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Justice Can't Wait

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Last updated on July 15, 2025

Justice Can't Wait

Louisiana has the nation’s highest incarceration rate, and while historic reforms implemented as part of the 2017 Justice Reinvestment Package have begun to alleviate this crisis, more work must be done to reduce the state’s harmful reliance on incarceration.

The goal of the ACLU of Louisiana’s Smart Justice campaign is to cut the state’s incarcerated population in half and reduce racial disparities. One area that is especially overdue for reform is Louisiana’s harmful overreliance on pretrial incarceration, which destroys lives, destabilizes communities, and has a disproportionate impact on Black and brown communities.

In 2020, the ACLU of Louisiana released a first-of-its-kind report based on thousands of jail records across the state. The report showed that after a 10.3 percent increase, Louisiana’s pretrial incarceration rate is now three times the national average and the highest of any state on record since 1970. Fifty-seven percent of people in jail had been arrested for non-violent offenses and, on average, the people represented in the study had been held behind bars for 5 and a half months – without trial or conviction.

The ACLU of Louisiana is working in the Legislature and in communities across the state to restore the presumption of innocence by ensuring everyone has access to a speedy trial and no one languishes in jail unnecessarily.

 
   
   
   
 

Related Content

Resource
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Justice Can't Wait: An Indictment of Louisiana's Pretrial System

Press Release
Apr 05, 2019
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  • Criminal Law Reform

ACLU of Louisiana Releases Blueprint for Cutting Incarceration by 50 Percent, Combating Racial Disparities

NEW ORLEANS — The ACLU of Louisiana today released a report outlining a series of reforms to reduce the number of people incarcerated in the state by half by 2025 – saving taxpayers more than $800 million that could be reinvested in making communities stronger and safer.
Issue Areas: Criminal Law Reform