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1 Prisoners in State and Federal Institutions on December 31, 1977: Advance Report [1] (1977)

handle is hein.death/psfiar0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration
National Criminal Justice
Information and Statistics Service
National Prisoner Statistics Bulletin SD-NPS.PSF-5A, April 1978


       Prisoners
               in State
         and Federal
         Institutions
on December 31, 1977


Advance Report


  A record 292,325 prisoners were held in custody
by Federal and State correctional authorities on
December 31, 1977. Of these, 1,778 were housed
in local jails because of overcrowding in State
correctional facilities.1 Furthermore, 5,313 addi-
tional prisoners, not included in the total, were
held in local jails because of overcrowded prisons
in six States that do not consider such prisoners
to be under custody of State correctional author-
ities. Taken together, 7,091 prisoners throughout
the United States were housed in local jails for
lack of space in State facilities; a year earlier the
figure was 7,725.

  The yearend count was the third in a row to
reach an all-time high, although the rate of growth
in 1977 was only about half that of 1976.2 Although
the overwhelming majority of the prison inmates
were serving sentences of at least a year and a day,
13,732 were serving shorter sentences or were
unsentenced .3

  There were 12,055 women, representing 4 per-
cent of the total, in Federal and State prisons on
December 31, 1977. Consistent with the pattern of
the last several years, the growth rate of the
female portion of the prisoner population during
1977 was considerably higher than for males--10
percent versus 5 percent.

  Federal institutions held 30,920 prisoners on the
last day of 1977, a rise of 6 percent over the num-
ber reported 12 months earlier. For State juris-



  1A11 1977 data are preliminary and subject to
revision. These data were collected through the
National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) program for
the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration by
the Bureau of the Census.
2Figures for December 31, 1976, and December
31, 1977, appear in the accompanying table; those
for December 31, 1975, in Prisoners in State and
Federal Institutions on December 31, 1975, NPS
Bulletin No. SD-NPS-PSF-3, February 1977.
3Examples of unsentenced inmates were those held
for safekeeping, those undergoing court -ordered


dictions as a whole, the number of inmates
increased 5 percent, from 249,305 to 261,405.
There was a 6 percent increase in both the South
and the North Central region and 4 percent in the
Northeast but virtually no change in the West.4

  Twelve States reduced their inmate population
during 1977, compared with only four in 1976.
The largest 1977 decline occurred in California
(1,465); the next largest was in Mississippi (408),
the only jurisdiction with a decrease in both 1976
and 1977. Among the 39 jurisdictions experiencing
net increases in prisoners for 1977, Florida posted
the largest (1,963), followed by Texas (1,722), New
York (1,640), Michigan (1,439), and Louisiana
(1,255). In the latter State, the growth resulted
chiefly from the reassignment of a sizeable number
of locally held prisoners to State facilities
upgraded to meet occupancy standards.

    Among the eleven States housing inmates in
local jails in order to alleviate overcrowding, only
five--Maryland, South Carolina, Massachusetts,
Michigan, and Oregon--considered them to be in
the custody of the State correctional system. The
other six jurisdictions--Alabama, Florida, Louisi-
ana, Mississippi, New Jersey, and Virginia--did
not consider them to be in State custody.
  Additional details from the 1977 count of inmates
in State and Federal correctional facilities will be
contained in a final report to be published this
year.


evaluation, civil narcotics addicts, and, in States
operating an integrated jail-prison system, those
held awaiting trial or sentencing.
4States included within each region are listed in
the accompanying table.

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