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1993 Prisoners in 1 (1993)

handle is hein.death/prsin1993 and id is 1 raw text is: U.S. Department of Justice
Office of Justice Programs
Bureau of Justice Statistics

BuraoJutc atitc
Bulletin

Prisoners in 1993

By Darrell K. Gilliard
and Allen J. Beck
BJS Statisticians
The number of prisoners under the
jurisdiction of Federal or State cor-
rectional authorities at yearend 1993
reached a record high of 948,881.
The States and the District of Colum-
bia added 55,898 prisoners; the Fed-
eral system, 9,327. The increase for
1993 brings total growth in the prison
population since 1980 to 619,060, an
increase of about 188% in the 13-year
period (table 1).
Table 1. Changes In the State and
Federal prison populations, 1980-93
Total
percent
Annual   change
Number   percent   since
Year    of inmates change  1980
1980     329,821     -        -
1981     369,930   12.2%    12.2%
1982     413,806   11.9     25.5
1983     436,855    5.6     32.5
1984     462,002    5.8     40.1
1985     502,507    8.8     52.4
1986     544,972    8.5     65.2
1987     585,084    7.4     77.4
1988     627;600    7.3     90.3
1989     712,364   13.5    116.0
1990     773,919    8.6    134.6
1991     825,619    6.7    150.3
1992     883,656    7.0    167.9
1993     948,881    7.4    187.7
Note: All counts are for December 31 of each
year and may reflect revisions of previously
reported numbers.
-Not applicable.

The 1993 growth rate of 7.4% was
slightly greater than the percentage
increase recorded during 1992 (7.0%),
and the number of new prisoners
added during 1993 was 7,188 more
than the number added during the
preceding year (58,037). The 1993
increase translates into a nationwide
need to confine an additional 1,254
inmates each week, compared to
the nearly 1,116 additional inmates per
week in 1992.
Prisoners with sentences of more than
1 year (referred to as sentenced pris-
oners) accounted for 96% of the total
prison population at the end of 1993,
growing by 7.5% during the year (table
2). The remaining prisoners had sen-
tences of a year or less or were unsen-
tenced (for example, those awaiting
trial in States with combined prison-jail
systems).
The number of sentenced Federal
prisoners increased more than that
of sentenced State prisoners during
1993 (13.2% versus 7.0%). The rate
of increase slowed somewhat from
the year before. In 1992 the Federal
system had increased 15.9%, and
the State population had grown 6.6%.
Prison populations decreased in eight
States and the District of Columbia
through the end of 1993. This
decrease amounted to a combined
total of 716 inmates.

June 1994
The number of inmates under the
jurisdiction of State or Federal prison
authorities at the end of 1993 was
7% higher than the count a year ear-
lier. Since 1980, the number of pris-
oners nationwide has grown by
619,060 - an average of 47,600
per year or more than 900 additional
inmates per week. The 1993 growth
rate translates into an average of
more than 1,254 additional inmates
each week.
Over the last 10 years, 22 juris-
ditions have reported prisoner
increases of 100% or more. During
1993, five States, the District of
Columbia, and the Federal prison
system experienced increases of
10% or more. Bureau of Justice
Statistics (BJS) data on prisoners
indicate that returned conditional
release violators, drug offenders,
and an increased probability of
incarceration given arrest constitute
the largest elements in these popu-
lation increases.
BJS appreciates the assistance of
employees of departments of correc-
tions nationwide who make these
data available. This report marks
the 67th anniversary of this Federal-
State partnership.
Lawrence A. Greenfeld
Acting Director

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