The Sentencing Project Report
The Sentencing Project released its quadrennial census of people in the United States sentenced to life behind bars. The report, No End in Sight: America’s Enduring Reliance on Life Imprisonment, finds that one in seven people in prison — amounting to 203,865 individuals — is serving a sentence of life without parole, life with parole, or a virtual life sentence of at least 50 years. The report also provides an in-depth analysis of the proliferation of life sentences over the past 35 years and describes who is most affected by these extreme punishments. The report offers proposals for changing course.
“Life sentences are a poor way to achieve public safety because most people mature and change for the better with time, including people who have committed serious crimes,” said Ashley Nellis, the report’s author. “Keeping people apart from the rest of society for decades beyond what is necessary is both cruel and costly.”
More than two-thirds of those serving life sentences are people of color. Over 10,000 people are still serving life for crimes committed when they were under 18-years-old. Another 30 percent of people serving life sentences are 55 or older — even though they face health risks behind bars and pose a limited threat to public safety.
“The mainstream use of life imprisonment in the American justice system deprives people of their dignity, exacerbates already-extreme racial injustice, and perpetuates a system of excessive punishment across the entire sentencing spectrum,” said Sentencing Project’s Executive Director Amy Fettig.
The Sentencing Project calls for the abolition of life-without-parole sentences and a 20-year cap on all life sentences that allow parole. Doing so would help to reverse the tough-on-crime policies now debunked by years of social science. It would also help recalibrate all prison sentences downward, leading to substantial reductions in mass incarceration and producing a more humane, effective, just, and merciful system.
Other key findings include:
- Life sentences are five times their level in 1984, the first nationwide count of people serving such sentences.
- One in 5 Black men in prison today is serving a life sentence. Nationally, two-thirds of people serving life are people of color, with 46 percent Black and 16 percent Latinx.
- Between 2008 and 2020, the number of women serving LWOP increased 43 percent (compared to a 29 percent increase among men).
- People 55 and older account for 12 percent of state prison populations but an even higher concentration of the lifer population (30 percent).
- 3,972 people serving life sentences have been convicted for a drug-related offense and 38% of them are in the federal prison system.