with little or no prior record. Cases involving violence, weapons, sexual offenses against children, or organized criminal activity are usually excluded by rule. Participation is voluntary in the sense that a defendant can decline and go to trial instead, but the practical pressure to accept can be substantial.


Federal programs focus on pretrial diversion for non-violent first-time offenders. State models often use problem-solving courts like drug or mental-health courts, blending criminal justice with social services.
== Federal Pretrial Diversion ==


==Eligibility Requirements==
The federal government runs a formal pretrial diversion program administered through the United States Attorney's offices and the federal Probation Office. The framework is set out in the Department of Justice's Justice Manual at section 9-22.000.<ref>{{cite web |title=Justice Manual 9-22.000 - Pretrial Diversion Program |url=https://www.justice.gov/jm/jm-9-22000-pretrial-diversion |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> The decision to offer diversion rests with the United States Attorney, who exercises prosecutorial discretion rather than following an automatic rule.


Rules vary by jurisdiction. Generally, you need a non-violent offense tied to treatable issues like substance use or mental health. Federal programs prioritize first-time offenders with no felony history and exclude cases involving violence, child exploitation, or terrorism.<ref>{{cite web |title=Pretrial Diversion Program |url=https://www.justice.gov/criminal/criminal-ceo/pretrial-diversion |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice |date=May 1, 2025 |access-date=November 28, 2025}}</ref> States are more flexible, often accepting people with prior misdemeanors or low-level felonies, especially in specialized courts.
A defendant accepted into the program signs a diversion agreement before any guilty plea is entered. Supervision is handled by a United States Probation Officer. The standard term is up to eighteen months, and prosecution is held in suspension during that period.<ref>{{cite web |title=Pretrial Diversion |url=https://www.uscourts.gov/services-forms/probation-and-pretrial-services |publisher=Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> Conditions commonly include reporting to the probation officer, maintaining employment or schooling, completing counseling or treatment where relevant, and paying restitution to any victims. If the person completes the term without violating the agreement, the United States Attorney declines to prosecute and no charge is filed, or a filed charge is dismissed. The arrest may still appear in records, but there is no conviction.


Most programs require voluntary participation and a demonstrated need for treatment, assessed using screening tools like the Simple Screening Instrument for Substance Abuse. No active warrants. Indigent defendants don't pay, though some states charge co-pays for treatment.
The Justice Manual lists categories of cases the program is not meant to reach. It generally excludes people with two or more prior felony convictions, public officials accused of offenses connected to their office, and defendants charged with offenses involving national security or threats to public safety.<ref>{{cite web |title=Justice Manual 9-22.100 - Criteria for Pretrial Diversion |url=https://www.justice.gov/jm/jm-9-22000-pretrial-diversion |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> Within those limits, the program is aimed at lower-level, non-violent federal cases where the cost of a full prosecution is hard to justify against the likely outcome.


==Key Processes and Procedures==
Federal pretrial diversion is distinct from pretrial services supervision, which applies to defendants released while their cases are pending. It is also distinct from the deferred prosecution agreements used in corporate cases, even though the names overlap.


The process typically breaks down like this:
== Specialty Courts ==


# '''Referral and Screening''': Prosecutors or judges refer defendants; a clinical assessment determines fit (1 to 2 weeks).
Specialty courts, also called problem-solving courts, are a state-level form of diversion. Rather than route a case to a separate program, the court itself becomes the program. A single judge supervises a docket of defendants who share a common issue, and the same judge sees each participant repeatedly over months. The model began with the drug court founded in Miami-Dade County, Florida, in 1989, which is generally credited as the first of its kind in the United States.<ref>{{cite web |title=Drug Courts |url=https://nij.ojp.gov/topics/drug-courts |publisher=National Institute of Justice |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
# '''Admission and Contract''': Participants sign a binding agreement laying out conditions, goals, and consequences.
# '''Intensive Supervision Phase''': Regular court appearances, drug testing (2 to 3 times weekly at first), and treatment sessions.
# '''Progression and Review''': Advance through phases based on compliance; team meetings adjust plans quarterly.
# '''Completion or Termination''': Graduation ceremonies for those who finish; non-compliance sends you back to prosecution.


Hearings emphasize therapeutic jurisprudence. Judges provide encouragement rather than acting as adversaries.
Drug courts handle defendants whose offenses are tied to substance use. A participant reports to court on a regular schedule, submits to drug testing, attends treatment, and faces graduated responses from the judge. Stay clean and the supervision eases. Test positive or miss appointments and the judge can impose sanctions, up to removal from the program. Completion typically results in a dismissed charge or a reduced sentence, depending on the model the jurisdiction uses.


==Current Programs and Services==
Other specialty dockets follow the same template for different populations. Mental-health courts connect defendants with treatment and case management in place of incarceration. Veterans treatment courts pair veteran defendants with mentors and link them to benefits and services through the Department of Veterans Affairs. There are also dockets built around domestic violence, driving under the influence, and reentry. These courts are overwhelmingly creatures of state and local justice systems. The federal courts operate a small number of reentry and treatment dockets, but the bulk of specialty-court activity is in state criminal courts.


Federal diversion formalized under Justice Manual § 9-22.000 in 2023 operates in 62 of 93 U.S. Attorney districts, focusing on pretrial programs for drug possession and fraud.<ref>{{cite web |title=Justice Manual § 9-22.000 - Pretrial Diversion |url=https://www.justice.gov/jm/jm-9-22000-pretrial-diversion |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice |date=June 2025 |access-date=November 28, 2025}}</ref> States run over 3,500 drug courts alone, plus 650 mental-health courts and 600 veterans treatment courts.
The defining feature across all of them is direct judicial involvement. The judge is not a neutral referee who appears at a hearing and leaves. The judge tracks each participant week to week, hands out incentives and sanctions in person, and stays on the case until the person graduates or washes out.


Notable services include medication-assisted treatment (buprenorphine, for example) in 80 percent of drug courts and vocational training in 70 percent of state programs.
== Corporate Deferred and Non-Prosecution Agreements ==


==How to Access or Participate==
When the defendant is a company rather than a person, federal prosecutors use two related tools: the deferred prosecution agreement and the non-prosecution agreement. Both let a corporation resolve a criminal investigation without pleading guilty, which matters because a conviction can trigger collateral consequences such as the loss of licenses or debarment from government contracts.


You can get into diversion through:
Under a deferred prosecution agreement, the government files a criminal charge but agrees to hold it in suspension for a set term. The company admits a statement of facts, pays a financial penalty, and agrees to remedial steps such as compliance reforms or an outside monitor. If the company meets its obligations through the term, the government dismisses the charge.<ref>{{cite web |title=Justice Manual 9-28.000 - Principles of Federal Prosecution of Business Organizations |url=https://www.justice.gov/jm/jm-9-28000-principles-federal-prosecution-business-organizations |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> A non-prosecution agreement reaches a similar result without any charge being filed at all. The terms are recorded in a letter agreement rather than in court, and the government promises not to prosecute as long as the company performs.
* Prosecutor referral at your initial court appearance.
* A motion or application from your defense attorney.
* Judicial assignment after arrest.


There aren't formal deadlines, but getting referred early helps. Indigent participants get free legal aid. Programs are taxpayer-funded, though some states charge small fees ($25 to $50 a month).
The Justice Department's principles for prosecuting business organizations guide when these agreements are appropriate. Prosecutors weigh factors such as the seriousness of the conduct, the company's history, whether it voluntarily disclosed the problem, the quality of its cooperation, and the strength of its compliance program.<ref>{{cite web |title=Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs |url=https://www.justice.gov/criminal/criminal-fraud/page/file/937501/download |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice, Criminal Division |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> The terms of large corporate agreements are usually public, and they often run for several years with reporting requirements and, in some cases, an independent monitor installed to verify compliance.


==Requirements and Qualifications==
These corporate agreements share the basic logic of individual diversion. Prosecution is suspended, conditions are imposed, and the matter resolves without a conviction if the conditions are satisfied. The scale and the players are different, but the mechanism is the same.


Beyond initial eligibility, you've got to maintain employment or stay in school, show up to every session, and submit to random testing. About 40 to 50 percent fail, often because of relapse or not following the rules.
== Frequently Asked Questions ==


==Research Findings and Statistics==
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQ|question=What is a diversion program?|answer=A diversion program is an arrangement that moves a criminal case out of the normal prosecution track and into a set of conditions. The defendant agrees to requirements such as treatment, supervision, or restitution. If the conditions are met, the charge is dismissed or never filed, and the person avoids a conviction.}}
{{FAQ|question=Does completing diversion result in a conviction?|answer=No. The point of diversion is to avoid a conviction. When a participant completes the program, the charge is dismissed or the prosecutor declines to file it. The underlying arrest may still appear in some records, but there is no conviction on the person's record.}}
{{FAQ|question=Who runs the federal pretrial diversion program?|answer=The federal program is administered by the United States Attorney's offices, with supervision handled by United States Probation Officers. The framework is set out in the Department of Justice Justice Manual at section 9-22.000. The decision to offer diversion is made by the United States Attorney as a matter of prosecutorial discretion.}}
{{FAQ|question=How long does federal pretrial diversion last?|answer=The standard federal pretrial diversion term runs up to eighteen months. The prosecution is held in suspension during that period while the defendant is supervised by a probation officer and completes the agreed conditions.}}
{{FAQ|question=What is the difference between a drug court and pretrial diversion?|answer=Pretrial diversion routes a case to a separate supervision program, often before any plea. A drug court is a specialty court where the judge directly supervises a docket of defendants over months, with regular hearings, drug testing, and treatment. Drug courts are mostly a state-level mechanism, while formal pretrial diversion exists at both the federal and state levels.}}
{{FAQ|question=What is a deferred prosecution agreement for a company?|answer=A deferred prosecution agreement lets a company resolve a criminal case without a guilty plea. The government files a charge but suspends it while the company admits the facts, pays a penalty, and adopts compliance reforms. If the company meets its obligations, the charge is dismissed. A non-prosecution agreement reaches a similar result without any charge being filed.}}
{{FAQ|question=Who is eligible for a diversion program?|answer=Eligibility varies by jurisdiction and program. Most diversion is limited to non-violent offenses and to defendants with little or no prior criminal record. Cases involving violence, weapons, sexual offenses against children, or organized criminal activity are commonly excluded. The federal program also generally excludes defendants with two or more prior felony convictions and public officials charged in connection with their office.}}
{{FAQSection/End}}


Meta-analyses show drug court graduates reoffend 38 to 50 percent less than traditional defendants. Mental-health courts reduce rearrests by 45 percent.<ref>{{cite web |title=Do Drug Courts Work? Findings From Drug Court Research |url=https://nij.ojp.gov/topics/articles/do-drug-courts-work-findings-drug-court-research |publisher=National Institute of Justice |date=June 1, 2023 |access-date=November 28, 2025}}</ref> A 2024 NIJ study found felony rearrest rates dropped from 40 percent to 12 percent in one county and from 50 percent to 35 percent in another over two years.
== References ==


Cost savings reach $4 to $12 per $1 invested, mostly by avoiding incarceration. Women make up 60 percent of participants, minorities 45 percent Black and 20 percent Hispanic, though gaps still exist.
<references />
 
Miami-Dade's original drug court cut recidivism by 47 percent in its first year. California's statewide expansion serves 20,000 people annually.
 
==Criticisms and Challenges==
 
There's real criticism here. Black defendants are 20 percent less likely to get offered entry, and "net-widening" can trap minor offenders in more scrutiny than standard prosecution would bring.<ref>{{cite web |title=Are Drug Courts Effective? Drug Court Success Rate Statistics |url=https://www.ebpsociety.org/blog/education/271-efficacy-drug-courts |publisher=EBP Society |date=April 18, 2025 |access-date=November 28, 2025}}</ref> High dropout rates (40 to 50 percent) stem from treatment barriers, and funding shortages limit rural access. Some programs don't stick to evidence-based models, which hurts their effectiveness.
 
Recent reforms include 2025 DOJ equity grants and telehealth integration.
 
==Historical Background==
 
Diversion emerged in the 1970s as caseloads climbed. California's 1975 statute pioneered deferred entry of judgment. The 1980s crack epidemic led to drug courts, starting with Miami's 1989 pilot.


===Legislative History===
{{DEFAULTSORT:Justice, Diversion Programs in Criminal}}
[[Category:Federal Criminal Law]]


The Violent Crime Control Act (1994) funded early expansion. The Second Chance Act (2008) supported reentry variants. The First Step Act (2018) indirectly boosted the field by prioritizing treatment.
===Evolution Over Time===
From 100 drug courts in 1995 to 3,500 by 2025, these programs evolved to handle co-occurring disorders and serve veterans. Between 2023 and 2025, federal standardization and state automatic diversion laws took hold.
==See also==
* [[Drug Court]]
* [[Mental-Health Court]]
* [[Veterans Treatment Court]]
* [[Pretrial Diversion]]
==External links==
* [https://allrise.org National Association of Drug Court Professionals]
* [https://nij.ojp.gov/topics/articles/do-drug-courts-work-findings-drug-court-research National Institute of Justice: Drug Court Research]
==References==
<references />
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== Nightmare Success Guides ==
* [https://nightmaresuccess.com/guides/addiction-recovery-and-reentry-after-incarceration/ Addiction, Recovery, and Reentry After Incarceration] — How to align sobriety planning with reentry realities and reduce relapse risk after release.

Latest revision as of 14:04, 3 June 2026

Diversion programs in criminal justice are arrangements that route a person accused of a crime out of the ordinary path of prosecution and into a set of conditions instead. The person agrees to do certain things. Complete treatment. Stay employed. Pay restitution. Avoid new arrests. If the conditions are met, the charge is dismissed or never filed. The defendant ends up without a conviction. Diversion exists at the federal level and in nearly every state, though the form it takes differs a great deal depending on the court and the offense.

The label covers several distinct mechanisms. Pretrial diversion suspends a prosecution while the defendant completes supervision. A deferred prosecution agreement holds charges in abeyance under a signed contract. Specialty courts such as drug court or veterans court fold supervision and treatment into a single docket overseen by one judge. For companies, prosecutors use deferred prosecution and non-prosecution agreements to resolve corporate cases without a guilty plea. The common thread is that conviction is avoided in exchange for compliance.

Overview

Diversion works by trading a deferred or declined prosecution for performance. A prosecutor or a judge identifies a case as a candidate. The defendant accepts conditions. Supervision runs for a fixed term, often somewhere between six months and two years. During that window the person is monitored. At the end, the outcome turns on compliance. Finish the program and the charge goes away. Fail it and the case returns to the normal track, where the defendant faces the original charge.

The appeal is practical on both sides. Courts and prosecutors get to clear lower-level cases without the cost of a trial and without adding to prison populations. Defendants get a path that does not end in a record. The trade-off is that a person who enters diversion gives up time, money, and the leverage that comes with contesting the charge. Many programs require an admission of facts or a waiver of speedy-trial rights as a condition of entry, which raises the stakes of failure.

Eligibility is the gatekeeper. Most programs are limited to non-violent offenses and to defendants with little or no prior record. Cases involving violence, weapons, sexual offenses against children, or organized criminal activity are usually excluded by rule. Participation is voluntary in the sense that a defendant can decline and go to trial instead, but the practical pressure to accept can be substantial.

Federal Pretrial Diversion

The federal government runs a formal pretrial diversion program administered through the United States Attorney's offices and the federal Probation Office. The framework is set out in the Department of Justice's Justice Manual at section 9-22.000.[1] The decision to offer diversion rests with the United States Attorney, who exercises prosecutorial discretion rather than following an automatic rule.

A defendant accepted into the program signs a diversion agreement before any guilty plea is entered. Supervision is handled by a United States Probation Officer. The standard term is up to eighteen months, and prosecution is held in suspension during that period.[2] Conditions commonly include reporting to the probation officer, maintaining employment or schooling, completing counseling or treatment where relevant, and paying restitution to any victims. If the person completes the term without violating the agreement, the United States Attorney declines to prosecute and no charge is filed, or a filed charge is dismissed. The arrest may still appear in records, but there is no conviction.

The Justice Manual lists categories of cases the program is not meant to reach. It generally excludes people with two or more prior felony convictions, public officials accused of offenses connected to their office, and defendants charged with offenses involving national security or threats to public safety.[3] Within those limits, the program is aimed at lower-level, non-violent federal cases where the cost of a full prosecution is hard to justify against the likely outcome.

Federal pretrial diversion is distinct from pretrial services supervision, which applies to defendants released while their cases are pending. It is also distinct from the deferred prosecution agreements used in corporate cases, even though the names overlap.

Specialty Courts

Specialty courts, also called problem-solving courts, are a state-level form of diversion. Rather than route a case to a separate program, the court itself becomes the program. A single judge supervises a docket of defendants who share a common issue, and the same judge sees each participant repeatedly over months. The model began with the drug court founded in Miami-Dade County, Florida, in 1989, which is generally credited as the first of its kind in the United States.[4]

Drug courts handle defendants whose offenses are tied to substance use. A participant reports to court on a regular schedule, submits to drug testing, attends treatment, and faces graduated responses from the judge. Stay clean and the supervision eases. Test positive or miss appointments and the judge can impose sanctions, up to removal from the program. Completion typically results in a dismissed charge or a reduced sentence, depending on the model the jurisdiction uses.

Other specialty dockets follow the same template for different populations. Mental-health courts connect defendants with treatment and case management in place of incarceration. Veterans treatment courts pair veteran defendants with mentors and link them to benefits and services through the Department of Veterans Affairs. There are also dockets built around domestic violence, driving under the influence, and reentry. These courts are overwhelmingly creatures of state and local justice systems. The federal courts operate a small number of reentry and treatment dockets, but the bulk of specialty-court activity is in state criminal courts.

The defining feature across all of them is direct judicial involvement. The judge is not a neutral referee who appears at a hearing and leaves. The judge tracks each participant week to week, hands out incentives and sanctions in person, and stays on the case until the person graduates or washes out.

Corporate Deferred and Non-Prosecution Agreements

When the defendant is a company rather than a person, federal prosecutors use two related tools: the deferred prosecution agreement and the non-prosecution agreement. Both let a corporation resolve a criminal investigation without pleading guilty, which matters because a conviction can trigger collateral consequences such as the loss of licenses or debarment from government contracts.

Under a deferred prosecution agreement, the government files a criminal charge but agrees to hold it in suspension for a set term. The company admits a statement of facts, pays a financial penalty, and agrees to remedial steps such as compliance reforms or an outside monitor. If the company meets its obligations through the term, the government dismisses the charge.[5] A non-prosecution agreement reaches a similar result without any charge being filed at all. The terms are recorded in a letter agreement rather than in court, and the government promises not to prosecute as long as the company performs.

The Justice Department's principles for prosecuting business organizations guide when these agreements are appropriate. Prosecutors weigh factors such as the seriousness of the conduct, the company's history, whether it voluntarily disclosed the problem, the quality of its cooperation, and the strength of its compliance program.[6] The terms of large corporate agreements are usually public, and they often run for several years with reporting requirements and, in some cases, an independent monitor installed to verify compliance.

These corporate agreements share the basic logic of individual diversion. Prosecution is suspended, conditions are imposed, and the matter resolves without a conviction if the conditions are satisfied. The scale and the players are different, but the mechanism is the same.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is a diversion program?

A diversion program is an arrangement that moves a criminal case out of the normal prosecution track and into a set of conditions. The defendant agrees to requirements such as treatment, supervision, or restitution. If the conditions are met, the charge is dismissed or never filed, and the person avoids a conviction.


Q: Does completing diversion result in a conviction?

No. The point of diversion is to avoid a conviction. When a participant completes the program, the charge is dismissed or the prosecutor declines to file it. The underlying arrest may still appear in some records, but there is no conviction on the person's record.


Q: Who runs the federal pretrial diversion program?

The federal program is administered by the United States Attorney's offices, with supervision handled by United States Probation Officers. The framework is set out in the Department of Justice Justice Manual at section 9-22.000. The decision to offer diversion is made by the United States Attorney as a matter of prosecutorial discretion.


Q: How long does federal pretrial diversion last?

The standard federal pretrial diversion term runs up to eighteen months. The prosecution is held in suspension during that period while the defendant is supervised by a probation officer and completes the agreed conditions.


Q: What is the difference between a drug court and pretrial diversion?

Pretrial diversion routes a case to a separate supervision program, often before any plea. A drug court is a specialty court where the judge directly supervises a docket of defendants over months, with regular hearings, drug testing, and treatment. Drug courts are mostly a state-level mechanism, while formal pretrial diversion exists at both the federal and state levels.


Q: What is a deferred prosecution agreement for a company?

A deferred prosecution agreement lets a company resolve a criminal case without a guilty plea. The government files a charge but suspends it while the company admits the facts, pays a penalty, and adopts compliance reforms. If the company meets its obligations, the charge is dismissed. A non-prosecution agreement reaches a similar result without any charge being filed.


Q: Who is eligible for a diversion program?

Eligibility varies by jurisdiction and program. Most diversion is limited to non-violent offenses and to defendants with little or no prior criminal record. Cases involving violence, weapons, sexual offenses against children, or organized criminal activity are commonly excluded. The federal program also generally excludes defendants with two or more prior felony convictions and public officials charged in connection with their office.


References

  1. "Justice Manual 9-22.000 - Pretrial Diversion Program". U.S. Department of Justice. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  2. "Pretrial Diversion". Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  3. "Justice Manual 9-22.100 - Criteria for Pretrial Diversion". U.S. Department of Justice. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  4. "Drug Courts". National Institute of Justice. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  5. "Justice Manual 9-28.000 - Principles of Federal Prosecution of Business Organizations". U.S. Department of Justice. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  6. "Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs". U.S. Department of Justice, Criminal Division. Retrieved 2026-06-03.