Pubdate: Tue, 29 Apr 2003
Source: Badger Herald (Edu, Madison,  WI)
Copyright: 2003 Badger Herald
Contact:  http://www.badgerherald.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/711
Author: Michelle Samenfeld, City Writer

DANE COUNTY MINORITY PRISON POPULATION GROWING

Although similar numbers of African Americans and whites are sentenced in 
Dane County to serve prison terms each year, Dane County's overwhelmingly 
white population causes a disproportionate ratio of African Americans 
admitted to prison compared to whites, according to a pair of UW professors.

UW Sociology Professor Pamela Oliver said in 1999 a total of 86 African 
Americans and 67 whites sentenced in Dane County were admitted to prison, 
but compared with their respective populations in the county, the ratio of 
African Americans sentenced to prison compared to whites was 33 to 1.

More specifically, Oliver said the ratio was 92 African Americans for every 
white person sentenced for a drug-related offense, including drug dealing 
and possession with intent to deliver. For violent offenses, the ratio was 
27 to 1, and for robbery and burglary, the ratio was 31 to 1.

"People want to know if the rates are disproportional because of the 
different rates crimes are committed, the different rates of being 
processed in the system, or an unconscious bias. I think it's a combination 
of all three," Oliver said.

Oliver said the disproportionate ratio may be caused by several factors, 
but a major influence may be policing decisions like where to put a higher 
concentration of police enforcement because of a greater risk for serious 
crimes. She also said often the result is more police in areas populated 
primarily by minorities, which may explain why African Americans are 
arrested at a much higher rate than whites.

Similarly, Oliver said there is a higher rate of African Americans being 
arrested for drug-related offenses, disorderly conduct and public order 
offenses because this differential policing increases the likelihood of 
offenders being arrested if they are in an intensely policed area.

Oliver also said critics argue differential policing is a racist, unjust 
response to the U.S. drug enforcement policy, which gives police incentives 
to increase the number of drug-related arrests, especially for cocaine. 
With more police in an area, it may be easier for police to catch drug 
offenders.

"It's harder to catch white suburbanites in their own homes," Oliver said.

In contrast, Oliver said downtown is Madison's "high crime center," areas 
where homes are more densely concentrated, such as apartment buildings 
particularly on the east side, accounted for most occurrences of rape, 
assault, vandalism, violation of liquor licenses, drug abuse and drug selling.

UW criminal justice lecturer Daniel Nevers said, while Dane County has the 
highest proportion of African American arrests in Wisconsin, this is not an 
isolated trend since most counties in Wisconsin and most states in the 
United States also arrest a disproportionate number of African Americans 
compared to whites.

Nevers said this issue shows a society-wide trend, and the problem is at 
many levels in the criminal justice system. He said it is necessary to 
examine where decisions are being made regarding criminals; not just in the 
policing realm, but also the activities courts and prosecutors. He said 
more whites than minorities are sentenced to probation rather than prison 
terms or are more likely to receive other diversion methods like alcohol or 
substance treatment rather than prison terms.

In Madison, Nevers said, a program used by police emphasizing 
"decentralized community policing" has good intentions because its aim is 
to have more police out of the office and patrolling neighborhoods to have 
more interaction with people.

Consequently, however, Nevers said this method of policing has also led to 
an increase in arrests and prosecutions of minorities.

Madison police officer Kris Acker said from a patrol perspective, 
decentralized policing gives police more access to the public and allows 
them to address problems more directly because they are closer to the 
community.

"Decentralization is nice because you're in the district you are working in 
and are closer to the problems," Acker said.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart