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Minority youths in courts more than whites

Minority youths are arrested and in the Washington state’s court system more often than their white counterparts, a recent study commissioned by the state Supreme Court shows. But researchers said counties aren’t keeping complete data on ethnicity, and the gap between minority and white youth is larger.

Published: Jan. 27, 2013 at 12:05 a.m. PST
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Minority youths are arrested and in the Washington state’s court system more often than their white counterparts, a recent study commissioned by the state Supreme Court shows. But researchers said counties aren’t keeping complete data on ethnicity, and the gap between minority and white youth is larger.

Between 2007 and 2011, black youths were nearly 250 percent more likely to be referred to juvenile court for prosecution than their white counterparts. Their ratio is followed by American Indian youths, who are 80 percent more likely to be deferred. Overall, minority youth are 22 percent more likely to be deferred.

To determine the ratio, researchers calculated the number of minority youth in a particular aspect of juvenile law and the overall population of each county.

In arrests, minority youths were nearly 85 percent more likely to be arrested than white youths statewide, the study found. But researchers said that number is likely much higher because counties count Latinos as white in their record keeping. Latino is an ethnicity, not a race.

Sarah Veele, one of the researchers from the Washington State Center for Court Research, said there isn’t a federal or state requirement for local agencies to track ethnicity in their juvenile arrest data, so Latinos are put in the “white” category.

Researchers looked at eight categories, ranging from arrests to diversion program enrollments. Still, about 40 percent of all cases were missing data on whether the youth was Latino and 5 percent of cases had no indicator of race or ethnicity.

“Increasing the quality of data collected by courts is key to fully understanding how and where racial and ethnic inequality arises,” Chief Justice Barbara Madsen said in a statement.

Once minority and white youths get to sentencing, the disparities begin to even out, Veele said, because judges usually follow sentencing guidelines.

Pierce County is one of the counties that has worked with private foundations working to find alternatives to detention. After examining their own data in 2003 and seeing disparities among black youths, the county began seeking remedies, including axing pricey one-on-one therapy programs that weren’t yielding results.

Now, Pierce County provides in-person visits to remind youths of court dates and transportation to court hearings if needed.

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