About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

1981 Prisoners in 1 (1981)

handle is hein.death/prsin1981 and id is 1 raw text is: U.S. Department of Justice
Bureau of Justice Statistics

P      son s R9A

During 1981, the Nation's prison
population grew by almost 40,000--by
far the largest increase in a single year
since data became available in 1925.
This huge 12.1 percent influx pushed
the number of Federal and State
prisoners up to 369,009 and surpassed
the record 10.5 percent annual growth
rate set in 1975. Between 1980 and
1981 the incarceration rate of
sentenced prisoners rose from 139 to
154 per 100,000 U.S. resident
population.
The sharp increase can be attributed
in part to sentencing laws enacted by
many States during the past 5 years,
notably mandatory imprisonment for
certain crimes, usually those of a
violent nature, and determinate
sentencing, which, in general, pre-
cludes the possibility of parole.
During 1981, the number of States
under court orders to reduce over-

May 1982
The statistics in this report are
from the National Prisoner
Statistics program, which is among
the oldest in the criminal justice
statistical series. These data are
collected annually for the Bureau of
Justice Statistics by the U.S. Census
Bureau from the departments of
corrections in the 50 States and the
District of Columbia. The
cooperation of State officials,
whose generous assistance and
unfailing patience make the NPS
program possible, is gratefully
acknowledged.
Benjamin H. Renshaw III
Acting Director
crowding rose from 28 to 31, while the
number involved in litigation about
overall prison conditions increased from

Number of sentenced State and Federal prisoners,
yearend 1925-81
Thousands
360 -                                                                             360
330  -                                                         Jurisdiction        330
300   _                                                                            300
270 -                                                                           - 270
240  -                                                                             240
210  -                                                                             210
180                                                                             - 180
150                                                                             - 150
120                                      Custody                                - 120
90                                                                             -  90
60                                                                             -  60
30                                                                                30
925   1930          1940         1950          1960         1970          1980
Note: Prior to 1978, NPS reports were based on the custody population. Beginning
in 1978, focus is on the jurisdiction population. Both figures are shown for 1977 to
facilitate year-to year comparison.
Figure 1

32 to 37. Moreover, dependence on
local jails for substitute housing grew
substantially.
The 1981 prison population increase
affected both Federal and State
correctional systems, as well as both
sentenced and unsentenced prison
inmates. The number of prisoners
under Federal jurisdiction grew by
nearly 3,800, or 16 percent, reversing a
3-year decline begun in 1978 that had
reduced the Federal prison population
by one-fourth. Federal authorities
linked the 1981 growth to increased
attention to bank robbery and drug
offenses.
The bulk of the increase in prisoners
occurred in State institutions, which
held an additional 36,000 inmates at
yearend. Behind this growth were
measures reflecting a sterner public
attitude toward crime and criminals.
During the past 5 years 37 States have
passed mandatory sentencing laws and
11 States have passed determinate
sentencing laws, both of which
frequently result in a longer average
time served than indeterminate
sentences. Many States have adopted
more stringent regulations on the use of
parole, and four States have abolished
it altogether.
During 1981, prison populations
increased in 49 States and the District
of Columbia. Only Michigan, which
released prisoners under its new
emergency rollback law, reported a
decline (I percent). Increases of less
than 5 percent occurred in only seven
States (Maine, Minnesota, New Mexico,
North Carolina, Oregon, West Virginia,
and Wyoming).
Nearly half the growth in the number
of State prisoners occurred in the seven
States that added more than 1,600

,! r

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most