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What Causes Prison Overcrowding In The United States

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To understand prison overcrowding we must first examine exactly what causes prison crowding. Prison overcrowding is not caused by one exact thing it is actually caused by multiple issues that have gotten worse over the past 30 to 40 years or so. I will start by listing off just a few of these and then over the course of this essay I will go in depth on each of the issues identified. So what does cause prison overcrowding well first and probably the most important is there isn’t enough room in our prisons, next is criminals are receiving tougher sentencing on certain crimes an example crimes involving drugs and lastly once in prison many offenders are spending more time incarcerated many states having the Truth in Sentencing Act, which forces …show more content…

According to Incarceration Nation (2014) “The United States holds only 5% of the world’s population and has nearly 25% of its prisoners at about 2.2 million people”. This becomes an issue of space there are currently 1,518,559 federal and state prisons in the United States of America and only 192 correctional facilities across Canada as of 2006. According to the Bureau of Justice (2013) the Indiana State Prison facilities were created to house 32,075 inmates but at the end of 2013 they were holding upward of 48,653 inmates this is 16,578 more than what the system is supposed to hold. This intern creates a large amount of double celling which by law prisoners are supposed to get allocated a certain amount of space thus increasing the amount of issues that overcrowding is causing. Take for instance Tillery V Owens a case handled by the Pennsylvania Court of Appeals. They found that double celling violated the 8th Amendment under a “totality of conditions” analysis was the overall prison conditions consisted of dilapidated, overcrowded and unsanitary prison condition. So this becomes the biggest issue with overcrowding the prisons are becoming unsuitable for criminals to stay in but they have to serve their …show more content…

What is truth in sentencing? It refers to policies and legislation that aim to abolish or curb parole so that convicts serve the period to which they have been sentenced. For example In the United States, federal laws currently requires that those convicted of federal crimes serve a "substantial portion" of their original sentence. This is achieved by eliminating or restricting parole and/or remissions. The first law requiring Truth in sentencing was passed in 1984, and a number of states now have them. In 1994, a federal Truth in sentencing law decided that to qualify for Truth in sentencing federal funding, offenders must serve at least 85% of the sentence for qualifying crimes before becoming eligible for parole. As of 2008, the District of Columbia and 35 of the 50 states qualify for this additional funding. In Canada Truth in sentencing is referred to as bill C-25. Now how does this effect our prisons and how does it cause them to overcrowd. Well since prisoners have to serve 85% of their original sentencing before being able to qualify for parole. So if someone receives a 20 year sentence then they must serve 17 years. Now on to Quality of life policing. The term “quality of life” is thought to have first been used in a policing context in New York City in the early 90s. During Mayor

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