Pubdate: Thu, 04 Jan 2001 Source: Des Moines Register (IA) Copyright: 2001 The Des Moines Register. Contact: P.O. Box 957, Des Moines IA 50304-0957 Fax: (515) 284-8560 Feedback: http://desmoinesregister.com/help/letter.html Website: http://www.dmregister.com/ Author: Des Moines Register Editorial Board A GENERATION IN PRISON The Incarceration Rate For African-Americans In Iowa Tops The National Average. That black Iowans are imprisoned at a higher rate than blacks nationwide is not news. The Register reported last year that at least 1 in 12 black Iowans is in prison, on parole or probation - a ratio surpassing most other states - while the ratio for whites is 1 in 110. Why does this outrageous disparity not only continue to exist, but to grow? It has been examined at length, including a 1993 study for the Iowa Supreme Court that covered bias in the criminal-justice system. A statistical analysis of cases looked at whether there were racial discrepancies in charging, pretrial release and sentencing decisions in four counties. The report by the Equality in the Courts Task Force said this: "If the racial disparities in criminal processing cannot be entirely explained by the legally relevant variables studied, what does cause these disparities is unclear. In the surveys of attorneys and judges, a significant number felt that minority defendants were at a disadvantage. The observed racial disparities are statistically significant. Although this analysis suggests that such discrimination is not blatant in Iowa courts, from the point of view of a victim of such discrimination it no doubt appears to be, and is, inexcusable. Regardless of how small the disparity or how infrequently it occurs, we condemn it." While that report brought attention to the issue, the Legislature's reaction was primarily to add more prison beds. In June 1993, 1,133 African-Americans were incarcerated in state prisons, according to the Iowa Department of Corrections. By June 1999, 1,748. Blacks make up 2 percent of Iowa's total population but nearly 25 percent of the state-prison inmates. More white Iowans were also in state prisons in 1999 than 1993, up to 5,035 from 3,368. The astonishing difference is this: 19 whites per 10,000 whites in Iowa were incarcerated in June 1999 while 301 African-Americans were incarcerated per 10,000 African-Americans in Iowa, reports the corrections department. "I think a large part of these statistics has to do with a lack of opportunity," said Don Nickerson, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Iowa. "I say that because people who have options as a result of opportunity don't choose to get involved with crime. If you have options, then you set goals, and your goals become positive." The racial breakdown for community corrections - including probation, parole, work release - shows 71 white Iowans supervised in some fashion in June 1999 per 10,000 white Iowans. For African-Americans, it's 489 under community-corrections supervision per 10,000 African-American Iowans. The scale of devastation, however, isn't really measured by the disproportionate numbers. The toll on families with a relative in prison is incalculable. Children especially suffer when a parent isn't present, and when the system seems to be against them. Drugs, harsh criminal penalties and higher poverty rates are often cited as reasons so many African-Americans are behind bars. They are factors. They do not, however, fully explain why the incarceration rate in state prisons is so much higher for African-Americans in Iowa compared to whites in Iowa and compared to African-Americans nationwide. Racial discrimination is surely at work, however subtle and hard to prove. White Iowans like to think of themselves as tolerant; neighborliness is a point of pride. But there must also be some sense of shame when so many African-Americans are locked up in Iowa's state prisons. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry F