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2002 Prisoners in 1 (2002)

handle is hein.death/prsin2002 and id is 1 raw text is: Revised 8/27/03, th

July 2003, NCJ 200248
Prisoners in 2002

By Paige M. Harrison
and Allen J. Beck, Ph.D.
BJS Statisticians
The total number of prisoners under
the jurisdiction of Federal or State adult
correctional authorities was 1,440,655
at yearend 2002. During the year the
States added 30,088 prisoners, and the
Federal prison system added 6,535
prisoners. Overall, the Nation's prison
population grew 2.6%, which was less
than the average annual growth of
3.6% since yearend 1995.
The rate of incarceration in prison at
yearend 2002 was 476 sentenced
inmates per 100,000 U.S. residents -
up from 411 in 1995. About 1 in every
110 men and 1 in every 1,656 women
were sentenced prisoners under the
jurisdiction of State or Federal
authorities.
Overall, the United States incarcerated
2,166,260 persons at yearend 2002.
This total represents persons held in -
- Federal and State prisons
(1,361,258, which excludes State
and Federal prisoners in local jails)
-territorial prisons (16,206)
- local jails (665,475)
- facilities operated by or exclusively
for the Bureau of Immigration and
Customs Enforcement, formerly the
U.S. Immigration and Naturalization
Service (8,748)
- military facilities (2,377)
-jails in Indian country (1,912 as of
midyear 2001)
- juvenile facilities (110,284 as of
October 2000).

Nation's prison population up 2.6%, the largest increase in 3 years

Prison
population

Number   Incarceration
of inmates rate, 12/31/02

Inmates per      Growth, 12/31/01 Percent
100,000 residents* to 12/31/02  change

5 highest:
Federal        163,528 Louisiana           794      Maine          11.5%
California     162,317 Mississippi         743      Rhode Island    8.6
Texas          162,003 Texas               692      Connecticut     7.9
Florida         75,210 Oklahoma            667      Colorado        7.9
NewYork         67,065 Alabama             612      Minnesota       7.9
5 lowest:
North Dakota     1,112 Maine               141      Alaska         -3.8%
Wyoming          1,737 Minnesota           141      Illinois       -3.7
Vermont          1,863 North Dakota        161      Delaware       -3.2
Maine            1,900 Rhode Island        191      Massachusetts  -2.4
New Hampshire    2,451 New Hampshire       192      Montana        -1.1
*Prisoners with a sentence of more than 1 year per 100,000 in the resident population.

- During 2002, 9 States experienced
prison population decreases, led by
Alaska (down 3.8%), Illinois (down
3.7%), Delaware (down 3.2%), and
Massachusetts (down 2.4%). Seven-
teen States had increases of at least
5%, led by Maine (up 11.5%), Rhode
Island (8.6%), and Connecticut,
Colorado, and Minnesota (all 7.9%).
- Between July 1, 2002, and Decem-
ber 31, 2002, the number of inmates
under State jurisdiction increased by
15,713 inmates (1.2%).
- The Federal Bureau of Prisons
continued to grow, up 1,847 inmates
since midyear 2002. At yearend 2002,
the Federal system was the largest
prison system.
- At yearend 2002, privately operated
facilities housed 93,771 inmates
(5.8% of State and 12.4% of Federal
inmates); local jails housed 71,256
State and Federal inmates (4.9% of all
prisoners).

- On December 31, 2002, State
prisons were operating between 1%
and 17% above capacity, while Federal
prisons were operating at 33% above
capacity.
- At yearend 2002, 97,491 women
were in State or Federal prisons -
6.8% of all prison inmates.
- An increase in violent offenders
accounted for 49% of female State
prisoner growth between 1995 and
2001 and 64% of male growth.
- At yearend 2001, 49% of State
prisoners were serving time for violent
offenses, up from 47% in 1995.
* Among the more than 1.38 million
sentenced inmates at yearend 2002,
an estimated 442,300 were black
males between the ages 20 and 39.
At yearend 2002, 10.4% of black males
age 25 to 29 were in prison, compared
to 2.4% of Hispanic males and 1.2% of
white males in the same age group.

U.S. Department of Justice
Office of Justice Programs

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