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1 Christopher A. Innes, State Prison Inmate Survey, 1986: Drug Use and Crime 1 (1986)

handle is hein.death/drusc0001 and id is 1 raw text is: C1

U.S. Department of Justice
Bureau of Justice Statistics

Bureau of Justice Statistics
Special Report
State Prison Inmate Survey, 1986

Drug Use and Crime

by Christopher A. Innes, Ph.D.
BJS Statistician
Results from the 1986 Survey of In-
mates of State Correctional Facilities
indicate that inmates report high levels
of drug use prior to the commission of
the crime for which they were incar-
cerated. In the month before their
current offense, 43% of State prison
inmates were using illegal drugs on a
daily or near daily basis; 19% were
using a major drug--heroin, methadone,
cocaine, PCP, or LSD--on a daily or
near daily basis.
Many inmates, however, began to use
drugs, particularly major drugs, only
after their criminal careers had already
started. Half of inmates who had ever
used a major drug and three-fifths of
those who had ever used a major drug
regularly did not do so until after their
first arrest.
Other findings include the following:
o In 1986, 35% of State prison inmates
reported that they were under the in-
fluence of drugs at the time they com-
mitted their current offense, compared
with 32% in the 1979 survey.
e Inmates were more likely to report
they were under the influence of co-
caine but less likely to report using
heroin at the time of the offense than
in earlier surveys. Marijuana or hashish
was the drug most frequently used at
the time of the offense.
9 Almost 80% of inmates had used
drugs at some time in their lives; 52%
had used a major drug.

July 19881

This Special Report examines the
links between illegal drug use and
criminal activity among State
prison inmates in the period before
they were incarcerated. Past
studies have shown that a high
degree of drug use is common
among offenders. This report
expands our understanding of the
relationship between drugs and
crime by examining in greater
detail the histories of drug use and
addiction among State prisoners,

* White inmates and female inmates
were somewhat more likely than others
to have been regular users of major
drugs at some time in the past.
* Among State prison inmates who had
used drugs, about half began their use
by age 15.
* A large majority of inmates (81%)
were not daily users of a major drug in
the month before the offense for which
they were sentenced to prison. About
one-seventh (13%) of inmates seem to
fit the pattern of drug addicts who
committed crimes for gain.
* About 65% of inmates reported that
they had never been regular users of a
major drug, and an additional 21% be-
gan such regular use after their first
arrest.
* Of State prisoners who were sen-
tenced for robbery, burglary, larceny,
or a drug offense, half were daily drug
users, and about 40% were under the
influence of an illegal drug at the time
they committed the crime. These pro-

their employment patterns, and their
participation in drug treatment
programs.
The report, based upon data from
the 1986 survey of State prison in-
mates, should be of use to criminal
justice policymakers, practitioners,
and researchers. We gratefully
acknowledge the cooperation of
State prison officials who made the
survey possible.
Steven R. Schlesinger
Director

portions were higher than those report-
ed by inmates convicted of other crimes.
* The greater an offender's use of
major drugs, the more prior convictions
the inmate reported: Less than 13% of
those who had never used a major drug
had six or more prior convictions,
compared to nearly 30% of daily users
of major drugs.        ,,
* Users of major drugs were substan-
tially more likely than nonusers to
report that they received income from
illegal activities during the time they
were last free (48% vs. 10%).
* Twenty-eight percent of inmates
reported a past drug dependency. The
drugs most frequently mentioned were
heroin (14%), cocaine (10%), and mari-
juana or hashish (9%).
* Thirty percent of inmates reported
that they had participated in a drug
treatment program at some time--12%
more than once. About half of the in-
mates who had participated in a pro-
gram had received their most recent
treatment while they were incarcerated.

E

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