Moving Target a Decade of Resistance to the Prison Industrial Complex Justice Policy Institute 2008.pdf
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Moving Target A Decade of Resistance to the Prison Industrial Complex A Justice Policy Institute Report to commemorate the 10th anniversary of Critical Resistance September 2008 About the Authors Amanda Petteruti is a researcher and policy analyst with approximately seven years of combined experience in education and criminal justice policy. Early in her career, she organized a writing program for youth at the National Campaign to Stop Violence and provided general support to the National Juvenile Defender Center. Prior to joining the staff of the Justice Policy Institute, she conducted research on issues pertaining to urban education at the Council of the Great City Schools. Petteruti earned a Master of Arts in education policy and leadership from the University of Maryland College Park and a Bachelor of Arts in sociology from Bates College. Petteruti has contributed to several reports related to education policy and co-authored The Vortex: The Concentrated Racial Impact of Drug Imprisonment and the Characteristics of Punitive Counties and JPI’s Public Safety Policy Brief series. Nastassia Walsh is JPI’s research assistant. She joined JPI shortly after earning her Master’s Degree in forensic psychology from Marymount University, where she studied psychological principles in the law and injustices in the criminal justice system. She started her education by earning a Bachelor of Science degree in psychology and justice studies from Arizona State University. Walsh has co-authored several reports while at JPI, including Maryland’s Mandatory Minimum Drug Sentencing Laws, The Consequences Aren’t Minor, and JPI’s Public Safety Policy Brief series. Walsh is an active volunteer at Opportunities, Alternatives and Resources (OAR) of Fairfax County, Virginia, an organization that aids both incarcerated adults and people recently released from jail in their re-entry process to help break the cycle of incarceration. Acknowledgments This report would not have been possible without the generous support of the Open Society Institute and the Drug Policy Alliance. This report was written by Amanda Petteruti and Nastassia Walsh, and edited by Sheila Bedi, at the Justice Policy Institute. JPI would like to thank Kati Guerra, Aaron Teskey, Andy Denison and Anisha Mehta for their invaluable research assistance. Special thanks to Emily Sydnor for her media analyses and Jason Ziedenberg for helping to conceptualize the report. We are indebted to Rachel Herzing and the staff of Critical Resistance for their critical insight. The report was copy edited by Sarah Baker and designed by Lynn Riley. JPI staff includes Sheila Bedi, Debra Glapion, LaWanda Johnson, Laura Jones, Amanda Petteruti, Emily Sydnor, and Nastassia Walsh. 2 Moving Target: A Decade of Resistance to the Prison Industrial Complex Contents 2 introduction 6 10 YEARS BY THE NUMBERS: Imprisonment, crime, policing and spending over the last decade The system expands The target shifts: Prison growth slows, while jail populations multiply People of color continue to be overrepresented in prisons and jails The PIC continues to absorb millions of our tax dollars Crime is at nearly the lowest point in the last 30 years and continues to fall Crime still affects certain communities disproportionately 10 PROFITING FROM PRISONS: A risky proposition for both corporations and communities 13 States and corporations profit from the labor of people who are imprisoned Prisons fail as an economic development tool POLICING: Accountability, federalization and surveillance Policing the police: The public supports police accountability The increasing federalization of the police and crime Overall expenditures for policing continue to increase Surveillance has increased from the borders to neighborhood streets Specialized police forces multiply and target specific crimes and populations 19 THE PRISON INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX IN ACTION: An analysis of the criminalization of drug use, poverty, mental illness, and immigration The war on drugs Militarization of police is largely driven by the drug war Criminalizing poverty and homelessness Immigration and the perceived threat of terrorism Reducing reliance on the criminal justice system?: Media, public opinion, and political agendas are beginning to shift toward addressing social problems outside the criminal justice system 30 PREVENTION: We know what works to strengthen communities 33 CONCLUSION: Looking Ahead 36 Funding for positive public safety expenditures still lags Mental health treament Substance abuse treatment Prevention We know what works to increase public safety Specialty prisons Onerous parole conditions Drug courts and other specialty courts Endnotes Introduction “The pandemic of fear and distrust, laced with contempt for enemy classes devoid of redeeming qualities (i.e., “people who hate freedom”), and combined with the growing number of paychecks attached to social control, undermines our collective willingness and ability to imagine “A World Without Prisons,” let alone organize the local and transnational effort required for its creation.” Geoff Ward, Criminal Justice Professor at Northeastern University1 For the past 10 years, Critical Resistance has helped advocates imagine the possibility of a world without bars. By questioning the necessity and effectiveness of the very foundations of our criminal justice system—incarceration, surveillance, policing—Critical Resistance has furthered the notion that nothing can “fix” the criminal justice system. Instead, if our country is to truly reclaim its communities, the criminal justice system must be dismantled. There is no “fix” for a system built on racism and fear and actualized through the social control of the poor. As a result of Critical Resistance and other groups’ community organizing, activists and stakeholders throughout the country recognize that there is no correlation between crime and punishment in this country and safe and vibrant communities. Despite evidence that investments in prisons and policing are not effective in increasing public safety, the prison industrial complex (PIC) continues to consume considerable governmental resources. In fact, history shows that states that increase their funding for the PIC do not necessarily see crime rates drop any more than states that do not. More specifically, we now know that increasing prison and jail populations does not produce lower crime rates.2 Yet the United States appears determined to cling to incar- ceration—the one thoroughly studied and disproven method of sustaining healthy communities. So if the criminal justice system is not really about creating safe communities, what is it? Critical Resistance answered this question by developing its analysis of the prison industrial complex or PIC. The prison industrial complex is a complicated system situated at the intersection of governmental and private interests that uses imprisonment, policing, and surveillance as a solution to social, political, and economic problems. The imprisonment crisis in the United States and the continued failure to invest in policies and programs that build on the strengths of our communities cannot be attributed to racism, media hysteria, or corporate greed alone. The complex interaction of these factors (and many others) has created a reality in which more than seven million people live under the control of the criminal justice system.3 The prison industrial complex clearly manifests all the inequities that still exist in the United States. With one in nine black men ages 20 to 34 behind bars,4 the disproportionate involvement of people living with mental illness and substance abuse, the use of the criminal justice system to enforce immigration laws, the skyrocketing imprisonment rates for women, and the specific targeting of poor communities, the system is molded by the forces of racism, able-ism, xenophobia, sexism, and classism. All modern day struggles for justice are implicated in criminal justice reform efforts because the current system magnifies all the ways in which the United States of America fails many of the people who live within its borders. But the success of the burgeoning national movement to decarcerate and divest from prisons and other negative public safety investments reveals a promising potential for real change. While a national movement to resist the prison industrial complex has grown, the PIC has flourished and, in some cases, shifted its shape. Prisons remain an important target for the resistance movement, but jail populations have dramatically increased and their growth far 2 Moving Target: A Decade of Resistance to the Prison Industrial Complex surpasses annual prison growth.5 Federal and state governments continue to lavish police departments with resources—with a 77 percent increase in funding over the past 10 years.6 And the complex forces of racism, media hype, and a stalled economy have contributed to the criminalization of immigration. Many industries still profit from the United States’ addiction to incarceration. Although the private prison industry has not grown at the rate once expected, it is still a profitable, politically connected industry. In 2000-2001, Corrections Corporation of America’s (CCA) stock plummeted, but now in 2008 it is steadily increasing.7 Indeed, private prison companies are betting that they will continue to make a profit, because in their view there is limited momentum for sentencing reform. Some politicians also remain enamored of the private prison industry. In his 2004 state of the state address, former Republican National Committee chairman and current governor of Mississippi, Haley Barbour, hyped his commitment to private prisons and announced the reopening of a formerly shuttered facility that is run by CCA. Related businesses that provide telecommunications, food, and other contractual services to prisons and jails continue to turn serious profits. Perhaps most disturbing is that, in the post-industrial United States, politicians tout prisons and jails as economic development tools. The prison industrial complex has become increasingly federalized. Funding for federal police resources has increased by 57 percent over the past eight years8 and is justified by the federal government’s focus on fighting terrorism and enforcing immigration laws. But the federal government has also been busy creating new reasons to incarcerate. From 2000 to 2007, Congress added 454 new offenses to the federal criminal code.9 Not surprisingly, this increase in federal crimes coincided with a 32 percent increase in the number of federal prisoners.10 Technological advances have driven the growth of police surveillance tactics. As cameras have become less expensive and more advanced, police departments across the country target poor neighborhoods with surveillance cameras. Sixty percent of all police departments nationwide use some form of mounted surveillance camera,11 despite the lack of evidence that these cameras decrease violence in our communities. Video surveillance is a $9.2 billion industry—a tremendous waste given the sorts of resources we could flood our communities with for that amount of money.12 Challenging the Prison Industrial Complex During the past 10 years, efforts to dismantle the prison industrial complex have taken various forms: • Mothers of children in Louisiana prisons led a first-of-its-kind effort to close down a horrifically abusive juvenile prison and formed Family and Friends of Louisiana’s Incarcerated Children (FFLIC), a powerful advocacy organization that continues to lead the juvenile justice reform movement. • Grassroots Leadership has developed numerous successful campaigns throughout the Deep South that have reduced the number of private prisons in that region. • Members of the Community in Unity Coalition, including Critical Resistance of New York City, built a powerful coalition that defeated a proposal for a 2,000 bed jail in the south Bronx. • Copwatch chapters have sprouted up coast to coast, providing communities with the tools they need to hold police officers accountable for abuses of power. Community-based movements revealed the powerful economic drivers behind imprisonment. • In New York, the Campaign for Telephone Justice took on the telephone companies and significantly reduced the financial burdens families incur when trying to stay connected to their incarcerated loved ones. • The Southern Center for Human Rights and the Alabama Women’s Resource Network used a class action lawsuit over inhumane conditions in an Alabama women’s prison to launch a campaign to close an overcrowded and dilapidated women’s prison. As a result of this advocacy, a recent Alabama legislative task force endorsed a plan to reduce the number of incarcerated women in Alabama by investing in community services and regionally-based alternatives to prison. Sustained media campaigns throughout the country have turned the tide of major editorial boards that now rally behind “treatment not incarceration” for people struggling with substance use and that decry the incarceration of people living with mental illness. • In Mississippi, children who survived serious physical and emotional abuse while incarcerated repeatedly testified before the legislature and helped convince lawmakers to permanently close the facility in which the most horrific abuses occurred. • Critical Resistance and its allies across the country have engaged social justice advocates from diverse fields in the struggle to dismantle the PIC. These dynamic partnerships frequently include educators, environmental justice advocates, and members of organized labor and the faith based community. Justice Policy Institute 3 Introduction The media remain a vibrant force in both creating and dismantling the prison industrial complex. Media sensationalism creates public panic about crime and safety, but a comparison of crime reporting and crime rates indicates that the media overhype the existence of crime in our communities and do not reflect the realities of public safety. The war on drugs provides an important example of how the media fuel bad public policy. Studies show that media reports overwhelmingly focus on the need to “get tough” on drugs and rarely discuss the failures of these policies to increase safety in our communities. The media almost wholly ignore the fact that, according to the federal government, whites and African Americans use drugs at the same rate. Yet African Americans are imprisoned for drug offenses at 10 times the rate of their white counterparts. The war on drugs remains a vital force of the prison industrial complex. The stark racial disproportionality of drug imprisonment rates suggests that drug policy is laden with overt racial bias. An examination of drug war funding reveals the federal government’s relatively minimal investment in programs that actually help people kick their addictions, especially when compared to the billions of dollars poured into the PIC in the name of the drug war. The federal Office of National Drug Control Policy spent twothirds of its budget during FY 2008 on law enforcement and interdiction, and it invested only one-third on drug treatment and prevention.13 This allocation of resources directly contributes to the disproportional imprisonment of African Americans for drug offenses. Whites generally have greater access to drug treatment than do people of color and they are admitted to drug treatment at more than twice the rate of African Americans.14 Police departments have become increasingly militarized as a result of the continued war on drugs. Police paramilitary units or SWAT teams now exist in 90 percent of the police departments that serve communities with more than 50,000 people.15 These units are responsible for some of the most controversial and deadly police practices in use today. During several botched drug raids, SWAT teams have killed innocent people, including a 92-year-old woman in Atlanta.16 Drug use is just one of the perceived social problems that PIC proponents try to solve through more prisons and more policing. Government entities struggling to address homelessness, mental illness, and immigration have also turned to the prison industrial complex with failed results. In these contexts, the PIC targets 4 Moving Target: A Decade of Resistance to the Prison Industrial Complex with law enforcement strategies and imprisonment specific populations that have been deemed undesirable. For example, policies that criminalize homelessness have their origin in the “broken windows” theory. This theory suggests that unkempt neighborhoods attract a criminal element, so crime can be controlled by a rigorous enforcement of “quality of life” ordinances that regulate panhandling, sleeping in public, and other public order offenses. There is no evidence that incarcerating the homeless increases public safety, but since formerly incarcerated people frequently struggle to find a job or stable living situation, it is certain that incarceration is a destabilizing force that will likely serve only to exacerbate the very conditions that contribute to homelessness. Jailing Communities: The Impact of Jail Expansion and Effective Public Safety Strategies, a recent Justice Policy Institute report, documents that 60 percent of the jail population lives with a mental health disorder, compared to 10.6 percent of the general population.17 People living with mental illness are swept into the criminal justice system because of the failures of the public mental health system and the lack of adequate treatment in most poor communities. As a result, prisons and jails alike function as the largest psychiatric facilities in the country. In some states, jails actually function as quasi-mental health crisis centers. In Kentucky, Mississippi, Alaska, Montana, Wyoming, and New Mexico, jails are specifically authorized by state statute to hold individuals who are awaiting a bed in a mental health facility. While the PIC is resource-rich in many ways, prisons and jails are ill-equipped to meet the complex needs of people living with mental illness. Incarceration itself can contribute to the decompensation of many people with mental illness. There is some evidence that policymakers have begun to pay attention to these phenomena and are focusing efforts on strategies that will end the criminalization of people living with mental illness. The long-term success of these initiatives has yet to be evaluated. Policymakers have injected the PIC with significant resources to address the perceived immigration crisis in the United States. The number of U.S. border police has skyrocketed during the last decade—from fewer than 4,000 in 1990 to more than 10,000 currently patrolling the border.18 Since 1995, Immigration and Customs Enforcement has increased by more than 200 percent the number of people it incarcerates.19 The immigration-related expansion of the PIC is fueled by xenophobic and racist media coverage of the immigration debate that uses false, inflammatory rhetoric to link immigration with crime. In reality, the number of undocumented immigrants increased from 19.8 million in 1990 to 31.1 million in 2000.20 During the same time that immigration increased, crime rates plummeted to some of the lowest in U.S. history. Despite the extremely tenuous link between immigration and public safety, the PIC has deeply ingratiated itself into the immigration debate. Despite the apparent intransience of the PIC, evidence exists that in some instances policymakers and the general public are beginning to question the efficacy and fairness of the United States’ reliance on prisons and policing. A poll revealed that in 1994 only 48 percent of the public supported interventions that addressed the underlying causes of crime such as poverty and lack of education, whereas in 2002, 65 percent of the public supported these sorts of interventions over stricter sentencing.21 This shift in sentiment comes at the same time that crime is at its lowest point in 30 years. Policymakers’ willingness to rethink our reliance on incarceration is likely informed by the documented failure of prisons and jails to contribute to safe communities. According to the most recent data, 67 percent of people released from prison were re-arrested within three years of their release, and 51 percent were re-imprisoned for either a parole violation or a new conviction.22 With “When we look back at supposedly civilized societies in the past, we are amazed at how complacently they accepted such obvious evils as slavery, child labor and torture. Surely, people in centuries hence will be similarly astonished at our own moral blind spots. But what might they be? After a little reflection, you may wish to hazard a guess. Here’s mine: punishment by imprisonment.” Jim Holt, New York Times Magazine23 such dismal success rates, it is no wonder that some policymakers are seeking alternative ways to invest criminal justice dollars. Investments in education, employment, mental health services, and substance abuse treatment not only have proven to be far more effective at creating safe communities than PIC-related expenditures, but also cost far less. An emerging trend in states throughout the country is the increase in positive public safety investments and the development of alternatives to the traditional criminal justice response of imprisonment. Justice Policy Institute 5 10 YEARS BY THE NUMBERS: Imprisonment, crime, policing, and spending over the last decade The system expands Consider a world in which a country’s entire population is under the control of the criminal justice system—either imprisoned or on probation or parole. The prison industrial complex has created this reality. More than seven million people—a number equal to the population of Israel—live their lives under the control of the criminal justice system in the United States. Without question, during the past decade, the criminal justice system has ensnared an ever growing number of people—growing at an overall rate of 20 percent.24 The number of people in prison has increased by 30 percent and the jail population has grown 32 percent 1998 7,000,000 2007* 4,3 66 ,82 5,0 6 35 ,22 5 8,000,000 6,000,000 5,000,000 6,1 83 ,75 7 7,4 10 ,84 0 In 2007, there were more than 7.4 million people under the control of the criminal justice system. 2,000,000 1,000,000 0 Number of People in Prisons Number of People on Probation/ Parole Number of People in Jails Total *2007 numbers are as of June 30, 2007. Probation and parole numbers are from 2006; 2007 numbers are not yet available. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, “Key Facts at a Glance: Correctional Populations,” www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/glance/tables/corr2tab.htm; William J. Sabol and Heather Couture, Prison Inmates at Midyear 2007 (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2008), www.ojp.usdoj. gov/bjs/abstract/pim07.htm; William J. Sabol and Todd D. Minton, Jail Inmates at Midyear 2007 (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2008), www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/jim07.htm. 6 The target shifts: Prison growth slows while jail populations multiply More than a decade ago, the prison population was growing at a rapid pace with increases of almost 5 percent seen annually. In recent years, the growth of the prison population has slowed.25 This may be because jails are now the driving force behind incarceration in the U.S. Between 2001 and 2006, the jail population grew at twice the rate of the prison population,26 but the relative slow growth of the prison population may also reflect some government entities’ realization that imprisonment fails to create healthy communities. People of color continue to be overrepresented in prisons and jails 59 2,4 62 78 0,5 81 3,000,000 1,2 24 ,4 1,5 69 95 ,03 4 4,000,000 since 1998. At the same time, the number of people on probation or parole has increased by 15 percent. This massive growth in the number of people involved in the criminal justice system has detrimental effects on state and local budgets, on public safety, and on the 7.4 million people under criminal justice control. Moving Target: A Decade of Resistance to the Prison Industrial Complex African Americans and Latinos bear the brunt of the increased use of prisons and jails. A recent report by the Pew Center on the States found that one out of every 100 adults in the U.S. is behind bars, but one out of every nine African American men between the ages of 20 and 34 and one out of every 36 Hispanic adults is imprisoned.27 According to numbers from the Department of Justice, African Americans are now more than five times as likely and Latinos are more than twice as likely as whites to be housed in a prison or jail.28 Although African Americans and Latinos combined make up only a third of the U.S. population, they constitute almost two-thirds of the prison and jail populations. The yearly increases in the number of people in federal and state prisons has slowed but is still growing significantly. 6% 5% 5.0% 4.5% 4.5% 4% 3% 2.6% 1.9% 2% 2.0% 1.8% 1.2% 1% 0% 2.7% 2.0% 1.6% 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007* *2007 numbers include only the first 6 months of 2007. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, “Key Facts at a Glance: Correctional Populations,” www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/glance/tables/corr2tab.htm; William J. Sabol and Heather Couture, Prison Inmates at Midyear 2007 (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2008) www.ojp.usdoj. gov/bjs/abstract/pim07.htm; William J. Sabol and Todd D. Minton, Jail Inmates at Midyear 2007 (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2008) www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/jim07.htm. The PIC continues to absorb billions of our tax dollars From 1996 to 2005, government spending on criminal justicerelated expenses increased by 64 percent. This increase represents additional funding for police, prisons, jails, and the judiciary. The police and related expenditures grew the fastest in the last decade with a 77 percent increase since 1996.29 In 2005, the United States spent $213 billion on the criminal justice system: $98 billion on police, $68 billion on corrections, and $47 billion on the judiciary. By way of comparison, in 2005, state and local governments spent less than $42 billion on housing and $192 billion on higher education.30 It remains impossible to calculate the lost opportunity cost of these investments—every dollar spent on the prison industrial complex is a dollar withheld from programs that educate our children and build on the strengths of our communities; but the increased investing in PIC-related costs clearly demonstrate a shift in priorities from such things as education and community development. Imprisonment rate (per 100,000) African Americans are more than five times as likely as whites and more than twice as likely as Hispanics to be imprisoned in a jail or prison in the U.S. 2,500 2,380 2,000 1,500 973 1,000 500 0 762 427 White African Hispanic American Total African Americans and Hispanics make up one third of the U.S. population but makeup 61 percent of the imprisoned population. 20% (443,000) White 39% (852,100) 41% (882,300) African American Hispanic Source: William J. Sabol and Heather Couture, Prison Inmates at Midyear 2007 (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2008). Percent change in expenditures (1996-2005) Total justice expenditures across federal, state and local governments have grown 64 percent in the last decade. 90% 80% 70% 77.37% 64.30% 57.21% 60% 50.91% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Total Justice Police Protection Judicial/ Legal Corrections Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, “Expenditure National Estimates,” Expenditure and Employment Database, http://bjsdata.ojp.usdoj.gov/data online/Search/EandE/index.cfm. Crime is at nearly its lowest point in the past 30 years and continues to fall. 31 The majority of Americans are safer today than ever before. In 2006, the most recent year available for national crime rates, there was one incident of violent crime (murder, rape, robbery, or aggravated assault) for every 211 people in the U.S. and there was one incident of property crime (burglary, larceny, or motor vehicle theft) for every 30 people.32 In comparison, in 1998, there was one violent crime for every176 people and one property crime for every 25 people; so the rate of victimization fell 30 percent in the last decade. Justice Policy Institute 7 10 Years By The Numbers 550 4,000 473.5 500 4,049.1 450 3,500 3,334.5 3,000 2,500 400 350 300 Property Crime Rate Violent Crime Rate 2,000 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 19 19 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 250 200 Source: FBI Uniform Crime Report, Crime in the United States, 1998-2006. Crime still affects certain communities disproportionately Despite the overall decrease in violent crime in the last decade, violence is still a challenge for many communities, especially poor communities of color. The 2005 National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) shows that African Americans are 34 percent more likely than whites to be a victim of a violent crime and that people of Hispanic origin are 21 percent more likely than people who are not of Hispanic origin to be a victim. Members of households that make less than $7,500 per year are more than twice as likely as those in households that make more than $75,000 per year to be victims of violent crimes. As illustrated in the accompanying graph, increasing income is associated with a decrease in incidents of violent victimization. Violent victimization rate (per 1,000) 600 566.4 People of color are victims of violent crimes at higher rates than white people. 30 27 25 20 20.1 15 10 5 0 White Black People of Hispanic ethnicity are victims of violent crimes at higher rates than people who are not of Hispanic ethnicity. Violent victimization rate (per 1,000) 4,500 Number of violent offenses reported (per 100,000 people) Number of property offenses reported (per 100,000 people) Since 1998, violent and property crime rates have fallen. 30 25 25 20.6 20 15 10 5 0 Non-Hispanic Hispanic Note: Hispanic ethnicity includes people who are of any race. Source: Shannan Michelle Catalano, Criminal Victimization, 2005, Table 4. Violent victimization rates for selected demographic groups, 1993-2005 (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2006). 8 Moving Target: A Decade of Resistance to the Prison Industrial Complex People with lower income are victims of violent crimes at higher rates than people with higher incomes. Violent victimization rate (per 1,000) 40 37.7 35 30 30.1 26.5 25 26.1 22.4 20 21.1 16.4 15 10 5 0 0 re 99 99 00 99 99 ,50 mo 4,9 4,9 9,0 4,9 4,9 $7 3 2 4 7 r 1 $ $ $ $ o n 0-$ 00 00 00 00 00 tha ,50 5,0 5,0 5,0 0,0 5,0 ss $7 $2 $1 $3 $5 $7 Le Annual household income Source: Shannan Michelle Catalano, Criminal Victimization, 2005, Table 4. Violent victimization rates for selected demographic groups, 1993-2005 (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2006). Justice Policy Institute 9 PROFITING FROM PRISONS: A risky proposition for both corporations and communities While prison growth has slowed considerably since the 1990s, the United States still imprisons an astronomical proportion of its population. One out Since 2000, the percentage of the total number of people in state and federal prison that are held in private facilities has changed less than one percent. Percent of total number of people in prison 8% 7% 6.4% 6.3% 6.4% 6.4% 6.4% 6.9% 7.1% 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% 00 20 01 20 02 20 03 20 04 20 05 20 06 20 Source: William J. Sabol, Heather Couture, and Paige M. Harrison. Prisoners in 2006 (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2007). !FTER