Federal prison population, per BOP accounting of "Total Federal Inmates," drops down to 161,640

Today's check on the federal Bureau of Prisons' updated "Total Federal Inmates" numbers show a continuation of historic declines, though it again appears that the pace of the decline is slowing just a bit.  In a prior post here, I highlighted that, according to BOP's reporting, most weeks through April the federal prison population shrunk around or over 1,000 persons per week.  And through May 2020, as detailed here, the pace of weekly decline increased to an average of around 1,200 fewer reported prisoners in federal facilities.  As we headed into and now though June, the new numbers at this webpage continue to show significant, but slightly reduced, weekly declines: the BOP reported population dropped from 166,647 (as of May 21) to 165,575 (as of May 28) to 164,438 (as of June 4) to 163,441 (as of June 11) to 162,578 (as of June 18) to now a BOP reported total of 161,640.

I continue to suspect that these persistent declines in total inmates is mostly a function of delays in federal case-processing pipelines from COVID shutdowns; I keep expecting that we will, eventually, see some (considerable?) move upward in these numbers.  But with the recent surge in COVID cases in some regions and some talk of renewed shut-downs, perhaps the federal prison-population reverberations of COVID will be continuing on and on.  And maybe, as I have wistfully speculated before, we are still some ways from the bottom here and are still moving toward a much lower "new normal" for the federal prison population.  

A few of many prior related posts:

Via RSSMix.com Mix ID 8247011 http://www.rssmix.com/

Comments