US Jail and Prison Population Hits All-Time (Again) -- 2.3 Million Behind Bars, Inclu

dhcdavid

Ex-Bluelighter
Joined
Mar 24, 2004
Messages
777
Location
uk
US Jail and Prison Population Hits All-Time (Again) -- 2.3 Million Behind Bars, Including More Than Half a Million Drug Offenders


from Drug War Chronicle, Issue #564, 12/12/08

http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/564/US_jail_prison_population_all_time_high_drug_offenders

The number of people in jail or prison in the United States hit another record at the end of last year, according to a report from the US Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Statistics released Thursday. According to the report, Prisoners in 2007, 2,293,157 people were behind bars at the end of last year, roughly two-thirds of them serving prison sentences and one-third doing jail time.

Drug offenders made up 19.5% of all people doing time in the states, or roughly 400,000 people. In the federal system, drug offenders account for well over half of all 200,000 prisoners (those numbers are not included in this report), bringing the total number of people sacrificed at the altar of the drug war to more than half a million.

Parole and probation violators accounted for about one-third of all new prison admissions last year. It is unclear how many violations were for drug-related reasons, but that number is undoubtedly substantial.

The imprisoned population continued to grow last year, albeit at a marginally slower rate than the decade as a whole. The number of those imprisoned grew by 1.8 percent last year, down from 2.8 percent in 2006, and slightly lower than 2.0 percent a year average since 2000.

The population behind bars continued to grow at a faster rate than the population as a whole last year. The number of people imprisoned per 100,000 population -- the imprisonment rate -- rose from 501 in 2006 to 506 last year. It was 475 per 100,000 in 2000. Since 2000, the number of people behind bars increased by 15 percent, while the US population increased by only 6.4 percent.

The prison populations in 36 states and the District of Columbia increased during 2007. The federal prison population experienced the largest absolute increase of 6,572 prisoners, followed by Florida (up 5,250 prisoners), Kentucky (up 2,457 prisoners) and Arizona (up 1,945 prisoners), resulting in 58.7 percent of the change in the overall prison population. Kentucky (12.3 percent), Mississippi (6.5 percent), Florida (5.6 percent), West Virginia (5.6 percent), and Arizona (5.4 percent) reported the largest percentage increases in their prison populations.

The prison populations in the remaining 14 states decreased. Michigan's (1,344) and California's (1,230) prison populations experienced the greatest absolute decrease, while Vermont (down 3.2 percent), Montana (down 2.8 percent), Michigan (down 2.6 percent), and New Mexico (down 2.6 percent) prison populations had the largest percent decreases.

America's position as the world's leading jailer, in both absolute and per capita terms, remains unchallenged, and the war on drugs is playing a significant role. Interestingly, the BJS report comes one day after a study from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities reported that 43 states face budget shortfalls next year. As for the federal budget deficit, well, who can even keep up with that?

 
You'd think that the fact that the prison population just continues to grow would tell them that locking people up for drugs isn't a good deterrent. Meh, who cares as long as the ant-drug industry is raking in $$ from keeping the status quo. Next thing you know is they'll be pushing for more arrests, since that'll create jobs...
 
I would like to see some statistics on "total number of people serving a sentence of probation" and "total number of people on parole" and "total number of people arrested" and "total number of people who spent at least one night in jail".
 
What always gets me is how most of those people in jail for drugs are in their for having maryjane. I can understand crack, meth, maybe even h, but weed? How in the hell can MJ be schedule I and tylenol is OTC. Take too many tylenol......goodbye, but smoke too much mj......goodnight. Somethings got to change in my country.
 
What always gets me is how most of those people in jail for drugs are in their for having maryjane. I can understand crack, meth, maybe even h, but weed? How in the hell can MJ be schedule I and tylenol is OTC. Take too many tylenol......goodbye, but smoke too much mj......goodnight. Somethings got to change in my country.

I couldn't agree more my friend. When it comes to marijuana it always just seems like politicians almost the world over just straight up ignore common sense thinking, logic and scientific evidence.

Here in the UK for example, 4 years ago our current Labour government changed the classification of marijuana from a Class B drug to a Class C drug - which freed up a huge amount of police time to focus on more important stuff such as cracking down harder on knife crime and going after terrorists - but then earlier this year in direct opposition to the advice of medical and legal experts and its own advisory body on drugs it reclassified marijuana as a Class B drug.

And our Prime Minister, in a really lame attempt to convince the public of the wisdom of this move, was quoted as saying that there are nowadays far stronger "lethal" strains of marijuana around with astronomically high levels of THC in them which is why it must be re-classified as a Class B drug once again. The Concise Oxford Dictionary defintion of the word lethal is causing or sufficient to cause death . Can anyone anywhere provide me with a concrete example of someone who has died from an overdose of this allegedly lethal drug?

In Holland, where marijuana is in effect legal and openly sold in coffee shops, their rates of marijuana consumption in the wider population is something like half of what it is countries like the USA and the UK where marijuana is very illegal.

Sometimes I weep for the future of two of my favourite countries in the world: namely the USA and the UK. :(
 
Some people might disagree with me, but I think that if MJ was schedule 3 or 4 here in the states, that less people would "abuse" prescription pain meds, which in turn would help people who are really in pain get their meds. I also think it's outrageous that percocet with APAP is schedule 2 here. It doesn't make any sense. Even perc's with only 5 mg's are Schedule 3, but Norco(hydrocodone with 10mg/325APAP) is only schudule 3. Very very strange IMO.
 
Top