..............................................................

>From the New Paradigms Project [Not Necessarily Endorsed]:

From: "Matthew Gaylor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Matthew Gaylor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: 6.3 million Americans Under Some Form Of Correctional Supervision
Date: Friday, August 04, 2000 6:50 PM

US Corrections System Continues to Bloat With 458,000 Drug War
Prisoners: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Justice Policy Institute
Crunch the Numbers in Separate Reports:

  http://www.drcnet.org/wol/147.html#risingnumbers



The number of people under some form of correctional supervision
-- jail, prison, probation, or parole -- has reached a record 6.3
million, the Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS) announced in its semiannual report on corrections.  That
report, as well as a treasure trove of related statistics is
available online at <http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/correct.htm>.

According to the BJS numbers, the number of people on probation
or parole has reached a record high of 4.5 million.  Twenty-four
percent of the probationers were under criminal justice system
supervision for drug offenses.  The number of prisoners stood at
1.86 million in June 1999, the last month for which statistics
were available, but is thought to have passed 2 million last
February.

For Marc Mauer, Assistant Director of the Sentencing Project, an
independent criminal justice policy analysis group, the numbers
show that little has changed.

"Once again we see a new record being set; it's been the same way
each year for the last 25 years," Mauer told DRCNet.

Mauer also pointed out that parole and probation departments,
less glamorous components of the criminal justice juggernaut than
funding new policemen on the streets or building imposing new
prisons, are being stretched to the limit.

"One concern," said Mauer, "is that about 2/3 of these people are
on probation or parole, and what's happened with the enormous
increase in imprisonment is that we've diverted resources away
from probation and parole departments to prison cells."

"It's very difficult for probation and parole departments to do
the job they're supposed to do," he continued, "and it becomes a
vicious cycle.  If they don't have the resources to do the job
correctly, judges and communities will lose confidence in them,
violations could then increase or judges may not use probation or
parole if they don't believe the system can provide the right
level of supervision or service."

BJS statistician Allen J, Beck told the Washington Post,
meanwhile, that the likelihood of drug offenders being sentenced
to prison had begun to decrease over the past decade, but the
increased number of drug arrests meant that growth in the prison
population continued to increase, although at a lower rate.

According to BJS, between 1990 and midyear 1999, the incarcerated
population grew an average 5.8% annually.  The rate of growth in
state prison populations declined during the 12-month period
ending June 30, 1999 to 3.1%.  The number of federal prisoners,
however, rose by 9.9% (up 10,614 prisoners, the largest 12-month
gain ever reported).

As Mauer observed, "Absolute numbers are still going up, although
one would have thought that with crime rates declining for seven
straight years, we would have seen a reduction."

"Instead," said Mauer, "The numbers remain relatively steady.
This is driven by drug policy, mandatory minimums, and the
significant expansion of policing."

"Anytime you add more law enforcement officers, it is likely to
lead to more arrests.  The question," said Mauer, "is how can we
use law enforcement in more of a problem-solving manner instead
of just arresting more and more people."

Days after BJS released its latest numbers, the Justice Policy
Institute released its own study, "Poor Prescription: The Costs
of Imprisoning Drug Offenders in the United States.  That study
is available online at <http://www.cjcj.org/drug/>.

Based on data from the National Corrections Reporting System, as
well as BJS numbers and statistics from the California Department
of Corrections, the JPI study asked and answered the following
questions, among others:

Q:  What proportion of prisoners are drug offenders and how much
does it cost?

A:  Drug offenders make up 23.7% of the prison population, and
the cost of holding them behind bars will be over $9 billion this
year.

Q:  How have comparative rates of incarceration for prisoners
versus non-violent and violent offenders changed over time?

A:  From 1980 to 1997, the number of all offenders rose 82%, non-
violent offenders rose 207%, and the number of imprisoned drug
offenders increased an astounding 1040%, or nearly eleven times.

Q:  How do rates for blacks and whites compare?

A:  Blacks were incarcerated for drug offenses at a rate 14 times
higher than that of whites.  While the rate of white drug
offenders sent to prison doubled from 1986 to 1996, the rate for
black offenders quintupled.  Even in states that registered an
overall decrease in drug incarceration rates, the rates for
blacks increased.

The JPI report is sure to fuel electoral and legislative efforts
in several states to reform sentencing structures.  A California
initiative seeks to divert drug offenders from prison into
treatment, while in New York, the state's head judge has ordered
a statewide drug court diversion program.  In Michigan, the
governor and state legislature recently modified the state's
draconian mandatory life without parole drug law provisions.  A
recent Field poll reports that the California treatment-not-
prison initiative is gaining 64% voter approval.

And now comes word from Capitol Hill that Rep. John Conyers (D-
MI), Dean of the Congressional Black Caucus, is preparing an
omnibus bill to respond to the drug war's follies on a
comprehensive basis.  That bill will, according to a July 27th
press release, address mandatory minimum sentencing reform,
treatment as an alternative to prison, and means to facilitate
the reentry of former drug war prisoners into society.

Observers close to Conyers say the bill will be introduced this
fall.

In this session, Conyers has offered successful amendments to
bills in the Judiciary Committee that would establish federal
drug courts for the first time and create a Congressional finding
that mandatory minimums discriminate against African Americans.

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