Pubdate: Thu, 18 Nov 1999 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press Author: Laurie Asseo WAR ON DRUGS INCREASES NUMBER OF WOMEN IN PRISON WASHINGTON -- The war on drugs has sent an increasing number of women to prison, according to a study released Wednesday. It also says two-thirds of incarcerated women have children under age 18. The drug war has had a "dramatic and disproportionate impact on women," said the report by The Sentencing Project, a private group devoted to finding alternatives to imprisonment. The number of women in state prisons for drug offenses rose from 2,400 in 1986 to 23,700 in 1996, nearly 10 times as many, the study said. For non-drug crimes, the number of imprisoned women more than doubled, rising from 17,200 to 39,400. In other words, drug crimes accounted for half of the overall increase of women in state prisons. The figures for women imprisoned for drug crimes start from a "relatively low base, but it's still an enormous growth," said professor Alfred Blumstein of Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh. The numbers for women still are far below the numbers of men in prison. In 1986, there were 34,400 men in state prisons for drug crimes, a number that rose to 213,900 in 1996, more than six times as many. For non-drug offenses, 391,400 men were imprisoned in 1986, compared with 767,500, almost twice as many, a decade later. Drug crimes made up one-third of the total increase. "It is unclear to what extent our findings reflect changes in behavior and criminality or changes in official responses to those behaviors," the Sentencing Project's report said. James Alan Fox, professor of criminal justice at Boston's Northeastern University, said the study shows a strong impact of the drug war on both men and women. "This does not suggest that there has been any differential enforcement on women," Fox said. But he added, "The impact on families and children is obviously disproportionate when women are locked up." Two-thirds of female state prison inmates had children under age 18, and half of the women said their children had never visited them in prison. Many children of female inmates were placed in foster care. "Thus, women's incarceration results in a disruption of children's living situation as well as creating emotional stress for both women and their children," the report said. The report focused further on three states -- New York, California and Minnesota -- to show how the figures can vary across the country. In New York, the number of women sentenced to state prison for drug crimes rose from 209 in 1986 to 1,226 in 1995, nearly six times as many. For men, the number tripled from 3,006 to 9,110. Drug offenses accounted for 91 percent of the increase in the number of women imprisoned in New York from 1986 to 1995, compared with 55 percent in California and 26 percent in Minnesota. One in three male prisoners in New York were serving drug sentences in 1997, but six of every 10 women were sentenced for a drug crime, the study said. In California, about one in four male state prisoners in the same year were imprisoned for a drug crime, compared with four of every 10 female inmates. In Minnesota, a smaller share of the prison population was convicted of drug offenses. In 1995, the report said, 19 percent of women's prison sentences were for drug offenses, compared with 15 percent of men's sentences. In all three states, black and Hispanic women made up a significantly larger share of the women imprisoned for drug offenses than their share of the state population. The Sentencing Project recommended repealing mandatory sentencing laws, expanding drug treatment inside and outside of prisons, and providing aid for children of women in prison. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake