Florida officer records are live — search the officer testifying against your client, free. Search free →
SKIP TO MAIN CONTENT

BenchRecon Data · Florida sentencing

Nassau County: sentencing outcomes by charge

14,159 charge dispositions in Nassau County, Florida, from public FDLE CJDT Clerk-of-Court data, 25.9% drew a recorded jail or prison sentence. The table below breaks the county's highest-volume charge categories into incarceration rate, median confinement, adjudication-withheld rate, and diversion rate.

“Incarceration” means a sentence to county jail or state prison; the rate is the share of charges with a recorded jail or prison sentence (a lower bound, since the source confinement field is blank on 56% of charges statewide). Dispositions span 1951-12-22 to 2026-06-20; not time-normalized.

Aggregate analysis, data as of 2026-06-21. Reproducible from public records. No individual is identified; the source data has no judge identifier, so no claim is made about any individual judge.

14,159charge dispositions analyzed
25.9%ended in incarceration
12charge categories shown (≥10 charges each)

Sentencing outcomes by charge category

The highest-volume charge categories in Nassau County. “Median confinement (when incarcerated)” is the typical maximum term among only the charges in that category that resulted in custody, so where the incarceration rate is low, that median describes a small subset of the category's charges, not a typical outcome for the category as a whole. It reads “—” where fewer than 10 charges in that category were incarcerated, or where the category's incarceration rate is too low for the median to be representative.

Charge categoryChargesIncarcerationConfinement distribution (when incarcerated)Adj. withheldDiversion
Drug Abuse Prevention and Control3,64440.5%median 304 d · mean 1.8 yr · mode 183 d · mid-50% 121 d–2.2 yr22.5%0%
Driver Licenses2,2046.6%median 60 d · mean 153 d · mode 10 d · mid-50% 25 d–183 d38.8%0%
State Uniform Traffic Control1,97111.2%median 90 d · mean 355 d · mode 10 d · mid-50% 30 d–1.0 yr24.7%0%
Theft, Robbery, and Related Crimes93331.4%median 1.0 yr · mean 1.8 yr · mode 183 d · mid-50% 152 d–2.0 yr21.2%0%
Probation and Community Control90545.6%median 120 d · mean 291 d · mode 90 d · mid-50% 90 d–364 d9%0%
Assault; Battery; Culpable Negligence84128.7%median 1.0 yr · mean 1.9 yr · mode 1.0 yr · mid-50% 160 d–2.5 yr26.2%0%
Burglary and Trespass65828%median 1.0 yr · mean 2.2 yr · mode 1.0 yr · mid-50% 112 d–2.1 yr12.6%0%
Obstructing Justice59914.2%median 183 d · mean 309 d · mode 183 d · mid-50% 90 d–1.0 yr20.2%0%
Motor Vehicle Licenses3552.8%median 60 d · mean 60 d · mode 60 d · mid-50% 60 d–60 d31%0%
Drunkenness; Open House Parties; Loitering; Prowling; Desertion2568.6%median 30 d · mean 30 d · mode 30 d · mid-50% 11 d–30 d16.4%0%
Weapons and Firearms25360.1%median 2.9 yr · mean 3.5 yr · mode 3.0 yr · mid-50% 1.0 yr–4.0 yr18.2%0%
Arson and Criminal Mischief18314.8%median 274 d · mean 1.5 yr · mode 183 d · mid-50% 121 d–1.8 yr18%0%

Methodology & limitations

  • Source: public Florida FDLE Criminal Justice Data Transparency (CJDT) Clerk-of-Court case data, grouped by county and FDLE statute-chapter grouping. Snapshot: 2026-06-21. Every figure is reproducible from a published script against the source data.
  • “Incarceration” defined: a charge counts as incarceration only when its sentence is a sentence to county jail or state prison. The rate is the share of charges with a recorded jail or prison sentence, a lower bound, because the source confinement field is blank on 56% of charges statewide and counties populate it inconsistently. Cross-county comparison is therefore confounded by reporting completeness.
  • Confinement distribution: the median, mean, mode, and middle-50% range (25th–75th percentile) of the maximum confinement term, in days, among charges that resulted in a jail or prison sentence. The spread is shown because a single median is easily skewed; the distribution is what makes a comparable defensible. Reported only where at least 10 such charges exist; charge categories with fewer than 10 charges overall are omitted.
  • No judge dimension: the source data contains no judge identifier. Nothing here describes how any individual judge sentences.
  • What the data does NOT show: these figures describe recorded dispositions and do not control for criminal history, offense severity within a chapter, plea posture, or case facts. A category rate is a baseline, not a prediction for any specific case. This page reports aggregates only and identifies no individual.

Comparables for a specific Nassau County charge

BenchRecon's Sentencing Comparables return the outcome distribution for a specific charge in a specific Florida county, with every figure cited to the underlying public record.