Pubdate: Tue, 16 Mar 1999
Source: Independent, The (UK)
Copyright: Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/
Author: Andrew Marshall in Washington

US HAS 1.8 MILLION IN PRISON 

The United States is heading for an unenviable record, as the nation
which puts more of its people behind bars than any other.

The latest figures on US prisons show a population equivalent to that
of a large city is in jail. "At mid-year 1998 the nation's prisons and
jails incarcerated an estimated 1,802,496 persons," said the survey
from the US Justice Department.

"It is unique in a democratic society," said Mark Mauer of the
Sentencing Project, a group which questions American judicial policy.

That figure represents a rate of incarceration of 668 inmates per
100,000 residents, a doubling since 1985. By contrast, in England and
Wales - which have one of the highest rates of incarceration in Europe
- - the figure is around 120 per 100,000. Only Russia, at 685 per
100,000, has a higher proportion of the population in jail, and the US
may overtake it. The total cost of the US prison programme is about
$40bn (UKP25bn).

The staggering increase in the US prison population over the past 20
years has come about because of mandatory minimum sentences, the
policy of "three strikes and you're out", and "truth in sentencing",
which mean that inmates serve more of their sentences and are less
likely to get parole.

The prison population has slowed its rate of growth as the crime rate
falls in the US to 30-year lows, but it still increased by 4.4 per
cent from 1997 to 1998, the survey showed.

The number of prisoners first hit a million in 1990, and even though
the increase has slowed it seems set to hit 2 million within two
years. Nearly 90 per cent of prisoners are men, but the adult female
prison population is growing faster than the male.

The prison system is filled over capacity, and it is adding more
prison beds every two years than there are prisoners in total in Britain.

The prison population is disproportionately black and
Hispanic.

"Relative to their number of US residents, black non-Hispanics were
six times more likely than white non-Hispanics, nearly two times as
likely as Hispanics, and almost 7.5 times more likely than persons of
other races to have been held in a local jail on 30 June1998," the
Justice Department stated.

A growing proportion of prisoners are doing time for drugs offences,
but there are some anomalies in sentencing. The penalties for crack
cocaine, a cheap but powerful high, are significantly harsher than
those for powder cocaine, which is largely the preserve of the
middle-class drug abuser.

The prison population is so large that it distorts US unemployment
figures and skews the voting register.

The Sentencing Project says that nearly 4 million Americans are denied
the right to vote because they have a felony conviction, and nearly
1.4 million of them are black males.

The highest rates of incarceration are in the neighbouring southern
states Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Mississippi. Texas and Louisiana
both have more than 700 per 100,000 of their populations in jail, well
over the Russian figure.

LINK: US Department of Justice:

http://www.usdoj.gov/index.html
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MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry