Pubdate: Sun, 27 Apr 2008 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2008 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Author: Bertrand M. Gutierrez Note: The Journal does not publish LTEs from writers outside its circulation area PRISON GAP SAID TO BE SMALLER Group Says It Reported Incorrect Prison Rates For Blacks, Whites A Washington-based advocacy group reported last December that Forsyth County led the nation's largest counties in having the widest disparity in the rate at which blacks and whites go to prison on drug-related charges. The disparity remains, with more blacks going to prison on drug charges than whites, but the national disparity isn't as wide as originally reported by the Justice Policy Institute. And it also turns out that Forsyth County does not have the widest disparity in the nation. The Justice Policy Institute said earlier this year that it had based its report on faulty data. "As a result of a data-transmission error between the N.C. Department of Corrections and the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, the National Corrections Reporting Program provides incorrect prison admissions information for counties in that state for 2002," the Justice Policy Institute said. The first report said that the rate at which blacks in Forsyth County go to prison on drug charges was 164 times higher than the rate at which whites go to prison on such charges. But the institute's latest findings say that the rate at which blacks go to prison is 17.4 times higher than the rate for whites, "a disparity that is smaller than originally reported, though still large." Likewise, the research group revised drug-admission rates for North Carolina's other largest counties. Among the state's five largest: Cumberland County had the smallest disparity rate, with 4.7. Wake County had the largest disparity rate, with 24.7 Guilford and Mecklenburg counties had similar disparity rates, with 13.8 and 12.7, respectively. Mecklenburg's rate was the only one of the five counties to be changed to a larger number. Forsyth County had the second-largest disparity rate in the state among the five largest counties. Because the Justice Policy Institute got bad data, it had underestimated the rate of drug admissions for the five counties. Specifically, rates of admission to prison for drug offenses were underestimated for the total population, the white population and the black population. The institute changed its findings after Tom Keith, the Forsyth County district attorney, pointed out the error. All along, Keith said, Forsyth prosecutors have tried to carry out justice without bias. "I only prosecute those arrested. I don't pick the population," he said in a letter to a Winston-Salem Journal reporter. Still, Keith acknowledged that the disparity gap in Forsyth County remains wide. And the revised numbers didn't alleviate concerns among some in the black community. Living in the county with the second-largest disparity rate in North Carolina is not something to get excited about, said the Rev. Carlton Eversley, the pastor of Dellabrook Presbyterian Church. "It sounds like a slight adjustment in these terrible statistics, but it doesn't change the central fact that white people go to rehab and black people go to prison.!- If you stick a knife into my back 9 inches and then pull it out 3 inches, that is not progress," Eversley said this week, using a phrase from the civil-rights leader Malcolm X. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek