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ICYMI: Pew: 5 Years In, 5 Things to Know About Louisiana's Justice System

Government and Politics

November 7, 2022

From: Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry

ICYMI: Pew: 5 Years In, 5 Things to Know About Louisiana’s Justice System

In case you missed it last week, the Pew Charitable Trusts published a story highlighting the transformative impact bipartisan criminal justice reforms have had on Louisiana in the five years since taking effect. Read an excerpt of Pew's findings below.

5 Years In, 5 Things to Know About Louisiana's Justice System
By Michelle Russell

This fall marks five years since Louisiana enacted its landmark criminal justice reforms. Signed by Governor John Bel Edwards in 2017, the 10 bills passed with strong bipartisan majorities and followed the recommendations of the Louisiana Justice Reinvestment Task Force, an interbranch body of justice system leaders and stakeholders.

The new laws included changes to sentencing, corrections, and community supervision. In the legislation, policymakers focused on ensuring adequate prison space for those who pose a public safety threat, strengthening probation and parole practices, eliminating barriers to reentering society, and reinvesting savings to reduce recidivism and support victims. Using the most recent publicly available data, here are five findings about how Louisiana’s system has changed since the reforms took effect.

1. The state's prison population has fallen 24%, driven entirely by a decline in people convicted of nonviolent offenses.

Louisiana’s reforms sought to steer people convicted of less serious crimes away from prison and shorten the time incarcerated for those who could be safely supervised in the community. In the summer of 2017, before the new laws took effect, there were about 35,500 people under the Louisiana Department of Corrections’ jurisdiction held in prisons or local jails throughout the state. By the summer of 2022, that number had fallen nearly a quarter to about 27,000. A report recently presented to lawmakers showed that the declining prison population was entirely driven by a reduction in people convicted of nonviolent offenses. That number shrank by about 11,000 between 2016 and 2021. Over the same period, the number of individuals who were incarcerated for violent offenses increased by almost 1,400.

Read the full article here.