Home > Uncategorized > Missouri Inmate Population At All-Time High

Missouri Inmate Population At All-Time High

October 20th, 2009

Director George LombardiMissouri’s prison population has reached an all-time high, and state officials are trying to figure out why.  Story from the Columbia Tribune.

After declining or holding steady for the previous few years, the inmate population has been rising during the past year and a half, according to figures provided yesterday to The Associated Press by the Department of Corrections.   At the end of September, the department had 30,720 inmates — topping the previous high mark of 30,654 set in October 2005. That was down slightly to 30,708 yesterday. Department Director George Lombardi said the increase is a result of new people being sentenced to prison, not because of probation revocations for prior offenders. “There’s a lot of new commitments that are coming our way,” Lombardi said. But “we’re still trying to analyze exactly where that is, how it is, what the cause is.” It’s unclear whether more people are committing crimes, more people are being convicted or courts are clearing out a backlog of cases, he said.

After peaking four years ago, Missouri’s prison population dipped to 29,788 in September 2007 and remained around that mark until March 2008. Since then, it has risen by 3 percent. Steady growth in prison populations was the norm for several decades in Missouri as lawmakers passed increasingly tough sentencing laws. But that slowed after a 2003 Missouri law lowered the maximum prison sentence for some felonies, including drug possession, and gave judges greater discretion to order treatment programs or short-term shock sentences. The Department of Corrections also has placed a greater emphasis on programs that prepare soon-to-be-released offenders to re-enter society, resulting in a decline in the recidivism rate for parolees.

After opening nine prisons between 1994 and 2004, the state closed the 1,000-bed Central Missouri Correctional Center in June 2005 because of budget cuts. That prison remains closed, and Lombardi said there are no immediate plans to reopen it despite the recent growth in the inmate population.

vericatrajkova Uncategorized

Comments are closed.