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1984 Prisoners in 1 (1984)

handle is hein.death/prsin1984 and id is 1 raw text is: U.S. Department of Justice
Bureau of Justice Statistics

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.soners in 1984

The total number of prisoners in State
and Federal correctional facilities at
yearend 1984 was 463,866. During the
year 26,618 prisoners were added to the
prison rolls. The States and the
District of Columbia added 24,281
prisoners; the Federal system, 2,337.
The increase for 1984 brings the total
growth in the prison population since
1980 to more than 134,000 inmates-an
increase of 40% in the 4-year period.
The 1984 growth rate (6.1%) was
slightly greater than the 1983 rate
(5.7%). Although the 1984 rate is
roughly half of that for the record-high
years of 1981 and 1982, it is nearly
twice the average rate for the years
1978 through 1980. Furthermore, the
1984 increase in the number of inmates
was almost three times larger than the
average number added annually during
1978, 1979, and 1980 (table 1).
Overall, Federal institutions grew at
a slightly faster rate in 1984 than State
institutions. The percent increases
were 7.3 and 6.0, respectively. The
difference is explained, however, by the
addition to Federal facilities of 1,066
prisoners with either no sentence or a
sentence of less than 1 year. These
additional prisoners (which include
prisoners under the jurisdiction of the
U.S. Immigration and Naturalization
Service) account for 46% of the total
increase in the Federal prison rolls.
The number of inmates sentenced to
Federal prisons for more than a year
grew by 4.8%; the comparable popula-
tion in State prisons grew by 6.2%
(table 2).
Federal and State prison populations
have increased by the same proportion
since 1980. Their relative rates of
growth have fluctuated from year to
year, but by yearend 1984 both State
and Federal systems had grown by
40.6% (table 3).

April 1985

This bulletin presents the yearend
1984 population count for our
Nation's prisons. For the 10th
consecutive year, yearend prisoner
populations reached an all-time
high, numbering more than
463,000. Since 1980 the prison
population has jumped more than
40%. While jurisdictions have
struggled to accommodate the in-
creased populations through
capacity expansion, adding an esti-
mated 100,000 beds in the last 4
years, the number of prisoners has
grown by more than 130,000 over
the same period.
This report includes a new
feature comparing the number of
prison admissions since 1960 with
the number of reported serious
crimes. It shows that the number
of prison admissions from courts
for every 100 serious crimes
reported to the police declined
from 6.3 in 1960 to 2.3 in 1970.

The 1984 rate of increase in the
Nation's prison population, although
similar to the 1983 rate, reflected a
different pattern of growth among the
States. State-to-State variations were
less pronounced. Twenty-seven States
experienced a slowing of their growth;
11 of these States reduced their rates
of growth by at least 5%. Two States
(Tennessee and West Virginia) experi-
enced actual decreases in their prison
populations after increases in 1983.
Florida, North Carolina and Vermont
each reported an increase in the
number of inmates after a decline (of
more than 5%) in the previous year.
Only one State (Alaska) grew by more
than 20% in 1984; three had grown that
fast in 1983. Two other States (New
Hampshire and Oregon) grew by more
than 15% compared to six in 1983.

After remaining fairly stable in
the 1970s, the ratio began to
increase in 1981, reaching 4.0 in
1983. If the 1960 rate of prison
admissions relative to crime had
prevailed in 1983, the number of
offenders sentenced to prison that
year would have been about
100,000 more than the 173,000
who were actually admitted. On
the other hand, if the 1980 rate
had prevailed in 1983, about
60,000 fewer offenders would have
gone to prison.
I would like to express my
gratitude to the departments of
corrections in the 50 States, the
District of Columbia, and the
Federal Prison System for their
generous cooperation in compiling
these data. This report marks the
58th year of the annual National
Prisoner Statistics Program.
Steven R. Schlesinger
Director

Regional variations persist
Despite the decline in variation in
the rates of growth among States in
Table 1. Change in the total prison
population, 1977-84
Annual
percent
Year             Number          change
1977            300,024             -
1978            307,276            2.4
1979            314,457            2.3
1980            329,821            4.9
1981            369,930           12.2
1982            413,806           11.9
1983            437,248            5.7
1984            463,866            6.1
Note: National Prisoner Statistics reports
since 1977 are based on the jurisdiction
population.

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