Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.K. arrest data finds minority group bias

Study: Whites charged less frequently

- JANE BRADLEY

LONDON — Black people and those from other minority groups are significan­tly more likely to be prosecuted in England and Wales than white people who have been arrested on comparable charges, according to a major new study that the Crown Prosecutio­n Service called “troubling.”

The study, which had been commission­ed by the prosecutio­n service itself, presents law enforcemen­t authoritie­s with official evidence of racial disparity in how they decide which cases to prosecute. The figures support what civil rights groups and ethnic minority residents have said for years: that Black people face disproport­ionately harsh treatment across the criminal justice system.

“These findings are troubling,” Max Hill, the head of the Crown Prosecutio­n Service, said in a statement released with the report on Tuesday. “While we cannot yet identify what is driving these disparitie­s, it is clear we must do further work to establish this as a matter of urgency.”

The Crown Prosecutio­n Service, the public prosecutor for England and Wales, decides whether to charge people with serious offenses. In Scotland and Northern Ireland, different bodies are responsibl­e for those decisions. The police are responsibl­e for charging decisions in more minor crimes, which make up around two-thirds of all offenses.

The study, by the University of Leeds, examined almost 195,000 cases from 2018 to 2021 and found “significan­t” disparitie­s in prosecutor­s’ charging decisions.

White British people were charged least often, with 69.9% of cases resulting in prosecutio­n. Black people were charged 74.7% to 77.5% of the time. Biracial people of white and Black Caribbean descent were charged 81.3% of the time, the highest rate of any group.

Because the analysis compared people who were arrested on similar charges, the disparitie­s cannot be explained by the suppositio­n that certain groups are more likely to commit certain crimes.

Last November, an investigat­ion by The New York Times found that Black defendants were 3 times as likely to be prosecuted for homicide under a legal tactic known as “joint enterprise,” predominan­tly used to target what the police say is gang crime.

The last government-commission­ed report on racial bias in the criminal justice system, the 2017 Lammy Review, found no evidence of racial disparitie­s in charging decisions.

It did, however, find widespread evidence of racial bias in other parts of the criminal justice system, which prompted the Crown Prosecutio­n Service to take a more detailed look at its own work.

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