Louisiana
Number One in Incarceration
By Bill
Quigley
May 12,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- In 2014, the US Department of Justice confirmed
Louisiana
remained number 1, among the 50 states, with
38,030 in prison, a rate of 816 per 100,000 over 100
points ahead of next highest state Oklahoma.
Because the
US leads the world in incarcerating its people,
this means Louisiana is number one in the world.
Compare Louisiana’s rate of 816 people per
100,000 with Russia’s 492, China with 119, France
with 100, and Germany with 78.
Louisiana
first became
number 1 in the nation in 2005 when it was
imprisoning 36,083 people. Louisiana remained
number 1, in 2010 with 35,207 in prison, an
incarceration rate of 867 per 100,000 people, over
200 points head of the next highest state
Mississippi.
It was not
always so. In 1965, Louisiana ranked
13th nationally in putting its
citizens in jail with a rate of 109 prisoners per
100,000 people. In 1978, Louisiana only held
7,291 people behind bars. By 1986, Louisiana
was
5th highest in the nation in putting
its own citizens in prison, with 14,580 behind bars,
a rate of 322 per 100,000, according to the US
Department of Justice. In 1990, Louisiana rose to
3rd highest in the nation, putting
18,599 behind bars, a rate of 427 per 100,000. In
2000, Louisiana moved to
2nd highest in the nation,
imprisoning 35,047 behind bars, a rate of 801 per
100,000.
The number
of prisoners expanded nation-wide as a result of the
“war on drugs” which was
conducted in a racist way to target blacks. But
in Louisiana, the prisons also backed up when the
practice of releasing prisoners for good behavior
after
10 years and 6 months of their life sentences
was ended in the 1970s.
Louisiana
has been much more severe in sending black people to
prison than whites, at least after black people were
no longer slaves. In 1860, when the Civil War
started, the population of the Louisiana
penitentiary was
two-thirds white. But by 1868, the population
of Louisiana’s penitentiary was
two-thirds black.
Angola
Penitentiary remains the
largest maximum security prison in the United
States. There are
over 5000 prisoners at Angola alone. The
average sentence for prisoners there is
93 years.
About 95 percent of people serving time at
Angola will die there under current laws.
It costs
taxpayers an average of
$23,000 a year for each inmate at Angola. Over
400 people, about 9 percent of those serving
life in Louisiana, were convicted of non-violent
offenses.
There are
an additional
69,000 people in Louisiana on probation and
parole.
Louisiana
has a long history of running abusive prisons. In
1835, Louisiana was described as having
“the worst prison in the United States.” In
1952, after dozens of Angola inmates slashed their
heel tendons in protest of barbaric conditions,
Colliers magazine called Angola “America’s
worst prison.” In 1970, the American Bar
Association said conditions at Angola were “medieval,
squalid and horrifying.” By 1975, conditions
were so terrible, a Federal judge declared Angola a
“state
of emergency.”
Bill
teaches law at Loyola University New Orleans.
https://billquigley.wordpress.com/ |