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Oct. 2005
U.S. Prison Population Continued to Grow in 2004
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - The U.S. prison population, already the largest in the world, grew
by 1.9 percent in 2004, leaving federal jails at 40 percent over capacity, according
to Justice Department figures released on Sunday. Inmates in federal, state,
local and other prisons totaled nearly 2.3 million at the end of last year,
the government said. The 1.9 percent increase was lower than the average annual
growth rate of 3.2 percent during the last decade.
According to the International Center for Prison Studies at King's College in
London, there are more people behind bars in the United States than in any other
country.
China had the second-largest prison population with 1.5 million prisoners, according
to statistics updated in April and cited by King's College. The total U.S. population
is about 296 million, while China's is 1.3 billion. The Justice Department said
the U.S. incarceration rate hit 486 sentenced inmates per 100,000 last year,
up 18 percent from 411 a decade ago. The five states with the highest incarceration
rates last year were all in the South, led by Louisiana with 816 sentenced prisoners
per 100,000 state residents. The five states with the lowest rates were all
in the North, with Maine experiencing 148 sentenced inmates per 100,000 state
residents in 2004, according to the Justice Department figures.
The U.S. prison population continued to grow last year even though reports of
violent crime during 2004 were at the lowest level since the government began
compiling statistics 32 years ago, according to a government report released
in September.
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