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21. Frank Discussion: Marijuana Statistics
US Drug War stats. Charts (incarceration, race, cannabis, mandatory minimums, crime,murder, etc.). US arrests stats (from mpp.org). US statistics Deaths in 2001.
http://frankdiscussion.netfirms.com/info_statistics.html
Marijuana laws are not based in science. Highly recommended:
Other Countries:
Opinion Polls for legalization Cannabis And The Law Information Resources: Canadian marijuana related statistics USAGE STATISTICS to of Canadians aged to have used marijuana Approx. 7% of Canadians smoke marijuana recreationally (over 2 million people)
source 1: StatsCan Parliamentary Website
(Population of Canada in 2002: 31 million x 7% = 2.2 million marijuana smokers "Approx. 25% of adult Canadians have tried cannabis some time in life"
Special Senate Committee Report - Cannabis: Our Position for a Canadian Public Policy According to a UN study of drug use, 147 million
ARREST
STATISTICS per cent of drug-related criminal charges are connected with marijuana of people arrested for marijuana related crimes are for simple possession (under 30 grams of cannabis). Approximately 50,000 Canadians are arrested each year for marijuana related crimes . (49,639 in 2001 - according to Statistics Canada) [ U.S. arrest stats

22. Crime & Justice Stats '97
of juvenile detention and adult incarceration in Australia continues to exceed allother states and territories the Report includes coloured crime maps showing
http://suli.biz.uwa.edu.au/crc/media/Stats97-MR.htm
Embargoed until Thursday, 3 December 1998 Crime and Justice Statistics for Western Australia, 1997 There is no evidence to support the notion that Western Australia has been in the grip of a "crime epidemic", according to the latest statistics on crime and criminal justice in WA. The findings are contained in the eighth edition of Crime and Justice Statistics for Western Australia - a regular series produced by researchers at the Crime Research Centre, University of Western Australia. Authors of the 1997 report are Ms Anna Ferrante, Ms Nini Loh and Mr John Fernandez. Senior author of the report, Ms Anna Ferrante said that there was little change in the overall recorded crime rate between 1996 and 1997. The total number of reported offences rose by 3%, however, once population growth had been taken into account, the rate had remained fairly stable at 15,702 offences per 100,000 persons. For against person (violent) offences, the rate was constant at about 1,100 per 100,000 persons, that is, about 11 persons in every 1,000 reported being a victim of violence in 1997. "The trend in the robbery rate is disturbing. However, the WA rate is still on a par with the national average, and still well below the robbery rate of New South Wales." Ms Ferrante said. [see pages 8,9]

23. Prison Stats 1990-2000
by rising crime; nor did it cause crime to decrease. In many states, felony convictionsand drugrelated The rate of incarceration in adult correctional and
http://www.wrongfuldeathinstitute.com/links/prison/prisonstats.htm
Prison Statistics, 1990 - 2000 Certain Information from the Bureau of Justice Statistics Bulletin Overall, the United States incarcerated 2,071,686 persons at year end 2000." That's 478 inmates per 100,000 US residents. California (163,001 inmates), Texas (157,997), and the Federal system 145,416) together held 1 in every 3 prisoners in the Nation. By the end of 2000, State Prisons were operating between full capacity and 15% above capacity. Between 1990 and 2000 the number of State correctional facilities increased by 351. States also added over 528,000 beds, an 81% increase. Since 1990 the number of male inmates has increased by 77%, and the number of female inmates has increased by 108%. In the year 2000 the Federal inmate population rose by 9.4%. Since 1990, the Federal System has increased by 148%. Among the more than 1.3 million sentenced inmates (not including those in jail custody) at yearend, an estimated 428,300 were black males between the ages of 20 and 39. This means that 9.7% of all black males between the ages of 25 and 29 were in prisons. At yearend 2000, 1 in every 143 US residents were incarcerated in State or Federal prisons or a local jail.

24. PEN-L Message, Crime Stats.
in SLATE (May 8, 2000) The USA TODAY account of the crime stats in the stronglysuggesting the reasons for the decline are rising incarceration rates and
http://archives.econ.utah.edu/archives/pen-l/2000m05.2/msg00016.htm
PEN-L
mailing list archive
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Date: [ Previous Next ] Thread: [ Previous Next ] Index: [ Author Date Thread
crime stats.
  • To Subject : crime stats. From Date : Mon, 08 May 2000 08:47:24 -0700
http://liberalarts.lmu.edu/~jdevine

25. The Moratorium Campaign
imprisonment average around $500,000 each, including incarceration cost The UnitedStates leads the world in killing kids The death penalty does not deter crime.
http://www.moratoriumcampaign.org/facts/stats.lasso

Home
Facts General Statistics about the Death Penalty in the United States
The United States is the only western democracy that continues to use the death penalty. The U.S. stands with countries like China, Iran, Iraq, and Pakistan in its continued use of the death penalty. We are third only to China and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in total number of executions since 1998.
Innocent people are sentenced to die. Over 111 innocent Americans have been exonerated from death row in just the last two decades, but not before losing a total of over 800 years of their lives on death row for crimes they did not commit.
The death penalty is more expensive than life in prison. Various state governments estimate that a single death penalty case from arrest to execution ranges from $1 million up to $7 million. Cases resulting in life imprisonment average around $500,000 each, including incarceration cost. State and federal budget deficits ensure civic programs will be cut in order to finance capital trials.
The death penalty is racially inequitable.

26. CJOnline.com | Crime In The City
The nonviolent property offenders below the incarceration line on the sentencinggrid 3/00 Burglars frequently receive probation » 9/3/00 crime stats can tell
http://cjonline.com/webindepth/crime/stories/090300-4_crime.shtml

Browse the ads in

today's newspaper

Last modified at 10:56 p.m. on Saturday, September 2, 2000
Burglars frequently receive probation
By Roger Myers

The Capital-Journal Burglary is an infuriating crime that leaves its victims feeling violated. Burglary victims and Topeka police alike say penalties for the offense should be severe. Under the state's sentencing guidelines law, burglary is a property crime and is punishable by presumptive probation. That means the offender is placed on probation and remains in the community. "We receive a lot of complaints from citizens that the people who are convicted of burglarizing their homes are not getting enough (incarceration) time," said Topeka police spokesman Lt. John Sidwell. "Without a doubt there is a general public perception that the burglary offenders are getting off easy." The Kansas Sentencing Commission has heard that complaint, said Barbara Tombs, executive director of that body. In 1999, the commission proposed and the Legislature approved a change in sentencing guidelines to provide that any second and subsequent convictions for burglary would bring presumptive prison sentences. "The way sentencing guidelines were originally passed, it was difficult to go to prison," Tombs said. "We looked at it and thought that was the best way to handle it.

27. Type_Document_Title_here
Reactions of inmates to incarceration were found to be Office Research StatisticsDirectorate crime, Law and Web Search Legal News discussion Groups stats
http://www.umm.maine.edu/resources/beharchive/beh450/LetaMyers/lm.html
LETA MYERS
University of Maine at Machias
BEH 450
Dr. J.Lehman
March 1997
Crime, Punishment, Rehabilitation
Crime is defined as " any act which the soverign has deemed contrary to the public good: a wrong which the government has determined is injurious to the public and, hence, prosecutable in a criminal proceeding. (BARROWS LAW DICTIONARY, 1984) . Criminal acts range from the heinous to the mundane, defined within the context of the society in which they're committed.
When a person engages in a behavior that society has deemed to be punishable by imprisonment, does the imprisonment have a positive or negative impact? Edward Zamble (1992) conducted a long term study of prison inmates, ,ensuring behavior, emotional states, and cognitions. The results of this study were that adaptation improved over time. The inmates became more involved with the prison structure, had less emotional problems and less physical symptom complaints. (Zamble, 1992).
The following questions were of interest to the class: How are juveniles treated in comparison to adults?

28. Canada_stats
General Canadian stats. and 59,532 property offenses in Canada In 1997, (StatisticsCanada) http//www.crime.org. If recent incarceration remains unchanged
http://www.stv.net/canada_stats.htm
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Teens and the Streets
Teens at School ... Random Firearm Stats General Canadian Stats CANADA Youth Population (12-17yrs): 1995, 2,384,600 (Canada)

29. AFROCENTRIC NEWS Network
frustrated police officials and FBI crime stats aren t among many whites that violentcrime comes exclusively with cycle of arrest and incarceration for blacks
http://www.afrocentricnews.com/html/ofari_tv_news.html
Welcome To The Afrocentric News Network TV News Fuels Crime Fears
By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, Ph.D

Earl Ofari Hutchinson
The recent FBI report that crime rates have plunged seven years in a row should be cause for great joy. But many police officials instead have expressed frustration that much of the public still doesn't believe they have. He blamed the media for fueling public perceptions that crime still rages and criminals lurk behind every street lamp. But for many who call the shots in TV newsrooms, frustrated police officials and FBI crime stats aren't likely to change how they present crime news. They've spent the past two decades turning TV- crime verite into a sure fire formula for ratings. That formula is ridiculously simple. Just have helicopters and mobile camera crews hover over or roam around city streets looking for police car chases, dead bodies, gang shoot-outs, and drug busts. And most importantly, make sure those city streets are in black and Latino neighborhoods. The formula is bloody, exploitative, and racist. But it is a smash success. It has hooked so many Americans on the murder and mayhem nightly news broadcasts that the networks have spun off a legion of hybrid clones. These shows simulate live-action crime chases and busts and worse they almost always depict blacks and Latinos as violent criminals. This has convinced many white suburbanites that their lives are at grave risk from violence-prone, drugged out Latinos and African-Americans.

30. Comments On 9239 | MetaFilter
Columbia s ranking among US highest incarceration rates 1 From the stats quotedabove only, though, it s enjoying several years of declining crime rates due
http://www.metafilter.com/mefi/9239
Tuesday, June 08, 2004 2:00 AM PST Home Archives MetaTalk Login ... Etc
July 25, 2001
The Incarceration Atlas. Everyone's probably familiar with the usual stat that America has the world's highest rate of incarceration, but there are some other pretty interesting numbers here too, touching on some Metafilter favorites - race, education and drugs. (more inside...)
posted by stavrosthewonderchicken at 12:53 AM PST [ trackback ] (12 comments total)
Some examples :
Ranking of the U.S. in world's highest incarceration rates: 1
Percentage of U.S. prisoners incarcerated for drug offenses in 1980: 8
Percentage of U.S. prisoners incarcerated for drug offenses in 1998: 23
U.S. incarceration rates of Caucasians per 100,000 residents: 235
U.S. incarceration rates of African-Americans per 100,000 residents: 1815
Minnesota's ranking among U.S. highest incarceration rates: 51
Minnesota's ranking among U.S. highest education spending per capita: 1
District of Columbia's ranking among U.S. highest incarceration rates: 1 District of Columbia's ranking among U.S. highest education spending per capita: 51

31. General Info
whose mission is to reduce society s reliance on the use of incarceration as a Mycurrent project is to seek out new crime stats links at the city, county
http://www.nmu.edu/cj/Criminal Justice Links/general_info.htm
Click to see where we're located:
Back To Criminal Justice Links
Please let us know if you find any old or broken links, so we can remove them. Either send email to syoung@nmu.edu or call 906-227-2660.
General Information Sources
Amnesty International
Amnesty International is a worldwide campaigning movement that works to promote all the human rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international standards. In particular, Amnesty International campaigns to free all prisoners of conscience; ensure fair and prompt trials for political prisoners; abolish the death penalty, torture and other cruel treatment of prisoners; end political killings and "disappearances"; and oppose human rights abuses by opposition groups.
Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy

The Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy (CFDP) is a non-profit organization founded in 1993 by several of Canada's leading specialists in drug policy. Its founding members include psychologists, pharmacologists, lawyers, health policy advocates and public policy researchers.
Center for Community Alternatives

CCA is a private, not-for-profit agency providing direct services to professionals and clients in the criminal and juvenile justice and related human service systems, as well as research, training and technical assistance in those fields.

32. Tilting At Windmills: Comment On Simple Solutions
Compare crime and incarceration rates between the US and other (I believe I noticedin those stats that the budget put towards crime fighting increased
http://www.la-mancha.net/cgi-bin/mt-comments.cgi?entry_id=253

33. CSIndy: Group Pushes For Halt To New Prisons (January 13 - January 19, 2000)
law enforcement have also claimed that the high cost of incarceration is worthwhile thatassertion, however, pointing out that while overall crime stats may be
http://www.csindy.com/csindy/2000-01-13/news.html
Group pushes for halt to new prisons
by Malcolm Howard JANUARY 13, 2000: Standing next to a stark, black-and-white chart showing the number of prisoners behind bars in Colorado, activist Christie Donner rattles off statistics that she says support her call for a moratorium on new prison construction in the state. 'Prison construction now takes up one-third of the state's capital construction budget,' Donner told a group of about three dozen residents gathered at downtown's St. Mary's Cathedral earlier this week. 'And it's been increasing.' Donner spoke as part of a statewide, grass-roots effort to raise support for Senate Bill 00-104. Introduced in the state Senate last week, the bill would forbid new prison construction in the state until 2003.
Inmate population quintupled
A few of the facts cited during Donner's two-hour talk: The prison moratorium bill, Donner argued, would give lawmakers a chance to stop and look at the real costs of increased incarceration. Among other things, the proposed bill would create a 17-member task force that would study the causes behind the state's massive prison boom and suggest possible countermeasures. Made up of experts appointed by various sectors in the criminal justice system, the task force would study minority representation in prison, the availability of drug treatment programs behind bars and the role of parole policies.

34. Earl Ofari Hutchinson, TV News Fuels Crime Fears
frustrated police officials and FBI crime stats aren’t among many whites that violentcrime comes exclusively cycle of arrest and incarceration for blacks
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/45/332.html
Documents menu
Date: Thu, 20 May 1999 14:35:38 -0400
To: hype-info-service@usa.net
HYPE Information Service
http://www.afrikan.net/hype ytoure@mindspring.com 770 322 6653 USA
TV news fuels crime fears
Commentary by Earl Ofari Hutchinson, 20 May 1999
The recent FBI report that crime rates have plunged seven years in a row should be cause for great joy. That formula is ridiculously simple. Just have helicopters and mobile camera crews hover over or roam around city streets looking for police car chases, dead bodies, gang shoot-outs, and drug busts. And most importantly, make sure those city streets are in black and Latino neighborhoods. The formula is bloody, exploitative, and racist. But it is a smash success. This has convinced many white suburbanites that their lives are at grave risk from violence-prone, drugged-out Latinos and African-Americans.
  • It has boosted the number of persons jailed in America to a record high 2 million persons. This is the largest number of any nation on the planet. According to the Sentencing Project, a Washington D.C.-based public advocacy group, California alone has built 21 new prisons since 1984, and taxpayers cough up $4 billion yearly to run them. In the same period the state could manage to scrounge up only enough funds to build one new university campus despite a bulging student population. It has prompted passage of an avalanche of three strikes laws, and other draconian drug laws, which have locked up mostly black and Latino offenders for nonviolent property or drug-related crimes.

35. PrisonSucks.com: Research On The Prison Industrial Complex
the first time in American history, the states and the in prison; that will properlyvary with crime rates and The US rate of incarceration is the highest in
http://www.prisonsucks.com/
June 8, 2004
Skip
Site Map Search
PrisonSucks.com
Research on the crime control industry
Prisonsucks.com is a clearinghouse for useful, verifiable statistics about the crime control industry. Too often prison activists use statistics that are out of date, provided without citation or simply wrong. One of these days the public will start listening to prison activists, so let's be prepared to win without being sidetracked by arguments over defective statistics. In some cases, the numbers we need don't exist. In others, the facts exist but activists don't know where to find them. Now you do. Start at prisonsucks.com. Explore the links above (especially research ) and take action today!
Like the site? Love the book!
Written by the editor of this site and co-published with the Western Prison Project, The Prison Index: Taking the Pulse of the Crime Control Industry is the first index of statistics about our nation's criminal justice system ever published. Containing 611 facts and 17 graphs and charts, this 48-page volume presents, in black-and-white, the state of crime control in America. Read more and order online
Incarceration is not an equal opportunity punishment
On December 31, 2002, there were 2,033,331 people in U.S. prisons and jails. That's a rise of 3.7% during the 12 previous months, more than twice the growth rate of the previous year. The average annual increase since 1995 has been 3.6%.

36. US Notches World's Highest Incarceration Rate | Csmonitor.com
tough policies and years when violent-crime rates have Nor does the impact of incarcerationend with the Ex-felons are prohibited from voting in many states.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0818/p02s01-usju.html
WORLD USA COMMENTARY LEARNING ... Text Edition Search:
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Monitor Breakfast

Excerpts from discussions between reporters and Washington newsmakers. USA Stories: for 06/08/2004 Worldviews: Reagan and Bush Long after tornadoes have passed, a lens on poststorm life California students fall into state budget gap High school hijinks: Diploma day poses a discipline challenge ... more projects... Most-viewed stories: (for 06/06/04) A child of the 'Reagan revolution' grateful for inheritance Protest song is back - with a vengeance Remembering the heroes of Watergate The meaning of Mr. Reagan ... Justice from the August 18, 2003 edition US notches world's highest incarceration rate A report highlights extent to which many citizens have served time in prison. By Gail Russell Chaddock WASHINGTON More than 5.6 million Americans are in prison or have served time there, according to a new report by the Justice Department released Sunday. That's 1 in 37 adults living in the United States, the highest incarceration level in the world. It's the first time the US government has released estimates of the extent of imprisonment, and the report's statistics have broad implications for everything from state fiscal crises to how other nations view the American experience.

37. US Notches World's Highest Incarceration Rate | Csmonitor.com
in the United States, the highest incarceration level in a black male in the UnitedStates would have tough policies and years when violent-crime rates have
http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0818/p02s01-usju.htm
from the August 18, 2003 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0818/p02s01-usju.html
US notches world's highest incarceration rate
A report highlights extent to which many citizens have served time in prison. By Gail Russell Chaddock WASHINGTON - More than 5.6 million Americans are in prison or have served time there, according to a new report by the Justice Department released Sunday. That's 1 in 37 adults living in the United States, the highest incarceration level in the world. It's the first time the US government has released estimates of the extent of imprisonment, and the report's statistics have broad implications for everything from state fiscal crises to how other nations view the American experience. If current trends continue, it means that a black male in the United States would have about a 1 in 3 chance of going to prison during his lifetime. For a Hispanic male, it's 1 in 6; for a white male, 1 in 17. The numbers come after many years of get-tough policies - and years when violent-crime rates have generally fallen. But to some observers, they point to broader failures in US society, particularly in regard to racial minorities and others who are economically disadvantaged. "These new numbers are shocking enough, but what we don't see are the ripple effects of what they mean: For the generation of black children today, there's almost an inevitable aspect of going to prison," says Marc Mauer, assistant director of The Sentencing Project, a nonprofit advocacy group based in Washington. "We have the wealthiest society in human history, and we maintain the highest level of imprisonment. It's striking what that says about our approach to social problems and inequality."

38. Bureau Of Justice Statistics Criminal Offenders Statistics
10 jail inmates had prior sentences to probation or incarceration. offenders releasedfrom prisons in 15 States in 1994 rearrested for a new sex crime within 3
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/crimoff.htm
Bureau of Justice Statistics BJS home page Corrections facts at a glance
Reentry Trends in United States
Criminal Offenders Statistics
On this page:
Summary findings
Publications Selected statistics
Also by BJS staff
... Related sites On the corrections page:
About the data collections
Summary findings
For additional information about homicide offenders, see Homicide Trends in the United States Prevalence of imprisonment in the United States
  • As of December 31, 2001, there were an estimated 5.6 million adults who had ever served time in State or Federal prison, including 4.3 million former prisoners and 1.3 million adults in prison.
    Nearly a third of former prisoners were still under correctional supervision, including 731,000 on parole, 437,000 on probation, and 166,000 in local jails.
    In 2001, an estimated 2.7% of adults in the U.S. had served time in prison, up from 1.8% in 1991 and 1.3% in 1974.

39. Bureau Of Justice Statistics Crime And Justice In The U.S. And England And Wales
In the United States, place of incarceration includes State prisons and local jailsfor adults crime definitions are given in Notes on figures 510.
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/html/cjusew96/psi.htm
U.S. Department of Justice
Bureau of Justice Statistics
Contents
Previous

Next
BJS home page
Crime and Justice in the United States
and in England and Wales, 1981-96
Percent sentenced to incarceration
To the chart data Notes on figures 31-36: Data compiled by courts nationwide (courts are identified in Notes on figures 19-24 ) formed the basis for estimates of the percentage of convicted offenders sentenced to incarceration. In the United States, place of incarceration includes State prisons and local jails for adults convicted in State courts; Federal prisons for persons convicted in Federal courts; residential institutions (for example, juvenile training schools) for juveniles convicted in juvenile courts. In England, place of confinement includes prisons, young offender institutions, and secure accommodation for juveniles. Juveniles in England are incarcerated in two types of facilities: those that are exclusively for juveniles (secure accommodation for juveniles), and those for persons under age 21 (young offender institutions). More details on the conviction data for the graphics is given in Notes on figures 19-24 . Crime definitions are given in Notes on figures 5-10 In the United States, various types of institutions are used to incarcerate persons convicted of crime. There are State prisons and local jails for adults convicted in State courts; Federal prisons for persons convicted in Federal courts; and various types of residential institutions (for example, training schools) for juveniles found delinquent in juvenile courts.

40. RUPD Campus Crime
A weekly summary of reports received by the Rice University Police Department. This page is updated every Monday. Police Department. Annual. crime. stats. Campus crime. Regularly. The following
http://www.rupd.rice.edu/archive/2001/January 2001.html
    Rice University
Police Department
Annual
Crime

Stats
Campus Crime
Regularly
The following is a summary of reported crime
that has occurred on OUR campus:
January, 2001
  • Nothing to report.
      Entrance #12
      Traffic stop at Entrance #12. Driver has suspended license. Subject arrested and transported to Harris County Jail.
      • Entrance #3

      • Traffic stop for possible daytime curfew. Juvenile did not have a drivers license. Subjects sister was contacted to pick him up.
      • Hanszen College

      • Student reports items stolen from room. Case pending.
      • Hanszen College

      • Student reports computer stolen from room. Case pending.
        • Baker College
        • Student reports bicycle stolen from quad area. Bicycle had been secured and was missing on 01.03.01. Case pending.
          • Nothing to report.
              East Stadium Lot Report of minor accident between vehicle and Rice Delivery Services vehicle. Report filed.
              • Greenbriar Building
              • Staff member reports theft of two wallets which occurred on 01.11.01. Wallet found less cash. Case pending.
                • Nothing to report.
                    Hanszen College Report of stolen bicycle from area near commons. Case pending.

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