Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Racial bias in Amber Alerts unfounded

- Eric Litke

Cellphones across Wisconsin received the all-too-familiar pop-up on July 6 — an Amber Alert had been issued for a missing child.

Kodie Dutcher, 10, went missing from her home in Baraboo about 4 p.m. and the search for her went on through the night. The story ended sadly the next morning when searchers found her body. The death was later ruled to be suicide.

In a nation rife with racial tension in the wake of George Floyd’s death and the ensuing police brutality protests, even this story drew questions. Several widely shared Facebook posts raised the role of race in the widespread alert system.

“So Amber Alert works for kids in Baraboo but not Black kids in Milwaukee,” one Facebook post stated July 6. The text was accompanie­d by a “thinking” emoji.

This post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinforma­tion on its News Feed.

The writer’s use of the word “works” muddles the issue a bit, since the item was posted before the girl’s body was found, showing the alert unfortunat­ely had not worked. So we’ll interpret that to be a general reference to which children are the subjects of Amber Alerts.

Is the poster right to allege racial bias? We’ll check it out, but first, there’s some important background to note.

The context

The first slew of comments on the Facebook post supported the statement, with posters saying they thought the same thing. Later comments were more critical of the post as news of the tragic outcome spread.

The post likely spread in part because in Milwaukee, particular­ly in the Black community, there are concerns police do not respond quickly enough in missing child cases.

This issue came sharply into focus in a bizarre incident June 23 in which a civilian-led search for two teenage girls spiraled over the course of several hours to involve three people shot, 10 officers and a firefighter injured, police firing tear gas and rubber bullets into a crowd and protesters setting fire to a house they believed to be connected to the girls and sex trafficking.

Police later said there was no evidence of sex trafficking and that the girls hadn’t met the criteria for an Amber Alert since authoritie­s had no reason to believe their lives were in danger. The girls, ages 13 and 15, were later found several miles away.

An hourslong livestream of the situation included one community activist talking about the difficulty of “getting a missing person’s report going” and how community members had set up their own system for missing people on social media.

Some comments on the Facebook post about Amber Alerts referenced this incident.

Strict requiremen­ts for alerts

Wisconsin has been issuing Amber Alerts since 2003, but only 41 alerts have been sent out in that span, according to state Department of Justice records. That’s a rate of just over two per year.

The Amber Alert tally is low because incidents must meet strict criteria for an alert to be issued:

❚ The child (or children) must be 17 or younger.

❚ The child must be in danger of serious bodily harm or death.

❚ The initiating agency must have enough descriptiv­e informatio­n about the child, the suspect and/or the suspect’s vehicle to believe an immediate broadcast alert will help locate the child.

Any law enforcemen­t agency in the state can request an Amber Alert and DOJ personnel then decide whether an alert is justified. If approved, the informatio­n is sent to TV and radio stations, cellphones, highway message boards, lottery terminals and other locations.

A similar Amber Alert system is used in all 50 states.

Breaking down the Wisconsin alerts

With that background, let’s dig into the alerts issued in Wisconsin.

Among the 41 alerts issued since the program began here, 18 were for Black children, 15 were for white children and eight were for children listed as Hispanic, Native American or unknown, according to DOJ records.

Put another way, Black residents account for 6.7% of the population in Wisconsin but have been the subject of 44% of the Amber Alerts.

The breakdown by agency shows Milwaukee uses this system far more than any other municipali­ty — hardly a surprise given its size. The Milwaukee Police Department was the initiating agency for 11 of the 41 alerts. That’s more than 25% of the alerts, even though Milwaukee has about 10% of the state’s population.

Every one of the Milwaukee alerts was for a Black child.

Green Bay had the second-highest tally with three. The Barron County Sheriff’s Office and police in Eau Claire, Racine and Baraboo also issued two. The last two alerts were from Baraboo, the other sent in February for a missing 15-year-old girl who was later found.

To be sure, the frustratio­n that underlies the post may be more about whether the system is used often enough — particular­ly when it comes to Black children. To make that determinat­ion, however, one would need to understand the circumstan­ces of each case and whether ones that met the criteria were not issued.

In the post at hand, though, the claim — strictly speaking — is about whether it is used at all in cases of missing Black children or whether it is disproport­ionately used for non-Black children. By those measures, the claim is off.

Our ruling

A widely shared Facebook post said Amber Alerts are issued for white kids “but not Black kids in Milwaukee.” It grew out of concerns in the Black community that missing children are not taken seriously enough in Milwaukee.

But the data actually shows a disproport­ionate high number of alerts — based on population — have been issued precisely for Black children in Milwaukee.

Nearly half of all alerts involved Black children, even though only about 1 in 15 state residents is Black. And more than one-fourth of all alerts were initiated by Milwaukee police — all for Black children.

We rate this claim False.

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