Prison Population Drops In New York, Grows To 1.6 Million Across US

DEVLIN BARRETT   12/ 8/09 04:57 PM ET   AP

Prison

WASHINGTON — The U.S. prison population edged up slightly last year, though the number of total inmates dropped in 20 states, including New York, Georgia and Michigan.

Justice Department figures released Tuesday show the overall state and federal prison population stands at a record 1.6 million and is still rising, but the rate of growth is slowing as state authorities look for cheaper ways to mete out justice.

If you add in those people in jails – where some are held while they await trial – the total number of people behind bars comes to 2.3 million.

The government figures show one out of every 133 U.S. residents was in prison or jail at the end of last year.

The statistics are the latest evidence that the rapid growth of prisons seen in the 1990s has cooled significantly in this decade.

The prison population grew less than 1 percent last year. The previous decade saw the inmate population grow by an annual average of more than 6 percent.

Ram Cnaan, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania's School of Social Policy and Practice, said the slowing trend shows politicians are confronting a painful truth about prisons.

"They simply cost too much," said Cnaan. "If you can prevent opening a new prison, you can save lots of money."

Both liberals and conservatives are increasingly searching for alternative sentencing programs, like treatment or monitoring, he said.

"It's not ideological, it's pragmatic," said Cnaan. "This is the first time that we have alliances on the right and left on this issue, and it's the money that has forced the issue."

The states with the largest increases in prison population were Pennsylvania, Florida and Arizona, whose one-year increases were all greater than the federal prison system, which grew by 1,662 inmates.

Of the three states that lost the most prisoners in 2008, New York shed 2,273, Georgia 1,537 and Michigan 1,495.

One group that saw a big jump in incarceration were immigration detainees, which jumped 12 percent. About 34,000 people were held last year in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement lockup or a contracted holding facility. About a third of those detainees were originally from Mexico, the Justice Department said.

While more prisoners were locked up, officials also released more – some 735,454 prisoners, a 2 percent increase over 2007.

Among those releases, the number of those freed without conditions increased 8 percent.

___

On the Net:

Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/

FOLLOW HUFFPOST NEW YORK

WASHINGTON — The U.S. prison population edged up slightly last year, though the number of total inmates dropped in 20 states, including New York, Georgia and Michigan. Justice Department figure...
WASHINGTON — The U.S. prison population edged up slightly last year, though the number of total inmates dropped in 20 states, including New York, Georgia and Michigan. Justice Department figure...
Filed by David Weiner  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 155
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (5 total)
photo
ibsteve2u
Someone who cares - to his unending regret
06:08 AM on 12/09/2009
You have to begin to think that the water in Washington, D.C. has become severely polluted with lead, mercury and other heavy metals over the last three decades.

At least, I'd hope that the sad state that America is in has an organic explanation, and is not solely the result of greed and ideology run amok.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jannsmoor
12:24 AM on 12/09/2009
A lot of these people are mentally ill. It is one of the hallmarks of the morality of a society. How does it treat the mentally ill?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ostrom808
Moral Contrarian
10:06 PM on 12/08/2009
@grind88
"Start thinking about WHY these people commit crime and not HOW they can build new prisons. "

Actually, what really needs addressing is WHAT we CALL crimes, not WHY these people do what they do. Before Clinton, the majority of these wouldn't even have gone to jail, let alone for the sentences they're receiving.

The US prison population has been QUADRUPLED since 1980!!

Are we truly to believe that there are four times as many criminals, or that there is an agenda behind this?

Check out the % of the population behind since 1980
http://www.scribd.com/doc/18972765/Prison-Population-As-of-US-Population-19802007
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thomas Alan
09:38 PM on 12/08/2009
It's the war on non-violent pot users, just a small bag about a handful is a felony, three strikes your out!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marylandtravelinman
12:32 PM on 12/09/2009
Agreed, and a war on African Americans. You get arrested with Crack you do more time that with powdered cocaine? Eventually the Cons will see it is money out of there pockets and they will come around.
photo
ie
ugh.
09:20 PM on 12/08/2009
it's working well for the old white guys, isn't it. Put the poor, uneducated and liberals in prison, or force them into the military (when unemployment is high, it's the only way to turn to make money and stay OUT of prison).

Now if we can get rid of that pesky separation of church and state thing it will be totally solved.

Grrrrrr
Mildmannered
"Be excellent to each other"
09:18 PM on 12/08/2009
"California now spends more incarcerating 167,000 adults than it does to educate 226,000 students in its 10-campus University of California system."

This is unacceptable.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jannsmoor
12:22 AM on 12/09/2009
What words can one utilize to encompass the stupidity of a system that allows this?
Mildmannered
"Be excellent to each other"
03:02 AM on 12/09/2009
well, certainly not positive words -- words of ridicule or frustration maybe
09:18 PM on 12/08/2009
Thanks to the War on Drugs. The biggest waste of money and humanity ever devised.
09:13 PM on 12/08/2009
We're the incarceration capital of the universe. Wow, one way to handle homelessness. No really, something is terribly wrong with a system that has so many jailed in a country with such inequality of it's people and staggering poverty. It's like when a teacher has a class full of kids that are failing. It's time to look at the teacher.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:03 PM on 12/08/2009
There are the crimes that WE care about, and the crimes that THEY care about.

WE care about:

People doing harm to one another's person or property.

THEY care about:

Whatever is profitable to prosecute.

Ever wonder why they never find and jail the one who killed some black teenager, but they're batman when it comes to pot busts?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ostrom808
Moral Contrarian
08:59 PM on 12/08/2009
Actually, California uses 14% of it budget for prisons.

Education? 13%

Twenty years ago? Education 19%. Prisons 9%.

Pretty easy to see where the priorities lie.
09:02 PM on 12/08/2009
Statistics like this really shouldn't be shrugged off.

Maybe there's one good thing about our economic problems; it gives us time to reflect on how serious some of our problems really are.
photo
Hiphopcrates
Kicking the money lenders out of the Temple
08:54 PM on 12/08/2009
So where exactly is the play for Goldman $achs? Get used to this America, debt and private prisons are growth industries. What's next, CDS on prison insurance policies?
Mark from atlanta
Unity through Diversity.
08:50 PM on 12/08/2009
The effort to turn the U.S. into a prison warehouse has been bipartisan. In fact it was Clinton who signed the massive 1994 Crime Bill that promoted the prison buildup and mandatory minimums. Its cheif sponsor in the Senate: Biden. Now we are a police state with a higher incarceration rate than any other country.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nicon
09:28 PM on 12/08/2009
Nixon started it, Clinton went along. History did not start in 1995.
08:50 PM on 12/08/2009
1 in 133 citizens are in jail.

What does that mean? The entire system is severely flawed.

Start thinking about WHY these people commit crime and not HOW they can build new prisons.

Start thinking about WHY people are obese and not HOW you can build hospitals for them all.

This should be common sense for every person i the world. But the country is run by greedy coorporations and logic and humanity is out the window. Llook at the climate-gate situation.
GOP will sink the entire world before they are dragged away from the gigantic pile of dirty and bloodsoaked money.
This style of me-me-capitalism is bringing the states to it's kness and people are feeling the earthquakes all over the world.

But i digress...
Mildmannered
"Be excellent to each other"
08:50 PM on 12/08/2009
California must find a way to reduce this cost.

"California devotes 10 percent of its operating budget to locking up criminals in state prisons, one of the highest rates in the nation and an amount that is becoming a drag on the state's ability to deliver other services."

http://cbs2.com/politics/California.prisons.spending.2.1140595.html
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MartyJo
If the world didn't suck, we'd all fall off.
08:41 PM on 12/08/2009
The rethugs love building prisons.... its there jobs plan.... cept they conveniently forget that building prisons is also an expansion of government. They sure know how to l.ie to there sheep.... now it must be mandatory that Americans keep the rethugs out of the WH.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
08:48 PM on 12/08/2009
It's not just 'rethugs.' Grey Davis, the Democratic governor of California before Ahnuld won the recall, was the best friend the prison industry ever had.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hangdogit
Progressive with some Libertarian (abolish DEA).
10:05 PM on 12/08/2009
"The rethugs love building prisons...­. its there jobs plan.... "

Public housing plan too.