| For the thirty-first
straight year, the number of people America throws behind bars has
increased, leaving the nation with an all-time high of nearly 2.1
million people incarcerated at the end of June 2003, according to an
annual report released last week by the Justice Department's Bureau
of Justice Statistics. Despite sentencing reforms and other measures
to trim prison budgets in the states in recent years, the number of
people behind bars increased by 57,600, a 2.9% rate of increase, the
largest in four years. Growth was fastest in the federal prison
system, which swelled by 5.4% to more than 170,000 prisoners, well
over half of them drug offenders, compared to a much lesser 2.6%
rate of increase in state prison populations. The drug war drives
the increase in the federal system, with drug offenders accounting
for nearly half (48%) of the increase.
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Southern Correctional Institution, Troy, NC
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The report did not look at
the number of drug offenders imprisoned, but another Bureau of
Justice Statistics report found more than 246,000 people doing time
in state prisons at the end of 2002, as well as more than 78,000
doing federal time for drug crime. That report did not specify the
number of drug offenders in city or county jails, but in past years
that figure has been in the tens of thousands. According to that
report, drug offenders accounted for 15% of the overall growth in
prison populations.
Not only is the absolute
number of prisoners continuing to rise, the bureau found, but
incarceration rates continue to increase as well. At midyear 2003,
718 out of every 100,000 Americans were behind bars, up from 701 the
previous year. With recent amnesties for prisoners in Russia,
America's reign as the imprisonment champion of the world is once
again un-endangered. (Russia's rate is 584 per 100,000, and by way
of comparison with other industrialized Western nations, England’s
is 143, Canada's is 116, Germany's is 96 and Japan's is 54.)
"Early warnings in late
1980's, though muted within the drug hysteria, were predictors of
the national statistics we see today," said Nora Callahan, cofounder
and executive director of the November Coalition (http://www.november.org),
a group working end the drug war and free drug war prisoners. She
paid close attention early on, because she had a brother facing a
federal drug indictment in 1989. "The federal government built an
entire prison industrial complex in two decades. Today, state and
federal prisoners serve the global war effort making uniforms, tank
cables, helmets, furniture, tents, et cetera," she told DRCNet.
"This report damns the notion that leaders in power are progressive
thinkers, now doesn't it? But we the people all have to pay for the
excess of the drug war and a criminal justice policy gone awry.
That's the saddest part."
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In an extensive analysis
of the Bureau of Justice Statistics report's implications, The
Sentencing Project attempted to address the obvious question: Why,
given the declining crime rate and the moves toward a less punitive,
less expensive approach to crime in recent years, do the numbers
continue to increase? The Sentencing Project pointed squarely at two
factors: more new prisoners (up 7.4% over the previous year) and
prisoners serving longer sentences. Prisoners sentenced in 2000 are
serving sentences 11% longer than those sentenced just two years
earlier, the group noted. Drug offenders were doing 21% more time.
The Sentencing Project
duly noted the enactment of sentencing reforms in various states,
but pointed out that "the continuing rise in imprisonment suggests
that they have not been sufficient in themselves to stem that
increase." In California, for example, the projected declines in
prison population after the enactment of Proposition 36, the
"treatment not jail" initiative passed by voters in 2000, was more
than offset by an 8% increase in new admissions in 2002-2003.
Similarly, while Texas adopted sentencing and parole revocation
reforms in recent years, it still accounted for a whopping 16% of
all new prisoners for the period ending midyear 2003. And sentencing
reforms that did take place were counterbalanced by the long-term
effects of "tough on crime" sentencing policies adopted by the
states and the federal government in the 1980s and 1990s, the group
said, pointing to "three strikes" and "truth in sentencing" laws in
effect in 30 states and the federal system.
Veteran observer Eric
Sterling, head of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation (http://www.cjpf.org)
suggested another force at work as well. "As local governments
stagger under the burden of the Bush recession with losses of state
and local revenue, the police seek to inoculate themselves from the
virus of budget-cutting by stepping up the number of arrests," said
Sterling. "Individual officers who may fear being laid off see it in
their interests to step up the number of collars. Chiefs of police
can go to city councils and say 'see how important our work is, we
have increasing arrests.' Prosecutors demonstrate their competence
by getting longer sentences," he continued. "And it goes all the way
to the top. Attorney General Ashcroft last summer issued directives
to the US attorneys telling them to charge the most serious charges
they can, get the longest sentences they can, and to refuse plea
bargains," Sterling continued. "He also ordered US attorneys to
report to him federal judges who imposed sentences lower than what
the Justice Department wanted. State and local prosecutors pay close
attention to what the attorney general does."
State legislators and the
criminal justice establishment inhabit different worlds, Sterling
said. "You have a disconnect between state legislators and governors
who need to balance state budgets that are struggling to accommodate
enormous expenditure of imprisonment and locally elected prosecutors
and judges and chiefs of police who answer to local mayors and city
councils who drive the statewide prisons population numbers," he
said. "They don't have to pay the bill, so you see legislators
advancing sentencing reform concepts that are undermined by locally
driven political ambitions."
Visit
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/cp02.htm to read the
Bureau of Justice Statistics report, "Prison and Jail Inmates at
Midyear 2003."
Visit
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/p02.htm to read the Bureau
of Justice Statistics report, "Prisoners in 2002," released in
August 2003.
Visit
http://www.sentencingproject.org/pdfs/1044.pdf to read the
Sentencing Project's analysis.
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