Orleans Parish Jail Population by the Numbers - Week Ending February 3, 2024

Having trouble reading this email? View it in your browser.

OCJC Header

Orleans Parish Jail Population by the Numbers - Week Ending 3 February 2024

This weekly summary produced by the Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice Coordination is a recommendation of the Jail Population Management Subcommittee supported by the work of the Safety and Justice Challenge. 

 


Purpose and Data Sources

Average daily jail population: 1,190 people

Average daily population by legal status, week ending 02/03/2024

Fig. 1. Daily jail population by open/closed case status, Sunday, 28 January - Saturday, 3 February 2024

 

For the week ending Saturday, 3 February 2024, the average daily jail population was 1,190 people, a 1.7% decrease from last week’s average daily population of 1,211 people.

 


 

On average, 91% of people detained in the jail last week were in custody for open matters. 56% of the average daily population was detained with a violent offense as their most serious charge at booking.

 

Not shown in this graphic are the 108 people who, on average, were detained last week on closed matters. Of people detained last week with final dispositions to their cases, 6% had been sentenced to a DOC facility, and 3%, to the Eastern Louisiana Mental Health System.

Average daily population of people with open matters by most serious charge at admission, week ending 02/03/2024

Fig. 2. Average daily jail population of people with open matters by most serious charge at admission, 28 January – 3 February 2024

 

Note that, on average and combined, just over 1% of the average daily population included people with misdemeanor-level sex offenses, weapons, and “other” charges as the most serious charge at booking. No one was detained in the jail last week with a misdemeanor drug offense as the most serious charge at booking.

 


Jail population demographics: Overrepresentation in detention

Average daily population by race, week ending 02/03/2024

On average, Black people made up  88% of the average jail population last week.  In 2021 (the last year for which we have available Census data), Black people comprised 58% of the estimated parish population. Thus, Black people are overrepresented in our average daily population.

 

Fig. 3. Average daily jail population by race/ethnicity, 27 January - 3 February 2024

 

Note that, on average, one person of “other” or “unknown” race was detained last week.


154 Jail admissions and 174 jail releases

154 people were booked into the jail between Sunday, 28 January and Saturday, 3 February 2024, a nearly 8% increase from last week, when 143 people were admitted to the jail.

 

Jail admissions by most serious charge category and holds at booking, week ending 02/03/2024

Fig. 4. Jail Admissions by most serious charge at booking, week ending 3 February 2024

 

84 people (55% of those booked last week) had a felony as the most serious charge at admission. 38 people (25%) were admitted to the jail with a state misdemeanor as the most serious charge.

 


 

174 people were released from jail custody between 28 January and 3 February 2024, an increase of 4% from last week’s 167 releases.

 

148 people – 85% of those released last week – left jail custody before the final disposition of their cases, and 26 people were released upon or after their cases’ final disposition. On average, people who were released from jail before the final disposition of their case stayed in custody for 30 days (median = 3 days; minimum = less than one day; maximum = 769 days; standard dev. = 83.0). The 26 people who were released after their cases’ final disposition stayed in custody an average of 184 days (median = 178 days; minimum = 3 days; maximum = 437 days; standard dev. = 101.1).

 

The weekly jail turnover rate for the week ending 3 February 2024 was 28%, an increase of 2 percentage points from last week.  A measure developed by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the jail turnover rate tells us something about the flow of people into and out of the jail. On average, nearly 3 out of 10 people detained in the jail on a given day last week had been newly admitted or were very soon to be released.

 

In 2021 (the most recent year for which we have published data), weekly turnover rate nationwide was 42% (see this BJS report for more details.)

 

Generally, higher turnover rates indicate larger numbers of jail admissions and releases, relative to the average daily population.

 


Average length of jail stays for people who were released was 53 days

The average length of stay was 68 days for the 167 people who were released from jail custody on the week ending 27 January 2024 (min = < 1 day; max = 725 days; standard dev. = 121.5). 

 

Length of stay distribution, week ending 02/03/2024

 

 Figure 5. Length of jail stay for people released 28 January -  3 February 2024, N = 174

 

The median length of stay was 7 days for all released people, an increase of 2 days from last week’s median.

 

41%, or 71 people, were released after staying in jail for two days or fewer.  The 103 people who were released after 2 or more days in jail stayed in jail for an average of 88 days (median = 44 days; standard dev. = 120.2).


Technical Notes

We calculate the average daily jail population as the mean of all daily counts during the week.

 

We calculate length of stay as the difference, in days, between booking date and release date, for people released from the jail during the week.

 

We determine the most serious charge at booking using a hierarchy of charges, with all felonies being more serious than all misdemeanors.

 

For more definitions of the terms used in this report, please see our glossary.


We welcome your feedback and questions!

Question Mark

As a stakeholder, have you noticed something and wondered if data exists to confirm your observations? At OCJC, we are interested in your observations and data questions. Please reach out to Adrienne Tobler at adrienne.tobler@nola.gov to further discuss the possibility of exploring your questions.

 

For technical questions, contact Theresa McKinney at theresa.mckinney@nola.gov.