Study finds trend among imprisoned vetsMilitary veterans in prison are more than twice as likely to have been convicted for sex offenses A class of sexual conduct prohibited by the law. Since the 1970s this area of the law has undergone significant changes and reforms. Although the commission of sex offenses is not new, public awareness and concern regarding sex offenses have grown, resulting in the as nonveteran inmates, federal researchers say. They cannot say why. A study released Sunday by the Bureau of Justice Statistics Noun 1. Bureau of Justice Statistics - the agency in the Department of Justice that is the primary source of criminal justice statistics for federal and local policy makers BJS compared the populations of inmates who served in the military and those who did not. Veterans are half as likely to be incarcerated incarcerated /in·car·cer·at·ed/ (in-kahr´ser-at?ed) imprisoned; constricted; subjected to incarceration. in·car·cer·at·ed adj. Confined or trapped, as a hernia. as those without service experience in the first place, researchers found, but 23 percent of the veterans in prison were sex offenders sex offender n. generic term for all persons convicted of crimes involving sex, including rape, molestation, sexual harassment and pornography production or distribution. , compared with 9 percent of nonveteran inmates. "We couldn't come to any definite conclusion as to why," said Margaret E. Noonan, one of the study's authors. The numbers mirror a trend seen in military prisons, where populations have declined but sexual assault remains the most common crime. "I don't want people to come away from this thinking veterans are crazed sex offenders," Noonan said. "I want them to understand that veterans are less likely to be in prison in the first place." The incarceration Confinement in a jail or prison; imprisonment. Police officers and other law enforcement officers are authorized by federal, state, and local lawmakers to arrest and confine persons suspected of crimes. The judicial system is authorized to confine persons convicted of crimes. rate for veterans is 630 per 100,000, compared to 1,390 per 100,000 for nonveterans. More than 90 percent of U.S. veterans are male and 99 percent of the veterans in prison are male. The study found that veterans in prison were older, more educated, more likely to have been married and more likely than nonveterans to be incarcerated for violent crimes or offenses against women or children. Many of those findings can be explained simply by age demographics, Colby College Colby College, at Waterville, Maine; coeducational; est. 1813, opened 1818. The school, principally a liberal arts college, adopted its present name in 1899. Its library includes the papers of Edwin Arlington Robinson. sociologist Alec Campbell This page is about the Australian Alec Campbell. For the American advocate for coal-miner's rights, see Alexander Campbell (businessman). Alec William Campbell said. Crime tends to decrease with age so older inmates are more likely serving lengthy sentences. Veterans as a group are older than the general population, so Campbell said it is not surprising to see a higher percentage of veterans imprisoned im·pris·on tr.v. im·pris·oned, im·pris·on·ing, im·pris·ons To put in or as if in prison; confine. [Middle English emprisonen, from Old French emprisoner : en- for violent crimes, which carry longer prison sentences. "I think that would go away if you controlled for age" in the study, Campbell said. Because crimes against women or children can carry longer than average sentences, it is possible that statistic also follows from the aging veterans population, he said. He said the statistic about sexual assault was "potentially interesting" but said it is impossible to know what that means without more information. The veterans population has declined as the prison population has risen. Of the more than 2 million prisoners in 2004, an estimated 140,000 were veterans. That number is down from 153,100 in 2000. ___ On the Net: Bureau of Justice Statistics: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs
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