Pubdate: 21 Mar 1999 Source: The New York Times Book Review Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Stephen Gillers Note: Stephen Gillers teaches legal ethics and evidence at New York University Law School. THE DOUBLE STANDARD Inequality In Criminal Justice May Be A Good Thing For The Favored Classes a review of: NO EQUAL JUSTICE Race and Class in the American Criminal Justice System. By David Cole. 218 pp. New York: The New Press. $25. LAST month, four white police officers shot and killed a young unarmed black man named Amadou Diallo in the vestibule of his Bronx tenement. A lawyer for the officers later called the shooting justified because Diallo fit the general description of a rape suspect and because he appeared to be reaching for a weapon. Do you accept these reasons? Would you accept them if Diallo had been a welldressed older white man standing in the doorway of his Park Avenue co-op? David Cole, a Georgetown University law professor and prominent civil liberties advocate, says that in answering questions like these, white Americans will count Diallo's race, age and class in the officers' favor. They would reject the officers' reasons had the shooting occurred on Park Avenue, but then the officers would not have sensed danger on Park Avenue in the first place. For the white middle class, the lesson is soothing: The law protects them. For young black men in poor neighborhoods, the lesson is chilling: An ambiguous hand movement in a stressful moment can legally end their lives. As Cole sees it, this disparity reveals two levels of constitutional rights, first class for the "privileged" and steerage for minorities and the poor. But Cole goes farther. The disparity is no accident. Our criminal justice system, he writes, "affirmatively depends on inequality." The majority of Americans endorse double standards of justice because without them we "could not enjoy as much constitutional protection of our liberties," even as we engage in a "policy of mass incarceration." Cole gives two reasons that the Constitution's principled language fails to protect all equally: race and class. Race is not supposed to count when the police make decisions, but Cole says it is impossible for race not to count. Because police discretion is largely unchecked, "racial prejudice and stereotypes linking racial minorities to crime rush to fill the void" created by the lack of judicial oversight. For example, Cole quotes statistics showing that black drivers on the New Jersey Turnpike are three times as likely as white drivers to be stopped for traffic offenses. Charles Ogletree, a black Harvard Law School professor, makes the same point more personally: "If I'm dressed in a knit cap and a hooded jacket, I'm probable cause." Cole's indictment goes beyond police discretion to include prosecutors, judges, legislators and juries. In theory, the Constitution guarantees indigent defendants effective counsel. In reality, Supreme Court rulings have allowed judges to treat lawyers as effective even when they conduct no investigation, fail to cross-examine crucial witnesses, sleep during testimony or come to court drunk. In theory, prosecutors cannot seek to exclude potential jurors because of their race. In reality, judges are too quick to accept disingenuous excuses. Cole quotes a study's finding that "in almost any situation a prosecutor can readily craft an acceptable neutral explanation to justify striking black jurors because of their race." Nor may race influence decisions about whom to prosecute. Yet in reality, prosecutions of African-Americans for drug crimes can be so disproportionately high that no raceneutral explanation seems credible. Cole reports, for example, that in Columbus, Ohio, "black males are less than 11 percent of the population, but account for 90 percent of drug arrests." WITH these examples and others, "No Equal Justice" makes a strong case that we have tolerated a law enforcement strategy that "depends on the exploitation of race and class divisions." Cole offers three solutions. The first two admit the mistake, then revamp the rules to reduce the influence of race and class - are probably unrealistic, especially as the new rules could reduce "the rights that the privileged now enjoy." Take the traits Federal agents have used to identify travelers who may be transporting drugs. Agents have cited the following behavior to defend stops: The suspect was traveling alone, he had a companion; the suspect "acted too nervous," he "acted too calm"; the suspect was "one of first to deplane," "one of last to deplane" or "deplaned in the middle." Cole writes that such broad criteria "will be used disproportionately against minorities." But if courts forbid reliance on race, some white travelers who are not now inconvenienced will be. Citing efforts here and abroad, Cole's third solution endorses "community-based criminal justice." This solution focuses "on reinforcing the community ties that deter crime in the first place, encouraging community associations, involving the community in punishment and rehabilitation . . . and reintegrating offenders into society." This is the ideological antithesis of the "tough on crime" chorus - more police with more discretion, more arrests, more prosecutions, and more time in more prisons. In the last quarter-century, those punitive policies have quintupled the prison population, with nonviolent offenders accounting for much of that increase. In Cole's view, they have also robbed criminal law of moral legitimacy among minority groups, which lessens respect for law and increases our dependence on brute force. Community-based policies will be a tough sell because they have been so easy to caricature as soft on crime. Unless voters are receptive, politicians won't propose them. So Cole's remedies require an enlightened electorate. A promising sign is that the "privileged" many also perceive a double standard. In an American Bar Association poll released last month, 47 percent of respondents said the legal system does not "treat all ethnic and racial groups the same." That's a start. Unfortunately, it may take tragic events like the death of Amadou Diallo to translate that perception into policies. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake