U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics Bulletin Prisoners in 2006 December 2007, NCJ 219416 ---------------------------------------------------------- This file is text only without graphics and many of the tables. A Zip archive of the tables in this report in spreadsheet format (.csv) and the full report including tables and graphics in .pdf format are available from: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/p06.htm ----------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------ This report is one in a series. More recent editions may be available. To view a list of all in the series go to http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pubalp2.htm#prisoners ------------------------------------------------------------ By William J. Sabol, Ph.D., Heather Couture and Paige M. Harrison, BJS Statisticians ------------------------------------------------------------ At yearend 2006 Federal and State correctional authorities had jurisdiction over 1,570,861 prisoners, an increase of 2.8% since yearend 2005.***Footnote 1 State-level prison population data and other detailed information are available in Appendix tables on the BJS Website at ***.The Federal system held 12.3% of these prisoners, and States held the remaining 87.7%. The number of prisoners under Federal jurisdiction increased by 5,428 prisoners, and the number under State jurisdiction increased by 37,504 prisoners. Jurisdiction refers to the legal authority over a prisoner regardless of where the prisoner is held. During 2006, the prison population grew at a faster rate than in the previous 5 years. The 2.8% increase in the number of prisoners under State or Federal jurisdiction was larger than the average annual growth rate of 1.9% from 2000 through 2005. It was also larger than the average increase of 2% per year that occurred in the 3 years prior to 2006 (figure 1). However, the 2006 growth rate was less than the annual growth rates of between 3.4% and 8.7% that occurred during the 1990s (see Prisoners in 2000, table 2). Growth in the Federal prison population slowed while growth in State prisoners increased The number of prisoners under Federal jurisdiction during 2006 increased by 2.9%. This increase was less than the average annual growth of 5.8% per year that occurred from 2000 through 2005. Conversely, the number of prisoners under the jurisdiction of State authorities increased more rapidly during 2006 than in the previous 5 years. The State prison population increased by 2.8% during 2006, compared to an average annual increase of 1.5% from 2000 through 2005 (figure 2). During 2006 the prison population increased in 41 States and declined in the remaining 9 States (table 1). New Hampshire (10.9%), Nevada (9.5%), and Rhode Island (9.4%) had the largest percentage increase in the size of their prison population. South Dakota (-3.0%), Hawaii (-2.9%), and Kansas (-2.8%) had the largest percentage decrease in prisoners. The growth rate for 30 of the 41 States experiencing an increase in 2006 exceeded the average annual rate of growth for the 5-year period from 2000 through 2005. Three of these States (New Jersey, New York, and Illinois) experienced a decline in the growth rate during the 5-year period, but had small increases during 2006. Eight States had absolute increases that exceeded 2,000 prisoners in 2006: California, Georgia, Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio, Texas, and Arizona. California (4,836), Georgia (4,043), and Ohio (3,312) had the largest absolute increase. Collectively, these 8 States accounted for 66% of the total change in the number of prisoners under State jurisdiction. Growth rates accelerated in States with the largest prison populations Of the 10 States that had the largest prison populations in 2000, 9 experienced an increase in the size and rate of growth of their prison populations during 2006. (See Appendix table 1). These 10 States included Texas, California, New York, Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Louisiana, and Florida. Florida is the only State among the 10 that did not have an increase in the rate of growth during 2006. Its prison population increased by 3.6% during 2006 which represented a decrease from the average annual growth rate of 4.7% from 2000 to 2005. Combined, the prison population in these 10 States grew by 3.2% during 2006, a rate that was more than 3 times the 0.9% average annual growth rate that occurred in these States from 2000 through 2005 (table 2). Among the 10 large States, prison populations in Georgia (8.3%), Ohio (7.2%), and Pennsylvania (4.8%) grew fastest during 2006. New York's prison population increased by 0.9% during 2006, reversing a 5-year decline of 2.2% per year. Illinois' prison population, which declined by 0.2% per year from 2000 through 2005, also increased by 0.4% during 2006. In the 10 States having the largest prison population in 2000, the increase of 24,241 prisoners during 2006 accounted for 64.6% of the total change (37,504) in the number of prisoners under State jurisdiction. By comparison, from 2000 through 2005 these 10 large States accounted for 32.7% of the overall change in the number of prisoners under State jurisdiction. The increase in California (4,836 prisoners) and Georgia (4,043 prisoners) accounted for 23.6% of the total change in State prisoners. Growth rates in the 10 smallest States (those holding fewer than 1,100 prisoners in 2000) were higher than growth rates in larger States. The number of prisoners in the 10 smallest jurisdictions increased at an average of 3.9% annually between 2000 and 2005, and by 4.0% in 2006. Number of female prisoners under jurisdiction rose faster during 2006 than over the previous 5 years During 2006 the number of women in prison increased by 4.5%, reaching 112,498 prisoners (table 3; see also Appendix table 2). This was larger than the male growth rate of 2.7%. The growth rate for female prisoners during 2006 was larger than the average annual growth rate of 2.9% from 2000 through 2005. Over the 5-year period, female prisoners increased by an average of 2,878 inmates per year. In 2006 the number of female prisoners increased by 4,872 women. At yearend 2006, females made up 7.2% of the population under State or Federal jurisdiction, up from 6.7% in 2000. The largest proportion of women inmates were in Hawaii (12.3%), followed by North Dakota and Wyoming (both 11.5%). Oklahoma had the highest female incarceration rate in the Nation (129 inmates per 100,000 women), followed by Louisiana (108) and Idaho (106). Eight jurisdictions held more than half of the 112,498 women under State or Federal jurisdiction: Texas, the Federal system, California, Florida, Ohio, Georgia, Arizona, and Virginia. Three jurisdictions--Texas, the Federal system, and California--collectively held more than a third of the women under jurisdiction at yearend 2006. These 3 jurisdictions also held more than a third of the male prison population. ------------------------------------------------------------- Total incarcerated population at yearend 2006 At yearend 2006 correctional facilities in the United States held an estimated 2,385,213 inmates in custody, including inmates in Federal and State prisons, territorial prisons, local jails, facilities operated by or exclusively for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), military facilities, jails in Indian country, and youth in juvenile facilities. During 2006 the total incarcerated population increased by 2.8%, or 64,579 inmates. For more information on custody populations, see box on Inmates in custody in State or Federal prisons or in local jails on page 4 and box on U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detainees at yearend 2006 on page 9. ------------------------------------------------------------- States increased the use of privately operated facilities by more than 6% during 2006 A total of 113,791 State and Federal prisoners were held in privately operated facilities at yearend 2006. This represented an increase of 5.4% (or 5,851 prisoners) over the 107,940 held in private facilities at the end of 2005. (See Appendix table 4). During 2006, 24 jurisdictions had increases in the number of prisoners held in privately operated facilities, and 9 had decreases. The total increase was 6,554 prisoners; the total decrease was 703 prisoners. Eighteen States had no prisoners in private facilities on December 31, 2006. Texas and Colorado had the largest absolute increase in the number of inmates held in private facilities at yearend 2006. Indiana more than doubled the number of inmates in private facilities, reaching 1,290 inmates, and Pennsylvania nearly doubled, reaching 962 inmates. Three States housed more than a third of their prisoners in privately operated facilities: New Mexico (44%), Wyoming (37%), and Alaska (33%). An additional 7 States housed more than 20% of their prison population in private facilities. (See Appendix table 4). States increased the use of privately operated facilities more rapidly than did the Federal system in 2006 (figure 3). The number of State prisoners housed privately increased by 6.4% during 2006, reaching 86,065 inmates, while the number of Federal prisoners housed privately increased by 2.5%, reaching 27,726 prisoners. From yearend 2000 to 2006, the number of Federal prisoners housed in private facilities increased 79%; State prisoners, by 15%. ------------------------------------------------------------- Inmates in custody in State or Federal prisons or in local jails at yearend 2006 At yearend 2006, 2.26 million inmates were in custody in State and Federal prisons and in local jails. This was an incarceration rate of 751 inmates per 100,000 U.S. residents, or 1 in every 133 residents. Custody count includes inmates held in State or Federal public prison facilities, inmates held in privately operated facilities, and inmates held in local jails. It excludes inmates held in U.S. Territories, military facilities, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities, jails in Indian country, and juvenile facilities. (See box on Total incarcerated population at yearend 2006 on page 3.) During 2006 the number of people in custody increased by 2.9%, up from the average annual growth rate of 2.6% from yearend 2000 through 2005. ------------------------------------------------------------- Number of prisoners held in local jails increased by 6.6% The number of State and Federal prisoners held in local jails increased at yearend 2006, from 73,164 to 77,987 (up 6.6%) (table 4). This increase accounted for 11.2% of the overall increase in the prison population under jurisdiction. The Federal system nearly doubled the number of inmates held in local jails, from 1,044 at yearend 2005 to 2,010 at yearend 2006 (table 4). Inmates under State jurisdiction held in local jails increased by 5.3%, a rate faster than the 3.5% average annual growth from 2000 to 2005. Thirty-five States and the Federal system held prisoners in local jails at yearend 2006. Six jurisdictions held more than 20% of their prisoners in local jails, led by Louisiana (44%), Kentucky (30%), and Tennessee (25%). Louisiana held the largest absolute number of inmates in local jails (16,230), followed by Texas (15,091). States expanded prison capacity during 2006 Jurisdictions provided three measures of their capacity for yearend 2006: Rated capacity is the number of beds or inmates assigned by a rating official to institutions within the jurisdiction. Operational capacity is the number of inmates that can be accommodated based on a facility's staff, existing programs, and services. Design capacity is the number of inmates that planners or architects intended for the facility. Highest capacity is the sum of the maximum number of beds and inmates reported by a jurisdiction across the 3 capacity measures, and the lowest capacity is the minimum of these 3 measures within a jurisdiction. Estimates of prison population as a percentage of capacity are based on the jurisdiction's custody population. In general, a jurisdiction's capacity and custody counts exclude inmates held in private facilities. Some jurisdictions include prisoners held in private facilities as part of the capacity of their prison systems. Where this occurs, prison population as a percent of capacity includes private prisoners. The Federal system reported capacity of 119,243 beds at yearend 2006. (See Appendix table 5.) Among States reporting capacity counts for yearend 2006, the highest capacity was 1,253,261 and the lowest capacity was 1,074,570 (table 5). Both measures of capacity increased since yearend 2005. Highest capacity increased by 3.4% and lowest capacity increased by 2.5% during 2006. At yearend 2006, 23 States and the Federal system operated at more than 100% of their highest capacity. Seventeen States operated at between 90% and 99% of their highest capacity. The Federal prison system was operating at 37% above its rated capacity at yearend 2006. By comparison, in 1995 States operated at 114% of their highest capacity and 125% of their lowest reported capacity. The Federal system was operating at 26% over reported capacity in 1995. Prison incarceration rate for sentenced prisoners reached 501 per 100,000 residents in 2006 About 96% of prisoners under State or Federal jurisdiction (or 1,502,179 prisoners) were sentenced to more than 1 year in prison (table 6). During 2006 the sentenced prison population increased by 2.7% or 39,313 prisoners, accounting for 92% of the overall increase in the jurisdiction prison population. The incarceration rate for prisoners sentenced to more than 1 year was 501 per 100,000 U.S. residents. This rate equaled about 1 in every 200 U.S. residents serving a prison term of more than 1 year on December 31, 2006. Among the States, the incarceration rate for prisoners sentenced to more than 1 year ranged from a high of 846 per 100,000 persons in Louisiana to a low of 151 per 100,000 in Maine. White women made up almost half of sentenced female prisoners in 2006; number of black women has decreased Of the 103,100 female prisoners sentenced to more than 1 year in State or Federal prison, nearly half (48% or 49,100 prisoners) were white females (table 7). Black women (an estimated 28,600 inmates) made up 28% of all sentenced female prisoners, and Hispanic women, 17%. Since 2000 the number and percentage of white women among sentenced female prisoners have increased. Over the same period, both the number and percentage of black women among sentenced female prisoners declined. At yearend 2000, the estimated 33,300 white women accounted for 40% of sentenced female prisoners, while the estimated 32,000 black women accounted for 38% of sentenced female prisoners. Women ages 35 to 39 made up the largest percentage of sentenced female prisoners overall (19%). This age group also made up the largest percentage of all 3 groups of sentenced female prisoners white, 18%, black, 19%, and Hispanic,18%. (See Appendix table 7.) Number of black men among sentenced male prisoners declined slightly since 2000 Black men represented the largest proportion of sentenced male inmates at yearend 2006 (38%); white men made up 34%; and Hispanic men, 21%. Black men ages 25 to 29 made up nearly one-fifth (19%) of sentenced black male prisoners, followed by black men ages 30 to 34 (17%). The largest percentage of sentenced Hispanic male prisoners were also in these two age groups (21% for Hispanic men ages 25 to 29 and 18% for those ages 30 to 34). White male prisoners were older than black and Hispanic men. Eighteen percent of white men were ages 45 to 54 and 16% were ages 40 to 44. From 2000 through 2006, the number of sentenced black male prisoners increased slightly, from an estimated 528,300 to 534,200. The percentage of black men among all sentenced male prisoners declined to 38% from 43%. Among all sentenced male prisoners, Hispanic men increased from 20% in 2000 to 21% in 2006. Declining percentage of blacks among sentenced prisoners Comparisons of changes in the racial composition of prison populations over time are constrained by new data collection methodologies. Following guidelines provided by the Office of Management and Budget, beginning in 2005 BJS estimated racial composition of the prison population separately for persons identifying with one race (97%) and those identifying with two or more races (3%). These guidelines have reduced the number and percent of persons identified as non-Hispanic white and non-Hispanic black prisoners. In addition, administrative data on the race and Hispanic origin of prisoners reported to BJS by corrections officials also overstate the number of non-Hispanic white and black prisoners and understate the number of Hispanics and persons of two or more races.***Footnote 2 Some jurisdictions are not able to report Hispanics or persons of two or more races as a separate category as requested under OMB guidelines***. Both administrative and estimated data indicate an overall decline among black prisoners from 2000 through 2006. The 2006 administrative data show a decline from 46.2% to 41.6%, while the estimated data indicate a decline from 42.4% to 37.5% (table 8). The rate of incarceration increased for white women, declined for black women White women were about one-third as likely as black women to be incarcerated and slightly more than half as likely as Hispanic women. There were 48 sentenced white female prisoners under State or Federal jurisdiction per 100,000 white women in the general population at yearend 2006 (table 9). Black women were incarcerated at a rate of 148 per 100,000, and Hispanic women at a rate of 81 per 100,000. The incarceration rate for black women declined from 175 per 100,000 at yearend 2000 to 148 per 100,000 at yearend 2006. At the same time, the rate for white women increased from 33 per 100,000 to 48 per 100,000, and the rate for Hispanic women increased from 78 per 100,000 to 81 per 100,000. The decrease in the black female incarceration rate occurred as the number of sentenced black female prisoners decreased (from 32,000 to 28,600). The number of white and Hispanic females both increased. The changes in incarceration rates were associated with changes in the relative rates of incarceration. Black womenwho in 2000 were 5.3 times as likely as white women to be incarceratedwere 3.1 times as likely as white women to be incarcerated at yearend 2006 (table 10). The incarceration rate for Hispanic women relative to white women declined slightly from 2.4 in 2000 to 1.7 at yearend 2006. Black males ages 30 to 34 incarcerated at the highest rate Nearly 8% of black men ages 30 to 34 were incarcerated as sentenced prisoners under State or Federal jurisdiction at yearend 2006. (See Appendix table 7.) This rate was the highest rate for males among the estimated age, race, and Hispanic origin groups. Among white men, those ages 30 to 34 also had the highest incarceration rate. About 1.2% of white men in this age group were incarcerated. Among Hispanic men, those ages 25 to 29 were incarcerated at the highest rates (about 2.5%). Overall, black men had an incarceration rate of 3,042 per 100,000 black men in the United States at yearend 2006 (See Appendix table 8). About 1 in every 33 black men was a sentenced prisoner. For white men, the incarceration rate for 2006 was 487 per 100,000 (or about 1 in every 205 white men). For Hispanic men, the rate was 1,261 per 100,000 (or 1 in every 79 Hispanic men). Violent offenders made up more than half of all sentenced inmates in State prisons at yearend 2004 At yearend 2004 (the most recent data available for estimating offense distributions by gender and race) more than half (52%) of all sentenced inmates in State prisons were sentenced for a violent offense (table 11) (See Appendix tables 9 and 10). Property offenses were the most serious charge for 21% of State prisoners, and drug offenses, 20%. Offense distributions differed between sentenced male and female State prisoners. More than half of males (53%) were sentenced for violent offenses, compared to 34% of females. Among State prisoners, sentenced females were more likely than sentenced males to be sentenced for property (31% vs. 20%) and drug offenses (29% vs. 19%). There were also differences in offense distributions at yearend 2004 by race and Hispanic origin. A majority of black (53%) and Hispanic (54%) prisoners were sentenced for violent offenses, compared to about half (50%) of white prisoners. Blacks and Hispanics were more likely than whites to be sentenced for drug offenses (23% of blacks, 21% of Hispanics, and 15% of whites). Whites were more likely (26%) than blacks (18%) or Hispanics (18%) to be sentenced for property offenses. Drug, weapons offenders accounted for nearly three-quarters of the increase in Federal prisoner since 2000 On September 30, 2006, (the latest available data from the Federal Justice Statistics Program on offenses of Federal prisoners) drug, weapons, and immigration offenders made up more than three-quarters (78%) of the 176,268 sentenced Federal prison population (table 12). Drug offenders made up more than half (53%); weapons offenders, 14%; and immigration offenders, 11%. From 2000 to 2006, the number of sentenced offenders in Federal prison increased by more than a third, from 131,739 to 176,268 in 2006. The number of weapons offenders more than doubled; immigration offenders increased by 43%; and drug offenders, by 26%. These three offense categories accounted for 87% of the growth in Federal prisoners. ------------------------------------------------------------- Detainees held by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) increased 41% from 2005 to 2006 At yearend 2006, 27,634 detainees were under the jurisdiction of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). This represented a 41% increase (or 8,072 detainees) from yearend 2005. Four border States (Arizona, California, New Mexico, and Texas) contributed to 67.2% of this growth. The largest growth occurred in New Mexico and Texas. New Mexico nearly doubled the number of detainees, increasing from 429 in 2005 to 1,035 in 2006. The detainee population in Texas increased 76% (or 3,261 detainees). California and Arizona had similar growth rates (32% and 31%, respectively) and ranked third and fourth in detainee growth. Of ICE detainees, 3,881 said their country of origin was in Central America, specifically El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. Another 2,643 individuals said they had Mexican citizenship. These groups collectively contributed to 81% of the growth from yearend 2005 to 2006. Over half (50.7% or 14,015) of the detainees were held on immigration law violations, 40% were held for criminal offenses, and the remaining 9.3% were pending charges or disposition. From yearend 2005 to 2006, the percentage of detainees held for immigration law violations increased by 79%. Comparatively, the number of detainees held for pending charges increased 62% and the number of detainees held for criminal offenses increased 8.9%. Methodology National Prisoner Statistics Begun in 1926 under a mandate from Congress, the National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) program collects statistics on prisoners at midyear and yearend. The Census Bureau serves as the data collection agent for BJS. BJS depends entirely upon the voluntary participation of State Departments of Corrections and the Federal Bureau of Prisons for NPS data. The NPS distinguishes between prisoners in custody and prisoners under jurisdiction. To have custody of a prisoner, a State or the Federal system must hold that prisoner in one of its facilities. To have jurisdiction over a prisoner, a State or the Federal system must have legal authority over the prisoner. Some States are unable to provide both custody and jurisdiction counts. The NPS jurisdiction counts include inmates held within a jurisdiction's facilities, including prisons, penitentiaries, correctional facilities, halfway houses, boot camps, farms, training/treatment centers, and hospitals. They include inmates who are: *temporarily absent (less than 30 days), out to court, or on work release *held in privately-operated facilities, local jails, other State or Federal facilities *serving a sentence for a responding jurisdiction and another jurisdiction at the same time. The NPS custody counts include all inmates held within a responding jurisdiction's facilities, including inmates housed for other jurisdictions. The custody counts exclude inmates held in local jails and in other jurisdictions. With a few exceptions for several responding jurisdictions, the NPS custody counts exclude inmates held in privately-operated facilities. The NPS counts also include all inmates in State-operated facilities in Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Rhode Island, and Vermont which have combined jail-prison systems. Since 2001, NPS prisoner counts have excluded inmates held by the District of Columbia, which as of yearend 2001 operated only a jail system. Prisoners sentenced under the District of Columbia criminal code are housed in Federal facilities. For more information about the NPS data collection instruments, see: . Military Corrections Statistics BJS obtains yearend counts of prisoners in the custody of U.S. military authorities from the Department of Defense Corrections Council. In 1994 the Council, comprised of representatives from each branch of military services, adopted a standardized report (DD Form 2720) with a common set of items and definitions. This report obtains data on persons held in U.S. military confinement facilities inside and outside of the continental United States, by branch of service, gender, race, Hispanic origin, conviction status, sentence length, and offense. It also provides data on the number of facilities and their design and rated capacities. Other inmate counts In 1995 BJS began collecting yearend counts of prisoners from the Departments of Corrections in the U.S. Territories (American Samoa, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands) and U.S. Commonwealths (Northern Mariana Islands and Puerto Rico). These counts include all inmates for whom the Territory or Commonwealth had legal authority (jurisdiction) and all inmates in physical custody (held in prison or local jail facilities). The counts are collected by gender, race, Hispanic origin, and sentence length. In addition, BJS obtains reports on the design, rated, and operational capacities of these correctional facilities. BJS obtains yearend counts of persons detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), an agency within the Department of Homeland Security. Formerly the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, ICE holds persons for immigration violations in Federal, State, and locally operated prisons and jails, as well as in privately operated facilities that are under exclusive contract and in ICE-operated facilities. Data on the number of inmates held in the custody of local jails are from the BJS Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ). The ASJ provides data on inmates in custody at midyear. For more information about the ASJ, see Methodology in Prison and Jail Inmates at Midyear 2006. Data on the number of juveniles held in residential placement facilities were obtained from the Office for Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, which conducts a Census of Juveniles in Residential Placement (CJRP). In this report, CJRP data have a reference date of March 29, 2006. Data on Federal prisoners are obtained from BJS' Federal Justice Statistics Program (FJSP). The FJSP obtains from the Federal Bureau of Prisons individual-level records of prisoners in Federal facilities as of September 30. The FJSP provides counts of sentenced Federal inmates by gender, race, Hispanic origin, and offense. Estimating age-specific incarceration rates Estimates are provided for the number of sentenced prisoners under State or Federal jurisdiction by gender (within genders by age group), race (non-Hispanic white and non-Hispanic black), and Hispanic origin. The detailed race and Hispanic origin categories exclude estimates of persons identifying two or more races. For 2000 and 2006, estimates were produced separately for inmates under State and Federal jurisdiction and then combined to obtain a total estimated population. State estimates were prepared by combining information about the gender of prisoners from the NPS with information on self-reported race and Hispanic origin from the 2004 Survey of Inmates of State Correctional Facilities. For the estimates of Federal prisoners, the distributions of FJSP counts of sentenced Federal inmates by gender, age, race, and Hispanic origin on September 30, 2006, were applied to the NPS counts of sentenced Federal inmates by gender at yearend 2006. Estimates of the U.S. resident population for January 1, 2007, by age, gender, race, and Hispanic origin, were generated by applying the July 1, 2006 age distributions within gender, race, and Hispanic origin groups to the January 1, 2007 population estimates by gender. The population estimates were provided by the U.S. Census Bureau. Age-specific rates of incarceration for each demographic group were calculated by dividing the estimated number of sentenced prisoners within each age group by the estimated number of U.S. residents in each age group, multiplying the quotient by 100,000, and then rounding to the nearest whole number. Totals by gender include all prisoners and U.S. residents regardless of racial or Hispanic origin, while incarceration rates for detailed race and Hispanic origin groups exclude persons identifying two or more races. --------------------------------------------------- This report in portable document format and in ASCII and its related statistical data and tables are available at the BJS World Wide Web Internet site: . --------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------- The Bureau of Justice Statistics is the statistical agency of the U.S. Department of Justice. Jeffrey L. Sedgwick is the director. BJS Bulletins present the first release of findings from permanent data collection programs. This Bulletin was written by William J. Sabol, Ph.D., Heather Couture, and Paige M. Harrison. Lara Allen verified the report. Tina Dorsey produced and edited the report, and Jayne Robinson prepared the report for final printing, under the supervision of Doris J. James. December 2007, NCJ 219416. --------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------- End of file 11/19/2007 JR