Bojs Prisoner Petition Filed in Us District Courts 2000
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U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Revised 2/05/02, th Bureau of Justice Statistics Special Report January 2002, NCJ 189430 Prisoner Petitions Filed in U.S. District Courts, 2000, with Trends 1980-2000 By John Scalia BJS Statistician The growth in the Nation’s prison population from 1980 to 1996 was accompanied by an increase in prisoner litigation in the Federal courts. The number of prisoner petitions filed by Federal and State inmates in U.S. district courts increased from 23,230 in 1980 to a high of 68,235 in 1996. Since enactment of the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) in 1996 the number of civil rights petitions filed in the U.S. district courts has decreased. Between 1995 (the year before implementation) and 2000, the number of civil rights petitions decreased from 41,679 to 25,504. The filing rate – number of civil rights petitions filed per 1,000 inmates – fell from 37 to 19. By contrast, since the enactment of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), which was enacted at the same time as the PLRA, the number of habeas corpus petitions filed, which include 28 USC § 2255 motions to vacate a sentence, has increased. Between 1995 and 2000, the total number of habeas corpus petitions filed increased from 20,958 to 31,556. The filing rate increased from 19 to 23 per 1,000 inmates. Petitions filed during 2000 During 2000 the approximate 1.4 million Federal and State prison inmates filed 58,257 petitions in U.S. Highlights From 1995 Number to 2000 the number ofpetitions civil rights petitions filed by prison inmates of prisoner filed in decreased U.S. 39%,district as the number habeas corpus petitions increased 50% courts, of 1980-2000 70,000 60,000 Total 50,000 Civil rights 40,000 30,000 20,000 Habeas corpus 10,000 0 1980 1985 1990 $ During 2000, 58,257 prisoner petitions were filed in U.S. district courts — 80% by State prison inmates and 20% by Federal inmates. $ The majority of petitions filed during 2000 were habeas corpus petitions (43%) or petitions by Federal inmates challenging the constitutionality of an imposed sentence (11%); 44% alleged civil rights violations; and 2% were mandamus actions. $ The 1996 Prison Litigation Reform Act appears to have resulted in a decrease in the number of civil rights petitions filed by State and Federal prison inmates. They filed 41,679 petitions during 1995 compared to 25,504 during 2000. district courts – or 42 petitions for each 1995 2000 $ Between 1995 and 2000 the rate at which Federal and State prison inmates filed civil rights petitions decreased from 37 to 19 per 1,000 inmates. $ The 1996 Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act appears to have resulted in an increase in the number of habeas corpus petitions filed by State prison inmates. State prison inmates filed 50% more habeas corpus petitions during 2000 (21,345) than during 1995 (13,627). $ Between 1995 and 2000 the rate at which State prison inmates filed habeas corpus petitions increased from 13 to 17 per 1,000 inmates. 1,000 prisoners incarcerated (table 1; figure 1). Prior to 1997 the number of civil rights petitions filed annually was greater than the number of habeas corpus petitions. Beginning in 1997 Total number of prisoner petitions filed per 1,000 inmates Table 1. Prisoner petitions filed in U.S. district court by Federal and State inmates, 1980-2000 Jurisdiction and type of petition Federal State Vacate Habeas Manda- Civil Habeas MandaTotal sentence corpus mus rights Total corpus mus 3,661 1,322 1,413 323 603 19,569 7,029 145 4,053 1,248 1,629 342 834 23,602 7,786 177 4,328 1,186 1,927 381 834 24,947 8,036 172 4,354 1,311 1,914 339 790 26,411 8,523 202 4,526 1,427 1,905 372 822 26,567 8,335 198 Year 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 Total 23,230 27,655 29,275 30,765 31,093 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 33,452 33,758 37,279 38,825 41,472 6,262 4,432 4,507 5,130 5,577 1,527 1,556 1,664 2,071 2,526 3,405 1,679 1,808 1,867 1,818 373 427 313 330 315 957 770 722 862 918 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 42,623 42,452 48,417 53,436 57,928 6,611 6,817 6,997 8,456 7,700 2,970 3,328 3,983 5,379 4,628 1,967 2,112 1,507 1,467 1,441 525 378 597 695 491 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 63,634 68,235 62,966 54,715 56,603 58,257 8,951 5,988 13,069 9,729 14,952 11,675 9,937 6,287 10,859 5,752 11,880 6,341 1,343 1,703 1,902 2,321 3,590 3,870 510 418 401 346 555 628 200 Civil rights 12,395 15,639 16,739 17,686 18,034 Eighty percent of prisoner petitions were filed by State prison inmates (table 1). More than half (53%) of the petitions filed by State inmates during 2000 alleged civil rights violations; 46% were habeas corpus petitions; and 1% mandamus actions. Overall, 38 prisoner petitions were filed in U.S. district courts per 1,000 State prison inmates (figure 1). By contrast to prior years, during 2000 the rate at which State inmates filed habeas corpus petitions (17 per 1,000 inmates) was closer to the rate at which they filed civil rights petitions (20 per 1,000). Before 1996 State inmates filed civil rights petitions at more than twice the rate at which they filed habeas corpus petitions. During 2000 inmates incarcerated in the South filed almost half of all State prisoner petitions (table 2). Inmates incarcerated in southern prisons filed 53% of all petitions alleging civil rights violations and 42% of all habeas corpus petitions. Inmates incarcerated 80 40 Total State 0 1980 180 215 276 270 311 18,490 20,071 22,972 23,558 25,039 1,149 999 910 915 1,140 36,012 35,635 41,420 44,980 50,228 10,817 10,325 11,296 11,574 11,908 352 267 479 388 395 24,843 25,043 29,645 33,018 37,925 200 1,110 1,219 974 983 962 1,041 54,593 55,166 48,011 44,777 45,738 46,371 13,627 14,726 19,956 18,838 20,493 21,345 397 444 397 461 513 563 40,569 39,996 27,658 25,478 24,732 24,463 80 in the West filed 23% of all petitions; those incarcerated in the Midwest, 15%; and in the Northeast, 14%. Federal 120 27,190 8,520 29,326 9,040 32,772 9,524 33,695 9,867 35,895 10,545 Note: Detail does not add to total, which includes local jurisdiction cases from outlying territories. Data source: Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, Report of the Proceedings of the Judicial Conference of the United States, annual (table C-2). Petitions by State inmates 160 1985 1990 1995 2000 Civil rights petitions filed per 1,000 inmates 160 120 40 Federal 0 1980 1985 Total State 1990 1995 2000 Habeas corpus petitions filed per 1,000 inmates 200 160 120 Southern States account for about 45% Federal 80 of the Nation’s State prison population. Inmates incarcerated in southern 40 Total prisons did not file petitions at a State 0 substantially greater rate (number per 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 1,000 inmates) than those incarcerated Note: Federal habeas corpus includes in the Northeast or West. In these 2255 motions to vacate a sentence. three regions about 40 petitions were filed per 1,000 prisoners. Inmates Figure 1 incarcerated in the Midwest filed petitions at a lower rate (29 petitions Petitions by Federal inmates per 1,000 prisoners) than those in the other regions. Twenty percent of prisoner petitions were filed by Federal prison inmates. Inmates incarcerated in New Mexico The majority of petitions filed by (77 per 1,000 inmates), Arkansas (65), Federal inmates were either habeas Virginia (68), Pennsylvania (55), corpus petitions (33%) or motions filed Indiana (55), West Virginia (51), and pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 seeking Alabama (51) filed petitions at the to vacate the sentence imposed greatest rates (figure 2). By contrast, (53%); about 9% alleged civil rights inmates incarcerated in Alaska (6 per violations; and 5% were mandamus 1,000), Utah (6), North Dakota (8), actions (table 1). Rhode Island (10), Hawaii (12), Connecticut (19), and Ohio (19) filed Overall, 82 prisoner petitions were filed petitions at the lowest rates. in U.S. district courts for every 1,000 Federal prison inmates; 44 petitions 2 Prisoner Petitions Filed in U.S. District Courts, 2000, with Trends 1980-2000 Revised 2/05/02, th seeking to vacate the sentence; 27 habeas corpus; 7 civil rights; and 4 mandamus (figure 1). The higher filing rate for Federal prison inmates compared to State inmates generally reflects the original jurisdiction that Federal courts have over matters dealing with Federal offenders. Legislative initiatives to reduce prisoner litigation Table 2. Prisoner petitions filed in U.S. district court by Federal and State inmates, by type of petition and State or jurisdiction, 2000 Region and jurisdiction U.S. total Federal State 6,341 -- 15 259 3,855 21,086 628 563 6,672 349 66 228 108 792 3,013 2,032 32 52 ----------- 22 0 ** ** 0 0 22 ** 3,087 121 27 164 24 258 1,406 1,057 16 14 41 2 0 9 0 2 20 7 1 0 3,522 226 39 55 84 532 1,587 946 15 38 174,825 18,355 1,679 10,722 2,257 29,784 70,198 36,847 3,286 1,697 6,805 1,146 1,103 335 296 1,158 203 855 118 9 880 119 583 -------------- 54 7 10 ** 0 ** ** 4 3 c 30 0 ** 3,362 368 602 97 108 685 126 401 46 7 540 47 335 68 14 5 8 0 4 3 14 0 0 13 5 2 3,321 757 486 230 188 469 74 436 69 2 297 67 246 237,016 45,281 20,125 7,955 8,344 47,718 6,238 27,323 3,895 1,076 45,833 2,616 20,612 South 22,239 Alabama 1,343 Arkansas 779 Delaware 298 District of Columbia 281 Florida 2,734 Georgia 1,650 Kentucky 557 Louisiana 1,461 Maryland 714 Mississippi 978 North Carolina 681 Oklahoma 1,008 South Carolina 891 Tennessee 1,009 Texas 5,613 Virginia 2,045 West Virginia 197 ------------------- 149 4 5 2 ** 11 1 4 2 1 2 18 24 2 16 52 5 ** 8,883 419 145 84 91 1,277 507 225 581 251 297 261 589 278 311 2,782 724 61 347 9 101 1 5 76 12 6 4 38 4 0 7 27 4 45 3 5 12,860 911 528 211 185 1,370 1,130 322 874 424 675 402 388 584 678 2,734 1,313 131 552,225 26,255 11,915 6,921 7,456 71,319 44,232 14,919 35,047 23,538 20,241 31,266 23,181 21,778 22,166 157,997 30,168 3,856 10,667 23 979 6,893 568 58 123 73 477 409 410 82 539 33 --------------- 34 ** 11 13 0 ** 1 1 8 0 0 0 0 5,759 13 419 4,017 261 26 36 34 185 321 155 34 243 15 101 0 16 27 1 0 0 1 7 0 44 2 3 0 4,773 10 533 2,836 306 32 86 37 277 88 211 46 293 18 272,419 4,173 26,510 163,001 16,833 5,053 5,526 3,105 10,012 5,342 10,630 5,630 14,915 1,680 Northeast Connecticut Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire New Jersey New York Pennsylvania Rhode Island Vermont However, after enactment of CRIPA the number of civil rights petitions filed in the Federal courts by State inmates continued to increase through the 1980's and the 1990's – increasing more than threefold from 12,395 during 1980 to a high of 40,569 during 1995 (table 1). The increase was primarily attributable to the increase in the State prison population. Between 1980 and 1995, the rate at which State inmates filed civil rights petitions was stable, West averaging 40 petitions per 1,000 Alaska Arizona inmates (figure 1). The State California prison population, by contrast, Colorado increased more than threefold from Hawaii 305,458 during 1980 to 1,025,624 Idaho Montana during 1995 (table 3). • The Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) sought to reduce the number of petitions filed by inmates claiming civil rights violations. As part of the PLRA, inmates (1) are Civil 2000 prison rights population* 25,505 1,381,901 11,880 46,371 In 1980 the Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act of 1980 (CRIPA) was enacted to reduce the number of civil rights petitions filed Midwest in the Federal courts. As part of Illinois Indiana this act, State prison inmates were Iowa required to exhaust State-level Kansas administrative remedies before Michigan Minnesota filing their petitions in the Federal Missouri courts (42 U.S.C. § 1997(e)). Thus Nebraska Congress sought to reserve the North Dakota Ohio Federal courts for more serious South Dakota civil rights violations or other signifiWisconsin cant constitutional issues. During 1996, two legislative initiatives were enacted that sought to further limit prisoners’ ability to file petitions in the Federal courts: Type of petition Vacate Habeas corpus Total sentence Death penalty Other Mandamus 58,257 6,341 274 24,945 1,192 Nevada New Mexico Oregon Utah Washington Wyoming 1,041 145,416 24,463 1,236,485 Note: Total includes local jurisdiction cases arising in the outlying territories. Detail for States does not include petitions by Federal inmates or the Federal prison population. --No Federal jurisdiction. **Jurisdiction without a death penalty during 1999. Jurisdiction had no prisoners under a sentence of death during 1999. *Source: Prisoners in 2000, BJS Bulletin, August 2001, NCJ 188207. Data source: Federal Judicial Center, Integrated Database (ICPSR 8429), 2000. Prisoner Petitions Filed in U.S. District Courts, 2000 with Trends 1980-2000 3 Prisoner petitions filed in U.S. district courts by State inmates, by State of jurisdiction, 2000 Petitions per 1,000 inmates Note: Alaska (5.5 petitions per 1,000 inmates) and Hawaii (11.5) are not shown. Fewer than 20 20 to 34 35 to 49 50 or more Figure 2 required to exhaust all administrative remedies before filing a case in Federal court; (2) filing petitions in forma pauperis are required to pay applicable filing fees and court costs from their existing assets or any funds available through correctional trust fund accounts; and (3) are prohibited from filing in forma pauperis if they have had prior petitions dismissed as being frivolous or malicious. Table 3. Federal and State prison populations, 1980-2000 Year 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 Total Federal 329,821 24,363 369,930 28,133 413,806 29,673 436,855 31,926 462,002 34,263 State 305,458 341,797 384,133 404,929 427,739 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 502,507 544,972 585,084 627,600 712,364 40,223 44,408 48,300 49,928 59,171 462,284 500,564 536,784 577,672 653,193 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 773,919 825,559 882,500 969,301 1,054,702 65,526 71,608 80,259 89,587 95,034 708,393 753,951 802,241 879,714 959,668 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 1,125,874 1,181,919 1,240,659 1,299,096 1,363,701 1,381,892 100,250 105,544 112,973 123,041 135,246 145,416 1,025,624 1,076,375 1,127,686 1,176,055 1,228,455 1,236,476 Note: Counts represent total jurisdiction counts for Federal and State prisons. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, National Prison Statistics data series, annual. • The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) addresses habeas corpus petitions in several ways: (1) It requires inmates to exhaust direct appeals at the State level prior to filing a petition in Federal court. (2) It establishes a 1-year statute of limitations whereby inmates have 1 year from the time their conviction becomes final – after all direct appeals of the conviction and/or sentence have been exhausted – to file a habeas corpus petition in Federal court. (3) It requires that a panel of the applicable Federal court of appeals approve successive petitions being filed in district court. However, the PLRA and the AEDPA appear to have had differential impacts on filing rates and, accordingly, the number of petitions filed. After enactment of the PLRA both the rate at which State and Federal prison inmates filed civil rights petitions and the number of civil rights petitions filed decreased dramatically. After enactment of the AEDPA, by contrast, both the filing rate and the number of habeas corpus petitions filed by State inmates increased. For Federal inmates, there was no measurable impact on the filing rate of habeas corpus petitions attributable to the enactment of AEDPA. The 4 Prisoner Petitions Filed in U.S. District Courts, 2000, with Trends 1980-2000 increase in the number of habeas corpus petitions filed by Federal inmates (§ 2241 and § 2255 motions combined) appears to be solely a consequence of the increasing prison population. Civil rights petitions. Almost immediately following enactment of the PLRA, the number of civil rights petitions filed by State inmates substantially declined – decreasing from an average of 3,020 petitions filed per month during the 55 months prior to enactment to an average of 2,227 petitions following enactment (through September 2000) (figure 3). The filing rate decreased from an average of 3.2 petitions filed per 1,000 inmates per month prior to enactment to 1.9. Despite the decrease in the filing rate, the decrease in civil rights petitions filed was offset by an increased State prison population. Since enactment of the PLRA, the State prison population increased by approximately 160,000 inmates (table 3). The PLRA similarly impacted filings by Federal inmates. Following enactment of the PLRA the number of civil rights petitions decreased from an average of 88 per month prior to enactment to an average of 84 per month following Revised 2/05/02, th Types of prisoner petitions This report addresses three types of suits prison inmates are able to file in the Federal courts to challenge the constitutionality of their imprisonment (habeas corpus), seek redress of civil rights violations by government officials (civil rights), or to compel a government official to perform a duty owed (mandamus). Habeas corpus (28 U.S.C. §§ 2241 and 2254-2255). The basic principle of the writ of habeas corpus is that the government is accountable to the courts for a person’s imprisonment. If the government cannot show that the person’s imprisonment conforms with the fundamental requirements of law, the person is entitled to immediate release. A previous BJS report indicated that “ineffective assistance of counsel” was the most frequently cited (25%) reason for habeas corpus petitions by State inmates. Other commonly cited reasons include errors by the trial courts (15%), due process (14%), and self-incrimination (12%) (Federal Habeas Corpus Review, BJS Discussion Paper, NCJ 155504, September 1995). For Federal inmates habeas corpus petitions take two statutorily distinguished forms: (1) traditional habeas corpus petitions that generally challenge the constitutionality of enactment (not shown in a table). The filing rate decreased from an average of 0.9 per 1,000 inmates per month to 0.7. imprisonment (28 U.S.C. § 2241) and (2) motions to vacate a sentence imposed (28 U.S.C. § 2255). While § 2255 motions are similar in principle to traditional habeas corpus petitions, in 1948 Congress distinguished the two to address practical difficulties that had arisen in administering the habeas corpus jurisdiction of the Federal courts. Pursuant to § 2255, the district court where the inmate was originally sentenced retains jurisdiction over challenges of the sentence. In this report, unless specifically noted, habeas corpus includes both § 2241 habeas corpus motions and § 2255 motions to vacate a sentence. Civil rights (42 U.S.C. § 1983). The foundation for these petitions originates in the 14th amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The 14th amendment prohibits the States from “depriv[ing] any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.” The Civil Rights Act of 1871, as codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1983, provides the mechanism for persons to seek relief from constitutional deprivations. While the Civil Rights Act originally addressed only violations by State officials, in 1971 the Supreme Court extended its jurisdiction to include violations by Federal officials (Bivens v. Six Unknown Agents of the Federal average of 1,042 petitions were filed compared to an average of 1,637 petitions filed following enactment (through September 2000) (figure 4). The AEDPA appears, however, to have had a delayed impact on the rate in which State inmates file habeas corpus petitions in U.S. district courts. During the first 11 months following enactment the filing rate did not change substantially. However, during April 1997, which marked the 1-year anniversary Habeas corpus petitions. By contrast of enactment, the filing rate more than to the PLRA, the AEDPA appears to doubled – increasing from 1.1 per have resulted in an increase in the 1,000 inmates per month to 3.4 – number of habeas corpus petitions resulting in an additional 2,600 habeas filed in U.S. district courts. During the corpus petitions being filed. Following 55 months prior to enactment an The decrease in civil rights petitions by Federal inmates was also offset by an increased prison population. Since enactment, the Federal prison population increased by approximately 40,000 (table 3). Bureau of Narcotics, 403 U.S. 388 (1971)). A previous BJS report indicated that physical security (21%), inadequate medical treatment (17%), and due process (13%) were the most frequently cited issues in civil rights petitions filed by State inmates (Challenging the Conditions of Prisons and Jails, BJS Discussion Paper, NCJ 151652, February 1995). Mandamus (28 U.S.C. § 1361). The writ of mandamus – like habeas corpus – is an extraordinary remedy based in common law that is used when the plaintiff had no other adequate means to attain the desired relief. Mandamus petitions are filed when the inmate seeks to compel a government official to perform a duty owed to the inmate. The Federal courts have held, however, that the mandamus writ can only be used to compel a ministerial or nondiscretionary duty of the government (Marquez-Ramos v. Reno, 69 F.3d 477 (1995)). Compared to other types of petitions, mandamus petitions are infrequent, varied in nature, and typically specific to individual circumstances. For more detailed descriptions, see Prisoner Petitions in the Federal Courts, 1980-96, BJS, NCJ 164615, October 1997. this spike, the filing rate decreased substantially – to 1.4 per 1,000 inmates per month – but remained higher than that before April 1997. In contrast to petitions by State inmates, the AEDPA does not appear to have had any statistically significant impact on the filing rate of habeas corpus petitions (including § 2255 petitions to vacate a sentence) by Federal inmates.* The increase in the number of these petitions appears to be solely related to the increase in the size of the Federal prison population. *On pages 6 and 7 see the discussion of methods for estimating the impact of this legislative change. Prisoner Petitions Filed in U.S. District Courts, 2000 with Trends 1980-2000 5 Revised 2/05/02, th Number of civil rights petitions filed by State prisoners, by month 4,500 Estimated filings without the 4,000 Number of habeas corpus petitions filed by State prisoners, by month 4,000 Prison Litigation Reform Act 3,500 3,500 3,000 3,000 2,500 2,500 Actual filings 2,000 2,000 1,500 Actual filings 1,000 1,000 500 500 0 October 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 (Sept.) Figure 3 1,500 Estimated filings without the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act 0 October 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 (Sept.) Figure 4 Estimates of the number of prisoner petitions that would have been filed Assessing the impact of the PLRA and absent the change in law were derived AEDPA on the number of prisoner by applying the parameters estimated As part of the time series analysis, data petitions filed requires more extensive from the ARIMA model but excluding analysis than calculating the difference describing the number of prisoner the PLRAt or AEDPAt parameter, petitions filed in U.S. district courts between the number of petitions filed depending upon the model, from the were aggregated into monthly counts prior to enactment and at some time equation. For example, the change in following enactment. Other changes – and plotted over time – both before and the number of prisoner petitions attribsuch as increases in the prison popula- after enactment of the PLRA and utable to the change in law was tion and changes in prison administra- AEDPA. In the context of ARIMA, estimated as: these two acts are considered intervention and conditions – may also impact tions, or “shocks,” that cause a change the rate at which inmates file petitions N N ^ Pt Pt in the number of prisoner petitions − y t 1,000 =t=1 Y t 1,000 and the number of petitions filed. t=1 filed. In addition to the legislative where: While changes in prison administration change, the size of the prison populaand conditions are difficult to ascertain, tion was also incorporated into the model derived. Monthly estimates of is change in the number of petitions incorporating changes in the prison filed during observation period population is a straightforward process. the prison population were derived by apportioning the change in the yearN is the number of months in the During the period following enactment end prison population in equal increobservation period of the PLRA and AEDPA, the State ments over the 12 calendar months. Yt is the actual number of petitions filed prison population increased from per 1,000 inmates each month during approximately 1.1 million to 1.2 million; (For 2000, estimates were derived using the June 30 population.) the observation period the Federal prison population t is the estimated number of petitions increased from approximately The ARIMA models derived suggest that would have been filed per 1,000 105,000 to 145,000. that the PLRA and AEDPA had a inmates absent the legislative change statistically significant impact (p < 0.05) P t is the prison population. Estimates of the impact of the Prison on the number of prisoner petitions, Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) and the civil rights and habeas corpus petitions Estimates of the number of prisoner Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) on the number of respectively, filed in U.S. district courts petitions that would have been filed prisoner petitions filed can be derived by State prison inmates and on the absent an increase in the prison using ARIMA models. ARIMA models number of civil rights petitions filed by population were calculated as the are derived empirically from available Federal prison inmates (tables 4-7). product of the actual filing rate and the data. These time-series models test The parameter estimate describing the for changes in the underlying process effect of the AEDPA on habeas corpus due to some intervention such as a petitions filed by Federal inmates was policy change, new legislation, or a not statistically significant (table 7). court decision by extrapolating from the past to the future. (See Richard Measuring the impact of legislation McCleary and Richard A. Hay, Jr., Applied Time Series Analysis for the Social Sciences, 1980.) 6 Prisoner Petitions Filed in U.S. District Courts, 2000, with Trends 1980-2000 Revised 2/05/02, th estimate of the May 1996 prisoner population. For example, the change in the number of prisoner petitions attributable to the increase in the State prison population was estimated as: N N 1,097,755 Pt =t=1 − Y t 1,000 Y t 1,000 t=1 where: is change in the number of petitions filed during observation period N is the number of months in the observation period Yt is the actual number of petitions filed per 1,000 inmates per month during the observation period Pt is the prison population. Civil rights petitions. Estimates derived from time-series models suggest that the PLRA resulted in approximately 3.4 fewer civil rights petitions filed per month for every 3,000 State prison inmates ( = -1.13, p < 0.05) (table 4). Between April 1996 and September 2000 an estimated 73,000 fewer petitions were filed in U.S. district courts by State prison inmates than would have been filed if the filing rate not changed following implementation of the PLRA (figure 3). During the Federal fiscal year 2000 an estimated 19,000 fewer civil rights petitions were filed by State inmates. However, because of the increase in the State prison populations more inmates were present to potentially file civil rights complaints. Accordingly, the approximate 160,000 inmate increase in the State prison population following enactment of the PLRA resulted in an estimated 7,500 additional civil rights petitions filed following enactment (not shown in a table). Similarly, estimates suggest that the PLRA resulted in approximately 1 fewer civil rights petitions filed per month for every 4,000 Federal prison inmates ( = -0.25, p < 0.05) (table 6). Between April 1996 and September 2000 an estimated 1,700 fewer civil rights petitions were filed in U.S. district courts by Federal prison inmates. During the Federal fiscal year 2000 an Table 4. ARIMA parameter estimates: Civil rights petitions filed in U.S. district courts by State prison inmates, October 1, 1991, through September 30, 2000 Table 5. ARIMA parameter estimates: Habeas corpus petitions filed in U.S. district courts by State prison inmates, October 1, 1991, through September 30, 2000 yt = µ + PLRAt + (Yt - Yt-1) Standard Parameter Estimate error t-value µ 3.08 0.08 33.28* -1.13 0.11 -9.89* PLRAt 0.60 0.07 8.06* yt = µ + AEDPAt + Standard Parameter Estimate error µ 1.10 0.05 0.29 0.06 AEDPAt 0.32 0.09 Note: Yt is the number of petitions filed per 1,000 inmates. *Parameter significant at p < 0.05. Source: Federal Judicial Center, Integrated Database (ICPSR 8429), 2000. Note: Yt is the number of petitions filed per 1,000 inmates. *Parameter significant at p < 0.05. Source: Federal Judicial Center, Integrated Database (ICPSR 8429), 2000. estimated 400 fewer civil rights petitions were filed. However the increase in the Federal prison population contributed to an increase in civil right petitions by Federal inmates. The approximate 70,000 inmate increase in the Federal prison population resulted in an estimated 600 additional civil rights petitions filed following enactment (not shown in a table). Habeas corpus petitions. Estimates derived from time-series models suggest that the AEDPA resulted in approximately 1 additional habeas corpus filing per month for every 3,400 State prison inmates ( = 0.29, p < 0.05) (table 5). Additionally, the increase in the number of habeas corpus petitions resulting from the increased filing rate was supplemented by an increase attributable to the increase in the State prison population. Table 6. ARIMA parameter estimates: Civil rights petitions filed in U.S. district courts by Federal prison inmates, October 1, 1991, through September 30, 2000 yt = µ + PLRAt + (Yt - Yt-1) Standard Parameter Estimate error t-value µ 0.92 0.03 29.30* -0.25 0.04 -5.56* PLRAt 0.37 0.09 4.06* Note: Yt is the number of petitions filed per 1,000 inmates. *Parameter significant at p < 0.05. Source: Federal Judicial Center, Integrated Database (ICPSR 8429), 2000. (Yt - Yt-1) t-value 24.15* 4.43* 3.45* Between April 1996 and September 2000 an estimated 18,000 additional habeas corpus petitions were filed in U.S. district courts by State prison inmates as a result of the enactment of the AEDPA (figure 4). During the Federal fiscal year 2000 an estimated 5,800 additional habeas corpus petitions had been filed. The approximate 160,000 inmate increase in the State prison population resulted in an estimated 5,900 additional petitions filed following enactment (not shown in a table). While the AEDPA does not appear to have had an impact on habeas corpus petitions filed by Federal inmates ( = 0.78, p = 0.37) (table 7), the approximate 40,000 inmate increase in the Federal prison population resulted in an estimated 6,000 additional habeas corpus petitions filed in U.S. district courts (not shown in a table). Table 7. ARIMA parameter estimates: Habeas corpus petitions and § 2255 motions to vacate a sentence filed in U.S. district courts by Federal prison inmates, October 1, 1991, through September 30, 2000 yt = µ + AEDPAt + Standard Parameter Estimate error µ 6.24 0.62 0.78 0.88 AEDPAt 0.28 0.09 (Yt - Yt-1) t-value 10.01* 0.89 2.96* Note: Yt is the number of petitions filed per 1,000 inmates. *Parameter significant at p < 0.05. Source: Federal Judicial Center, Integrated Database (ICPSR 8429), 2000. Prisoner Petitions Filed in U.S. District Courts, 2000 with Trends 1980-2000 7 Methodology Data sources The primary source of data for tables presented in this report is the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database. The Integrated Database is composed of the criminal, civil, and appellate data files maintained by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. These data are archived at the National Archive of Criminal Justice Data by the Federal Judicial Center as Study Number ICPSR 8429. Statistics describing the number of Federal and State prison inmates were obtained from the Bureau of Justice Statistics National Prison Statistics data series. This report and others from the Bureau of Justice Statistics are available through the Internet http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/ The Bureau of Justice Statistics is the statistical agency of the U.S. Department of Justice. Lawrence A. Greenfeld is acting director. BJS Special Reports address a specific topic in depth from one or more datasets that cover many topics. John Scalia wrote this report. Keonna Feaster provided statistical review and verification. John Golmalt of the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts provided technical commentary. George Cort of the Federal Judicial Center provided access to the data. Ellen Goldberg and Tom Hester edited and produced the report. Jayne E. Robinson administered final production. January 2002, NCJ 189430 U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics Washington, DC 20531 Official Business Penalty for Private Use $300 PRESORTED STANDARD POSTAGE & FEES PAID DOJ/BJS Permit No. G-91