Pubdate: Mon, 24 Jul 2000 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2000 The Washington Post Company Contact: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Ellen Nakashima, Washington Post Staff Writer NUMBER OF PROBATIONERS, PAROLEES AT RECORD HIGH The number of people on parole or probation reached a record 4.5 million in 1999, the Justice Department announced yesterday. The biggest increase is in probationers, reflecting a rise in drug arrests and a decline in the number of drug offenders sent to prison. Twenty-four percent of the people on probation were convicted of drug offenses and 18 percent were given probation for drunken driving. "What we've seen is a 30 percent decline in the likelihood of going to prison for a drug arrest over the last decade," Justice Department statistician Allen J. Beck said. "So even though we've had an increase in drug arrests, the flow into prisons has stabilized." More than 1 million of the nation's probationers and parolees were in two states. Texas had 556,410 and California 446,460. States with the largest percentages of their adult population under community supervision were Georgia, with 5.8 percent, and Idaho, with 4.2 percent. The parolees and probationers are part of the burgeoning population that is under correctional supervision in the wake of a national movement to crack down on crime, Justice Department officials said. States have built new prisons, toughened sentencing standards and increased options for community supervision. Overall, the number of people under correctional supervision stands at an all-time high of 6.3 million, with 1.86 million men and women behind bars in June 1999. The number has climbed every year for a decade. New figures will be released next month. "The scope of the criminal justice system has increased substantially over 20 years," Beck said. "It went from a little over 1 percent of the adult population back in 1980 to now up over 3 percent of all adults. That's one out of every 32 adults." Despite a decline in violent crime, arrests for simple assaults were up by 28 percent between 1990 and 1999; arrests for forgery, fraud and embezzlement increased 37 percent; and arrests for drug use and sale rose 34 percent. The three types of convictions disproportionately result in sentences of probation, which allow offenders to avoid prison or jail but remain under supervision in the community. After a steady increase in the 1980s, the parole population last decade stabilized at around 700,000, which Beck said reflects a drop in prison release rates and longer lengths of stay. There were more women on probation (22 percent of the total) and parole (12 percent) in 1999 than in 1990. Blacks were more than one-third of probationers and nearly half of parolees. Almost two-thirds of probationers and more than half of parolees were white. Hispanics, who may be of any race, were 16 percent of probationers and 21 percent of parolees. The study and other information about the nation's correctional population may be found at the Justice Department Web site: www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D