The Associated Press Editorial
May 28, 2004Report: 1
of Every 75 U.S. Men in Prison
U.S. Prison Population Up 2.9
Percent, With One of Every 75 Men in Prison or Jail, Report Finds
WASHINGTON May 28,
2004 — America's inmate population grew by 2.9 percent last year,
to almost 2.1 million people, with one of every 75 men living in prison
or jail.
The inmate population continued its rise despite a fall in the crime
rate and many states' efforts to reduce some sentences, especially for
low-level drug offenders.
The report issued Thursday by the Justice Department's Bureau of
Justice Statistics attributes much of the increase to get-tough policies
enacted during the 1980s and '90s, such as mandatory drug sentences,
"three-strikes-and-you're-out" laws for repeat offenders, and
"truth-in-sentencing" laws that restrict early releases.
Whether that's good or bad depends on who is asked.
"The prison system just grows like a weed in the yard," said Vincent
Schiraldi, executive director of the Justice Policy Institute, which
pushes for a more lenient system.
Without reforms, he said, prison populations will continue to grow
"almost as if they are on autopilot, regardless of their high costs and
disappointing crime-control impact."
But Attorney General John Ashcroft said the report shows the success
of efforts to take hard-core criminals off the streets.
"It is no accident that violent crime is at a 30-year low while
prison population is up," Ashcroft said. "Violent and recidivist
criminals are getting tough sentences while law-abiding Americans are
enjoying unprecedented safety."
There were 715 inmates for every 100,000 U.S. residents at midyear in
2003, up from 703 a year earlier, the report found.
The nation's incarceration rate tops the world, according to The
Sentencing Project, another group that promotes alternatives to prison.
That compares with a rate of 169 per 100,000 residents in Mexico, 116 in
Canada and 143 for England and Wales.
Russia's prison population, which once rivaled the United States',
has dropped to 584 per 100,000 because of prisoner amnesties in recent
years, the group said.
The U.S. inmate population in 2003 grew at its fastest pace in four
years. The number of inmates increased 1.8 percent in state prisons, 7.1
percent in federal prisons and 3.9 percent in local jails.
In 2003, 68 percent of prison and jail inmates were members of racial
or ethnic minorities, the government said. An estimated 12 percent of
all black men in their 20s were in jails or prisons, as were 3.7 percent
of Hispanic men and 1.6 percent of white men in that age group,
according to the report.
The report also said:
The number of women in state and federal prisons grew by 5 percent,
compared to a 2.7 percent increase for men. Still, men greatly outnumber
women: 1.36 million to 100,102.
Local jails held 691,301 inmates.
The inmate population in 10 states increased at least 5 percent. Some
of the smallest state prison systems saw the largest increase: Vermont's
grew by 12.2 percent, Minnesota was up 9.4 percent and Maine 9.1
percent.
Only nine states logged a decrease in prison population, led by Rhode
Island with a 3.4 percent drop; Arkansas, 2.2 percent; and Montana, 2.1
percent.
On the Net:
Bureau of Justice Statistics: www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs |