U.S. Prison Decline: Insufficient to Undo Mass Incarceration, The Sentencing Project, 2020
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U.S. PRISON DECLINE: INSUFFICIENT TO UNDO MASS INCARCERATION U.S. Prison Decline: Insufficient to Undo Mass Incarceration By yearend 2018, the U.S. prison population reached 1.4 million people, declining by 9% since reaching its peak level in 2009. This follows a nearly 700% growth in the prison population between 1972 and 2009. This research brief reveals significant variation across states in decarceration and highlights the overall modest pace of reforms relative to the massive imprisonment buildup. This analysis is based on the most recent data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics on people serving sentences greater than one year. Since the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, a number of states and the federal system have made additional, albeit modest, reductions in their prison populations. This analysis underscores the need to address excessively high levels of imprisonment amidst a public health crisis. SIGNIFICANT VARIATION ACROSS STATES All but six states have reduced their prison populations since reaching their peak levels. For twenty-five states, the reduction in imprisonment levels was less than 10%. The federal prison population was downsized by 17% relative to its peak level in 2011.1 Seven states lead the nation, having decarcerated by over 30% since reaching their peak imprisonment levels: New Jersey, Alaska, Connecticut, New York, Alabama, Rhode Island, and Vermont.2 These prison population reductions are the result of a mix of changes in policy and practice designed to reduce prison admissions and lengths of stay. But six states had their highest ever prison populations in 2018: Wyoming, Nebraska, Iowa, Wisconsin, Kansas, and Oregon. Figure 1: U.S. Prison Population by Conviction Offense, 1980-2017 800,000 700,000 Violent: 2% reduction since 2009 600,000 500,000 400,000 Drug: 29% reduction since 2007 300,000 Property: 18% reduction since 2007 200,000 100,000 0 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2017 Note: Reductions are from year when the prison population for that offense category reached its peak. Based on sentenced prison population in state and federal systems. Chart omits public order and other/unspecified offenses, for which an additional 231,000 people were imprisoned in 2017, down 1% since 2014. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics Prisoners Series (1994-2018) The Sentencing Project • 1705 DeSales Street NW, 8th Floor • Washington, D.C. 20036 • sentencingproject.org 1 U.S. PRISON DECLINE: INSUFFICIENT TO UNDO MASS INCARCERATION Figure 2. U.S. Prison Population Trends Through 2018: Decreases Since Peak Year, Increases Since 2013 -39% -38% -37% -36% -35% -34% -32% -27% -26% -25% -23% -20% -19% -19% -18% -17% -14% -13% -13% -10% -9% -9% -9% -7% -7% -7% -7% -6% -6% -5% -5% -5% -5% -5% -5% -5% -4% -4% -3% -1% -1% -1% -1% -1% -1% 0% Note: See Table 1 for additional details. *This state’s trend may not be accurate due to data incomparability across years. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics Prisoners Series (1999-2018) NJ AK CT NY AL RI VT CA HI MI MA SC LA IL MD Federal MS ME CO IN TN U.S. Total PA OK MO FL MN NH* UT* ND WV NC DE ID VA GA TX NM* OH AR MT* AZ WA NV KY SD 1% OR* KS WI IA NE WY 5% 7% 9% 10% 10% 2 U.S. PRISON DECLINE: INSUFFICIENT TO UNDO MASS INCARCERATION MODEST PACE OF REFORMS Although 44 states and the federal system have reduced their prison populations since reaching peak levels, the pace of reform has been slow to reverse nearly four decades of aggressive annual imprisonment growth. At the pace of decarceration since 2009, averaging 1% annually, it will take 65 years— until 2085—to cut the U.S. prison population in half. Clearly, waiting over six decades to substantively alter a system that is out of step with the world and is racially biased is unacceptable. NEXT STEPS The United States has made only modest progress in ending mass incarceration despite a dramatic decline in crime rates. Reported crime rates have plummeted to half of their 1990s levels—as they have in many other countries that did not increase imprisonment levels.3 Expediting the end of mass incarceration will require accelerating the end of the Drug War and scaling back sentences for all crimes, including violent offenses for which half of people in prison are serving time.4 1,750,000 Past reforms have helped to reduce the number of people imprisoned for a drug offense by 29% between peak year 2007 and 2017. The number of people imprisoned for a property offense has declined by 18% between peak year 2007 and 2017. But for the half of the prison population imprisoned for a violent crime— which ranges from certain burglaries, robbery, and assault to rape and murder—reforms remain the exception. Overall, the number of people imprisoned for a violent offense has only declined by 2% between peak year 2009 and 2017, despite substantial declines in violence since the mid-1990s. The reluctance to scale back excessive sentences for this population is at odds with evidence that long sentences incapacitate older people who pose little public safety threat, produce limited deterrent effect, and detract from more effective investments in public safety. Expediting the end of mass incarceration will require making a meaningful dent into the number of people imprisoned for violence as well as intensifying sentencing reforms for non-violent crimes. Figure 3. Historical and Projected U.S. Federal and State Prison Population, Based on 2009-2018 Rate of Decline 1,500,000 1,250,000 1,000,000 750,000 500,000 250,000 0 1925 1940 1960 1980 2000 2020 2040 2060 2075 2085 Source of historical figures: Bureau of Justice Statistics (1982) “Prisoners 1925-81”; Bureau of Justice Statistics Corrections Statistical Analysis Tool; Carson, E. A. (2020). Prisoners in 2018. Bureau of Justice Statistics. Available at: https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/p18.pdf 3 U.S. PRISON DECLINE: INSUFFICIENT TO UNDO MASS INCARCERATION Table 1: U.S. Prison Population Trends Through 2018: Decreases Since Peak Year, Increases Since 2013 Jurisdiction Peak to 2018 Peak Year New Jersey -38.5% 1999 Alaska -37.8% 2006 Connecticut -37.4% 2007 New York -36.1% 1999 Alabama1 -34.9% 2012 Rhode Island -33.7% 2008 Vermont -32.0% 2009 California -26.7% 2006 Hawaii -26.2% 2005 Michigan -24.8% 2006 Massachusetts -23.4% 2011 South Carolina -20.3% 2009 Louisiana -19.4% 2012 Illinois -19.1% 2012 Maryland -17.7% 2007 Federal -16.9% 2011 Mississippi -13.9% 2008 Maine -13.4% 2007 Colorado -13.0% 2008 Indiana -10.2% 2013 Tennessee -9.2% 2017 U.S. total -9.0% 2009 Pennsylvania -8.6% 2011 Oklahoma -7.3% 2016 Missouri -6.8% 2017 Florida -6.5% 2010 Minnesota -6.5% 2015 New Hampshire* -6.3% 2007 Utah* -6.1% 2013 North Dakota -5.4% 2015 West Virginia -5.4% 2016 North Carolina -5.3% 2014 Delaware -5.1% 2007 Idaho -4.6% 2013 Virginia -4.5% 2015 Georgia -4.5% 2009 Texas -3.7% 2010 New Mexico* -3.5% 2017 Ohio -3.4% 2015 Arkansas -1.3% 2017 Montana* -1.3% 2016 Arizona -1.3% 2015 Washington -0.7% 2017 Nevada -0.6% 2017 Kentucky -0.5% 2017 South Dakota -0.4% 2017 2013 to 2018 0.5% Peak Year 2018 Kansas 4.7% 2018 Wisconsin 7.1% 2018 Iowa 8.6% 2018 Nebraska 9.8% 2018 Wyoming 10.1% 2018 1 Jurisdiction Oregon* Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics Prisoners Series (1999-2018) *This state’s trend may not be accurate due to data incomparability across years. 4 U.S. PRISON DECLINE: INSUFFICIENT TO UNDO MASS INCARCERATION NOTES 1. This figure is based on the number of people serving sentences longer than one year. The Bureau of Prisons reports that the total population under its jurisdiction decreased by 22% between peak year 2013 and April 30, 2020. 2. Alaska and Alabama are poised to reverse some of this progress. Prompted by its governor, in 2019 Alaska’s state legislature repealed several aspects of a major criminal justice overhaul, Senate Bill 91. Alabama’s prison population increased by 6% between September 2018 and January 2020, and recent changes in the state’s parole policies and practices are poised to further undo the state’s decarceration. 3. Federal Bureau of Investigations Uniform Crime Reporting Program. Doob, A., & Webster, C. (2006). Countering punitiveness: Understanding stability in Canada’s imprisonment. Law & Society Review, 40(2), 325–367; Tseloni, A., Mailley, J., & Garrell, G. (2010). Exploring the international decline in crime rates. European Journal of Criminology, 7(5), 375–394 4. Carson, E. A. (2020). Prisoners in 2018. Bureau of Justice Statistics. Available at: https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/p18. pdf This briefing paper was written by Nazgol Ghandnoosh, Senior Research Analyst at The Sentencing Project. Published May 2020. 1705 DeSales Street NW, 8th Floor Washington, D.C. 20036 sentencingproject.org The Sentencing Project works for a fair and effective U.S. justice system by promoting reforms in sentencing policy, addressing unjust racial disparities and practices, and advocating for alternatives to incarceration. 5