HCDA’s Mission Statement: The Harris County District Attorney’s Office has launched the Data Transparency Dashboard, an innovative project aimed at promoting data freedom. This dashboard provides valuable data about the local justice system to the public, media, and researchers. The initiative seeks to foster openness, accountability, and informed public participation in line with transparent government principles.
Source: https://app.dao.hctx.net/publicdata/#hero
The Harris County District Attorney’s Office unveiled a new public dashboard on Wednesday, providing unprecedented access to detailed court data for nearly one million criminal cases.
The dashboard includes a wide array of key statistics dating back to 2015, in most categories. Among the most notable features of the new dashboard are stats on pending cases, dismissed cases and cases that’ve been thrown out due to lack of probable cause.
This data will be updated monthly, allowing the public to track the county’s legal trends in real-time, according to District Attorney Kim Ogg.
“The district attorney’s office is the one place where much information comes together — from the police, from the clerk’s office, from the courts and from information that we produce,” Ogg said. “The public will benefit because the criminal justice system is really the people’s system.”
The dashboard was created in partnership with the DA’s office and the University of Houston’s Hewlett Packard Enterprise Data Science Institute and aims to enhance transparency and accountability in the justice system, Ogg added.
Notably, the dashboard includes data on the number of people released from jail on bond who’ve gone on to commit another offense.
In recent years, Harris County’s justice system has been under scrutiny, with debates intensifying over how best to balance public safety and defendants’ rights. In the past, Ogg has accused local judges of being soft on crime by not setting higher bond amounts and dismissing an increased number of cases due to a lack of probable cause — the result of ”a different attitude taken by the judiciary,” she previously told Houston Public Media in February.
On Wednesday, Ogg noted that the availability of this data should also help in identifying gaps or inefficiencies in the judicial process, potentially driving reform discussions on pretrial detention, prosecutorial discretion and bond policies.
“It’s for people to utilize to improve their government and it’s for government to use to know what our best practices should be,” Ogg said. “It’s a very useful tool for all of us.”