The number of inmates who died in state prisons and local jails has risen for the third consecutive year, fueled in part by an increase in unnatural deaths, including suicide, drug or alcohol intoxication, accident and homicide, the Bureau of Justice Statistics announced Tuesday.
A total of 4,446 inmates died in state and local custody in 2013 — an increase of 131 deaths from the year before — marking the deadliest year the agency has reported since 2007. Previously the number of deaths in custody was on a downward trend for several years, decreasing by an annual average of 2% until it stopped in 2010.
Related: Sanders: Bland’s death wouldn’t have happened if she were white
The report comes after a series of high-profile cases has shined a spotlight on the number of people who have died in police custody. Just last month, the death of 28-year-old Sandra Bland sparked national outcry after her body was found hanging in her jail cell three days after she was arrested in a routine traffic stop.
A total of 967 inmates died in local jails at the last reporting in 2013, a nine-death increase from the year before. And while the number of inmates who died from natural causes went down — cases of deaths due to liver disease decreased by 35% — the number of unnatural causes actually went up. Drug and alcohol intoxication were responsible for 70 deaths in 2013, a 23% increase from 2012.









