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Bureau of Prisons Quick FactsLast
updated: June 1997 Note:
Data presented on this page are extracted from BOP automated information systems.
Percentages may not add to 100% due to rounding.
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Number
of Institutions -
Total
Population -
Inmates
by Security Level -
Inmates
by Gender -
Inmates
by Race -
Inmates
by Ethnicity -
Inmates
by Citizenship -
Average
Inmate Age -
Sentence
Imposed -
Type
of Offense -
BOP
Population Over Time/Drug Offenders as a Percentage of All Sentenced Offenders
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Staff
by Gender -
Staff
by Race/Ethnicity -
An
Overview of the Federal Bureau of Prisons
NUMBER OF INSTITUTIONS: 90
TOTAL INMATE POPULATION: 110,160
In BOP facilities: 99,175 In contract facilities: 10,985
The total population includes all inmates in BOP custody: those in BOP facilities
and those in contract facilities. BOP facilities -- Penitentiaries, Federal Correctional
Institutions, Federal Prison Camps, Federal Medical Centers, and others -- are
operated by the BOP. Contract facilities, usually Community Corrections Centers
or detention facilities, are operated by non-BOP staff. The BOP contracts with
these facilities to house Federal offenders on a per capita basis. The data presented
here relate to offenders in BOP facilities only unless otherwise noted.
INMATES BY SECURITY LEVEL
Minimum: 26,734 (29.02%) Low: 31,557 (34.25%) Medium: 21,031 (22.83%) High:
12,814 (13.91%) (7,039 inmates have not been assigned a security level)
INMATES BY GENDER
Male: 92,116 (92.88%) Female: 7,059 (7.12%)
INMATES BY RACE
White: 56,200 (56.67%) Black: 39,836 (40.17%) Asian: 1,658 (1.67%) Native
American: 1,481 (1.49%)
ETHNICITY
Hispanic: 27,230 (27.46%) Non-Hispanic: 71,945 (72.54%)
CITIZENSHIP
United States: 72,541 (74.52%) Mexico: 8,609 (8.84%) Colombia: 4,334 (4.45%)
Cuba: 2,759 (2.83%) Other/Unknown: 11,024 (10.89%)
AVERAGE INMATE AGE: 37
SENTENCE IMPOSED (calculated for those with sentencing information available)
Less than 1 year: 1,625 (2.01%) 1-3 years: 11,122 (13.75%) 3-5 years: 11,470
(14.19%) 5-10 years: 19,875 (24.58%) 10-15 years: 17,676 (21.86%) 15-20 years:
7,781 (9.62%) More than 20 years: 8,934 (11.05%) Life: 2,375 (2.94%)
TYPE OF OFFENSE (calculated for those with offense-specific information available)
Drug Offenses: 52,956 (60.2%) Robbery: 8,414 (9.6%) Firearms, Explosives,
Arson: 7,950 (9.0%) Extortion, Fraud, Bribery: 4,962 (5.6%) Property Offenses:
5,194 (5.9%) Violent Offenses: 2,270 (2.6%) Immigration: 2,988 (3.4%) Continuing
Criminal Enterprise: 667 (0.8%) White Collar: 644 (0.7%) Courts or Corrections:
560 (0.6%) National Security: 74 (0.1%) Miscellaneous: 1,339 (1.5%)
FEDERAL PRISON POPULATION OVER TIME/DRUG OFFENDERS
| Year | Total
sentenced and unsentenced population | Total
sentenced population | Total
sentenced drug offenders | Percentage
of sentenced prisoners who are drug offenders | | 1970 | 21,266 | 20,686 | 3,384 | 16.3% |
| 1971 | 20,891 | 20,529 | 3,495 | 7.0% |
| 1972 | 22,090 | 20,729 | 3,523 | 16.9% |
| 1973 | 23,336 | 22,038 | 5,652 | 25.6% |
| 1974 | 23,690 | 21,769 | 6,203 | 28.4% |
| 1975 | 23,566 | 20,692 | 5,540 | 26.7% |
| 1976 | 27,033 | 24,135 | 6,425 | 26.6% |
| 1977 | 29,877 | 25,673 | 6,743 | 26.2% |
| 1978 | 27,674 | 23,501 | 5,981 | 25.4% |
| 1979 | 24,810 | 21,539 | 5,468 | 25.3% |
| 1980 | 24,252 | 19,023 | 4,749 | 24.9% |
| 1981 | 26,195 | 19,765 | 5,076 | 25.6% |
| 1982 | 28,133 | 20,938 | 5,518 | 26.3% |
| 1983 | 30,214 | 26,027 | 7,201 | 27.6% |
| 1984 | 32,317 | 27,622 | 8,152 | 29.5% |
| 1985 | 36,042 | 27,623 | 9,491 | 34.3% |
| 1986 | 40,505 | 31,831 | 12,119 | 38.1% |
| 1987 | 43,683 | 34,163 | 14,354 | 42.0% |
| 1988 | 43,401 | 34,680 | 15,526 | 44.8% |
| 1989 | 50,173 | 38,969 | 19,459 | 49.9% |
| 1990 | 57,331 | 47,847 | 25,037 | 52.3% |
| 1991 | 63,711 | 53,526 | 30,498 | 57.0% |
| 1992 | 70,346 | 61,026 | 36,349 | 59.6% |
| 1993 | 79,483 | 70,557 | 42,945 | 60.9% |
| 1994 | 85,290 | 76,186 | 46,743 | 61.4% |
| 1995 | 89,564 | 79,347 | 48,118 | 60.6% |
| 1996 | 94,215 | 83,515 | 50,754 | 60.8% |
| 1997* | 99,175 | 88,018 | 52,956 | 60.2% |
*Year to date. Note: Data for 1970 to 1976 are for June 30; data for 1977 onwards
are for September 30. Data are for inmates in BOP facilities only (i.e., do not
include inmates in contract facilities).
STAFF BY GENDER
Male: 21,828 (73.4%) Female: 7,906 (26.6%)
STAFF BY RACE/ETHNICITY
White (Non-Hispanic): 20,091 (67.6%) African American: 5,700 (19.2%) Hispanic:
2,970 (10.0%) Other: 975 (3.3%)
Federal
Bureau of Prisons Overview Prior
to the 1930 Act of Congress creating the Federal Bureau of Prisons, there were
seven Federal prisons, each separately funded and operated under local policies
and procedures established by each warden. The 1930 Act directed the development
of an integrated system of prisons to provide custody and programs based on the
individual needs of offenders.
The mission of the Bureau of Prisons is to protect society by confining offenders
in the controlled environments of prison and community-based facilities that are
safe, humane, and appropriately secure, and that provide work and other self-improvement
opportunities to assist offenders in becoming law-abiding citizens.
All Federal inmates who are able must work and are paid a small wage, a portion
of which some inmates use to make restitution to victims through the Inmate Financial
Responsibility Program. About one-fourth of the inmates are employed by Federal
Prison Industries, Inc., a Government corporation that produces a range of goods
and services from office furniture to electronic cable assemblies for sale to
Federal Government clients. Research has shown that inmates who work or receive
vocational training adjust better to prison, are more likely to hold a job after
release, and are less likely to commit new crimes.
Most inmates serve the last few months of their sentence in a community corrections
center, or "halfway house," and often hold jobs in the community while
preparing for their release. Several hundred halfway houses around the country
are privately operated under contract and monitored by the Bureau.
The Bureau's Central Office in Washington, D.C., provides leadership, long-range
planning, facility development, policy formulation, and coordination for the nationwide
network of Federal correctional facilities and community resources.
For operational efficiency, the Bureau is divided into six geographical regions,
each headed by a regional director, that provide technical support and on-site
assistance to field locations. Regional Offices are located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;
Annapolis Junction, Maryland (near Baltimore); Atlanta, Georgia; Dallas, Texas;
Kansas City, Kansas; and Dublin, California (near San Francisco).
The National Institute of Corrections (NIC) provides advisory and technical support
to State and local correctional agencies throughout the country primarily through
technical assistance, training, and information services. The NIC Director's Office,
Deputy Director, Administrative Services, and Prisons and Community Corrections
Divisions are located in Washington, D.C. Its Jails and Academy Divisions and
the NIC Information Center are located in Longmont, Colorado.
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