Pubdate: Thu, 27 Apr 2000 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2000 Cox Interactive Media. Contact: http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/ Forum: http://www.accessatlanta.com/community/forums/ LADY JUSTICE TILTS SCALES AGAINST MINORITY JUVENILES The test of our juvenile justice system is whether we believe it would be fair to our own children. If white parents learned that their teenagers were 48 times more likely to go to juvenile prison for a first-time drug offense than black kids, the Gold Dome would literally tremble with their angry shouts and calls for reform. Instead, the Gold Dome is silent. Because according to a new national report, it's not white parents who live with this outrage. It's black parents. So when our overwhelmingly white Legislature demands tougher penalties for youthful offenders, its members are really talking about somebody else's kids. They know that if their own son makes a mistake --- as children of all races are prone to do --- they can tell the boy to slick down his hair and apologize nicely to the judge, then get home in time to watch "The Simpsons." "And Justice for Some," released Tuesday and sponsored by the U.S. Justice Department and six major research foundations, reviewed all phases of the nation's juvenile justice system --- from arrest to sentencing --- and found that minority youth face more severe treatment at virtually every turn. This report ought to lead Georgia to re-examine each and every step of its juvenile justice system, starting with a child's first brush with police. Because each encounter with the system ought to be an opportunity to save kids rather than shape them into career criminals. That's what treating kids like adults ultimately does. As research in several states shows, kids whose cases are transferred to adult courts come out of jail committing more and worse crimes than those who did similar crimes but remained in the juvenile system. Our blood lust has overcome our reason, explaining why juvenile jail populations nationally have gone up even as the number of juvenile arrests has fallen. "These disparities accumulate, and they make it hard for members of the minority community to complete their education, get jobs and be good husbands and fathers,'' says Mark Soler, president of the Youth Law Center, a research and advocacy group in Washington devoted to reforming juvenile justice and an organizer of the research project. Soler also notes that while many white parents may be able to afford better lawyers to represent their kids in court, economics cannot explain away all the dramatic disparities. The national data reveal a system in which children can expect to endure harsher outcomes if they're black or Latino. For example, African-American children with no previous time in a juvenile facility are locked up at six times the rate of white kids charged with similar offenses. Looking only at drug cases, the admission rate of black kids to juvenile detention centers is 48 times the rate for whites. The gap continues once kids are jailed. African-American children are incarcerated an average of 85 days longer than white youth, and Latinos are incarcerated an average of more than 140 days longer than white youth. Orlando Martinez, Georgia's enlightened juvenile justice commissioner, understands that most juvenile offenders belong in community programs, not in jails that do nothing but hone their criminal acumen. But he's had to battle hard-line legislators who couldn't care less that our justice system marginalizes and disproportionately punishes minority kids. A fair system should regard each child as an individual. If children break the law, they ought to suffer consequences appropriate to the behavior. But there should not be consequences to simply being born black or Hispanic. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg