Pubdate: Thu, 08 Jun 2000 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2000 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611-4066 Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Forum: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/boards/ Author: Christi Parsons RACE REPORT SINGLES OUT ILLINOIS FOR DRUG-CONVICTION DISPARITY Black men end up in Illinois prisons on drug convictions at a rate 57 times greater than white men, the most striking gap of any state examined by a new study of racial disparity in the nationwide war on drugs. As a result, 90 percent of drug offenders admitted to state prisons in Illinois are African-American, the highest percentage in the country, according to the report released Wednesday by Human Rights Watch, a New York-based organization that monitors human rights worldwide. The study, which analyzed data reported to the U.S. Department of Justice by 37 states, showed that black men across the nation are far more likely to go to prison for drug crimes than are white men--even though blacks are estimated to account for less than 13 percent of the nationwide population and government figures indicate that most drug users are white. "Five times as many whites use drugs as blacks," said Jamie Fellner, a staff lawyer who wrote the report for the group, a New York-based organization that monitors human rights worldwide. "But blacks comprise the great majority of drug offenders sent to prison. Race is clearly a factor in the process." The new figures could add fuel to debate about the role that racial profiling plays in police work and prosecution. And though the notion that race influences how law enforcement officials do their jobs is nothing new, advocates hope the mounting statistical evidence will produce change. The new report, which Human Rights Watch said was the first state-by-state analysis of its kind, tracks with other recent studies showing a quantifiable link between race and admission to prison. One study released earlier this year by the National Council on Crime and Delinquency found that, when charged with the same offenses, black youths were much more likely to be locked up than were white youths with comparable criminal backgrounds. Human Rights Watch researchers say that a host of factors are responsible for the disparity, including a heavier concentration of police sting operations in minority neighborhoods and a greater likelihood that black youths will be prosecuted once they are caught. Law enforcement officials say that they don't purposely target minorities for arrest and prosecution and that they are working to come up with alternatives to incarceration that can help drug offenders of all racial backgrounds go straight. But critics of the criminal justice system say the latest statistics are evidence that more sweeping reform is needed. In the study, researchers for Human Rights Watch analyzed demographic and conviction information about hundreds of thousands of inmates admitted to state prisons all over the country in 1996, the most recent year for which complete data was available when the study began. A total of 37 states voluntarily provided the information to the Justice Department that year. Overall, the study found that all 37 states incarcerated blacks at much higher rates than whites. Weighting numbers to account for the smaller size of the nationwide black population, the study concluded that in the 37 states black men are sent to state prison for drug convictions at a rate 13 times that of white men. In New York, black men were sent to prison for drug convictions at a rate 11 times greater than whites. In Maryland, they found the incarceration rate 28 times greater for black men. In Minnesota, the rate for black men was 39 times greater. Nationwide, blacks make up 62 percent of drug offenders admitted to state prisons, according to the report. In seven of the states, blacks constituted between 80 and 90 percent of all people sent to prison for drug convictions. Those figures were even starker in Illinois, especially when researchers considered the rate of prison admissions relative to overall population. Out of every 100,000 white male adult residents of the state, 20 were sent to prison during the study period for violation of drug laws. Meanwhile, of the same number of black adult males, 1,146 were admitted to prison for the same reasons--a rate 57 times greater. Of the total number of people sent to Illinois prisons for drug convictions that year, 90 percent were African-American, the study found. While blacks make up only 15 percent of the state's population, they constitute 65 percent of the prison population as a whole. Whites make up 25 percent of Illinois inmates, and Hispanics account for 10 percent. The researchers said they don't know specifically why Illinois' incarceration rate for black men was so high, or why there was such a range among the states. Among the 10 states with the greatest disparities, the rate at which black men ended up in prison for drug crimes ranged from 27 to 57 times the rate for white men. But some lawyers and advocates argue that police and prosecutors treat blacks differently than they treat whites. For starters, blacks--and black men in particular--are stopped by police more often, said William Hooks, president of the Cook County Bar Association, a group of African-American lawyers and judges. If blacks are searched more often, they will be arrested more often, he said. Young and first-time offenders are treated differently once they're in police custody, too, said Hooks, who is also a Chicago criminal defense attorney. Police tend to call a young white man's parents and try more frequently to quickly end a case, he said. "When I go to court with my white clients in Cook County, oftentimes I am met by the arresting officer and pulled aside," Hooks said. "The attitude is, `How can we resolve this? We don't want to hurt her."' Hooks said he tries to help that client be diverted from the court system and into a counseling program because it's in her best interests. "But it hurts deep inside that my other clients don't get the same offer," he said. His black clients are often eligible for the same treatment, he said, "but it's not this aggressive approach to get them out of the system." Once those marks show up on a youth's record, said researcher Fellner, there's a systemic bias against him. "Black kids are going to have more arrests on their records," she said. "Each time you go through the turnstile, you are treated more harshly." But many law enforcement officials dispute claims that "racial profiling" by police or prosecutors is the reason why more African-Americans are in prison for drug convictions. "I've asked this question of other officers, of corrections officers," said Bob Wallace, training director and public information officer for the National Association of Chiefs of Police. "Probably the accurate answer is because the majority of people who commit these crimes are of the African-American culture." Wallace said he believes that some police officers unintentionally allow personal observations about race to influence how they do their jobs. But he said that doesn't fully explain the demographics of the prison population. "In the high-crime areas, you do have a high population of African-American people," Wallace said. "There are a lot of good people of all races. Unfortunately, where you have poor standards of living, you're going to find people looking for quick ways of making money." Prosecutors deny that decisions on whether to pursue cases are influenced by race. Many prosecutors are now formalizing so-called diversion programs in an attempt to help more young and first-time offenders of all races avoid prison. In Cook County, half of all first- and second-time drug arrestees get drug treatment instead of prosecution, said Bob Benjamin, spokesman for State's Atty. Dick Devine. "You're trying to get them before they go too far on the escalator, with more and more drug use, more and more misery," he said. As for whether a suspect's skin color makes any difference in determining whether to proceed with prosecution, Benjamin said, "Race is not a factor at all. Ever." Advocates for Human Rights Watch say they hope law enforcement agencies around the country will adopt such diversion programs. "The solution to this racial inequity is not to incarcerate more whites," Fellner said, "but to reduce the use of prison for low-level drug offenders and to increase the availability of substance abuse treatment." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek