Incomes of Men Ages 27 to 42

Because they are frequently unable to pay fines, the formerly incarcerated are often forced to pay punitive, high interest rates on those fines. The mental burden of accumulating debt on a low or non-existent salary is a high one, Harris says.

The interest charged on LFOs can be prohibitive for some former prisoners, adding thousands of dollars on top of the fines and fees they already can’t pay. For instance, on average, people in Washington State were sentenced to LFOs of $1,347. But that amount can increase significantly if individuals can only pay $5 a month. Many realize they may never pay off their LFOs, according to Harris.

The uptick in LFOs comes as states look for ways to pay for their corrections system while facing other revenue shortfalls. The fees levied on the formerly incarcerated include bench-warrant fees, filing-clerks fees, court-appointed attorney fees, crime-lab analysis fees, DNA-database fees, jury fees, and incarceration costs. They come in different forms: Fines are fixed financial penalties for given offenses, fees are charges for costs of using the justice system—and surcharges are levied on top of those—as a percentage of the total cost. States also charge for restitution and the cost of collection, and add interest surcharges for people on payment plans.

The percentage of prison inmates with court-imposed monetary sanctions exploded from 1991 to 2004, according to a study by Harris, Heather Evans, and Katherine Beckett. In 1991, just 25 percent of inmates reported receiving court-ordered fines and sanctions, by 2004, 66 percent did.

And those fines continued to get more and more costly. The Victim Penalty Assessment in Washington State, for example, grew 1,900 percent between 1977 and 1996.

States are also adding on costs and fees to recoup money unrelated to a prisoner’s actual sentence. The Arizona legislature, for example, created a “felony surcharge” added onto former prisoners’ bills in 1994. Now, in addition to paying court fees and restitution, prisoners are also charged a surcharge, ostensibly to cover costs of the system. The legislature keeps upping the amount surcharge, which by 2012 had reached 83 percent. So if a former prisoner owes $1,000 in fines and fees, he pays an additional $830 to the state.

These fines and fees vary dramatically by state. Though all 50 states allow fines to be levied upon criminal conviction, the maximum fine for felony conviction ranges from $500 in Massachusetts to $500,000 in Alaska.

What’s more, in 44 states, former inmates can be re-incarcerated if they “willfully” fail to pay their fees. But the determination of whether an individual is “willfully” trying to make payments is very much up to judges; some judges decide that a former prisoner’s inability to get a job can constitute a lack of willful attempts to pay fees—resulting in him ending up back in jail and facing even more fines.