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Home Content Regional News Headlines: Daily News Briefing

KENTUCKY’S INCARCERATED POPULATION ON THE RISE

Kentucky incarcerated more than 32,000 people in 2022

Special For The Lazer by Special For The Lazer
April 28, 2023
in Regional News Headlines: Daily News Briefing
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Friday, April 28, 2023   
The Blackburn Correctional Complex near Lexington incarcerates more than 300 people. (PrisonInsight.com:Flickr)

Kentucky incarcerated more than 32,000 people in 2022 in both local jails and state prisons, a 250% jump from the mid-1980s, according to a new website tracking mass incarceration in the Commonwealth.

Ashley Spalding, research director for the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy, said those numbers don’t include the thousands of Kentuckians being held in federal prisons, or who are locked into the criminal-justice system because they owe fines and fees.

“Kentucky criminalizes far too many low level of offenses including cannabis possession, criminal littering, public intoxication,” she said. “There are lots of ways that people end up serving long sentences.”

Black Kentuckians make up less than 9% of the state’s population but 21% of the prison population. Since 2011, Kentucky lawmakers have enacted 76 measure increasing incarceration and only 14 reducing it, according to a Kentucky Center for Economic Policy analysis.

Amid the proposal to build a $500 million federal prison in Letcher County, Spalding said there isn’t a track record of economic benefits, only harmful impacts on communities in the three other counties with federal prisons in eastern Kentucky.

“When we look at the three counties other than Letcher County that in Kentucky already have these prisons, we have not seen reductions in poverty,” she said. “We have not seen the kinds of economic improvements that are often touted.”

According to UnlockKY, Kentucky incarcerates 40% more people per capita than the U.S. average.

Disclosure: Kentucky Center for Economic Policy contributes to our fund for reporting on Budget Policy & Priorities, Criminal Justice, Education, Hunger/Food/Nutrition. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.
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Comments 4

  1. Keeping it Real says:
    3 years ago

    Clear out death row in every state. Save a ton of money and open up beds. A death row fast lane. Blacks 9% of Ky population and in 95 % of TV commercials. Go figure.

  2. Harold says:
    3 years ago

    Public hangings would scare “would be” criminals to death.

  3. Birdie says:
    2 years ago

    Take away all the free rights when they go no tv no play time make them work to earn their keep. They have it made. 3 free meals they eat better than these starving kids do.

  4. Keeping it Real says:
    2 years ago

    I agree with you Birdie except our children aren’t starving. They’re actually overweight. According to The State of Childhood Obesity in the US, West Virginia ranks #1 in Obesity Rate for ages 10-17; Kentucky #2 ; Louisana #3.

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