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1994 Prisoners in 1 (1994)

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U.S. Department of Justice
Office of Justice Programs

August 1995, NCJ-151654

Prisoners in 1994

By Allen J. Beck, Ph.D.
and Darrell K. Gilliard
BJS Statisticians
The total number of prisoners under
the jurisdiction of Federal or State cor-
rectional authorities was 1,053,738 at
yearend 1994. During the year the
States and the District of Columbia
added 77,847 prisoners; the Federal
system, 5,447. Although the 1994
growth rate (8.6%) nearly equaled the
average annual percentage increase
Table 1. Changes in the State and
Federal prison populations, 1980-94
Annual increase
Number               Percent
Year      of inmates  Number   change
1980       329,821
1981       369,930    40,109    12.2%
1982       413,806    43,876    11.9
1983       436,855    23,049     5.6
1984       462,002    25,147     5.8
1985       502,507    40,505     8.8
1986       544,972    42,465     8.5
1987       585,084    40,112     7.4
1988       627,600    42,516     7.3
1989       712,364    84,764    13.5
1990       773,919    61,555     8.6
1991       825,619    51,700     6.7
1992       882,500    56,881     6.9
1993*      970,444    64,992     7.4
1994      1,053,738   83,294     8.6
Annual
average               50,069     8.7%
Note: All counts are for December 31 of each year
and may reflect revisions of previously reported
numbers.
--Not applicable.
Includes the jurisdiction populations of Massachu-
setts and Texas for the first time. The final 1993
count (947,492), which excludes the noncustody
population in Texas and Massachusetts, may be
used for comparisons.

*.Hglgt

Year
1980
1985
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
--Not available.

Number of inmates
Federal  State
24,363  305,458
40,223  462,284

65,526
71,608
80,259
89,587
95,034

Sentenced prisoners
per 100,000 resident
population
Federal   State

Population housed as
a percent of highest
capacity
Federal   State

9        130
14        187        123%      105%

708,393
754,011
802,241
880,857
958,704

* California (125,605) and Texas
(118,195) together held more than
1 in every 5 inmates in the Nation.
Seventeen States, each holding
fewer than 5,000 inmates, together
held 4% of all prisoners.
* At yearend 1994, State prisons
were operating at between 17% and
29% above capacity, while the Fed-
eral system was operating at 25%
over capacity.
* Since 1980 the Nation's prison
population more than doubled on a
per capita basis. On December 31,
1994, the number of sentenced pris-
oners per 100,000 U.S. residents
was 387- up from 139 in 1980.
* States with the highest incarcera-
tion rates were Texas (636), Louisi-
ana (530), and Oklahoma (508).
North Dakota (78) had the lowest
rate, followed by Minnesota (100),

West Virginia (106), and Maine
(118).
e In 1993 (the latest available data),
the incarceration rate of blacks was
7 times that of whites. At yearend
there were 1,471 black inmates per
100,000 black U.S. residents, com-
pared to 207 white inmates per
100,000 white residents.
e The percentage of State prisoners
serving a drug sentence more than
tripled from 1980 to 1993 (6% to
22%). The percentage of Federal
prisoners serving a drug sentence
more than doubled, from 25% in
1980 to 60% in 1993.
* In recent years, although the num-
ber of drug offenders in the Nation's
prisons grew dramatically (55,500
from 1990 to 1993), the number of
violent offenders grew the most (up
82,100).

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