Fall in probation drives decline, BJS report shows
The number of people under correctional supervision in the United States is at its lowest rate since 1996, according to a recently released report from the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
The report, "Correctional Populations in the United States, 2016," provides basic statistics about the number of individuals incarcerated in jails and prisons, as well as the number of individuals under community supervision through probation or parole.
In discussing incarceration in America, reports often focus on just the incarcerated population. The new BJS report notes that probation and parole account for 7 in 10 individuals subject to some form of correctional operation.
The combined number of people under correctional supervision dropped for the ninth year in a row in 2016, falling 18 percent from 2007, generally considered to be the peak of incarceration in America. In 2016 there were 2,640 individuals under correctional supervision per 100,000 people, compared to 3,210 per 100,000 people in 2007.
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They all ran for elected office. If the Dems start getting voted out, they'll be back.
ReplyDeleteDoesn't change the fact that when you have privately run institutions there is no incentive to curb crime. Why would the owners of jails and prisons want their clientele to disappear into upstanding citizens?
ReplyDeleteI still don't know why it's called corrections.
ReplyDeleteThat is the dumbest comment today. So far.
ReplyDeleteLegalized Cannibas in 9 states must have some repercussions
ReplyDeleteDeputy Cordrey is to thanks for this. His mere presence detures crime.
ReplyDeleteIf you remember, Obama let many of them out before their sentences were served. You know, all the drug dealers that were set free. THIS too, is an Obama legacy, that he turned all those convicted felons back loose on the streets of America, without them having to serve out their sentences.
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ReplyDeleteOr, due to shortage of jailers, while there are lots of inmates, fewer jailers are having to watch over larger populations resulting in fewer convicts under actual supervision. Could it be?