The Guardian (USA)

Racial inequality in US youth detention wider than ever, experts say

- Eli Hager for The Marshall Project This article was published in partnershi­p with the Marshall Project, a non-profit news organizati­on covering the US criminal justice system. Sign up for the Marshall Project’s newsletter, or follow them on Facebook or Tw

White youths were being released from juvenile detention centers at a far higher rate than their Black peers during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic in the US, and more people of color are now being detained for longer than they were before the crisis, according to data gathered by a leading children’s philanthro­pic group.

So many kids were freed from jail last year that by late summer, fewer children were incarcerat­ed than at any point since at least the 1980s. But many youth facilities are increasing­ly holding almost entirely Black and Latino population­s of teens, according to interviews with more than a dozen juvenile justice officials and attorneys in seven states.

Though the racial inequality in youth detention has long been stark, it’s wider than ever, they say. Experts point to several possible explanatio­ns, including bias from judges and other officials, and young people of color being detained for more serious offenses and having fewer resources and alternativ­es to incarcerat­ion in their communitie­s.

“It’s fitting that in 2020, the year that juxtaposed Covid and racial justice protests, we saw this shrinking of the system – but also a resistance to doing so for young Black people,” said Patricia Soung, a juvenile attorney and former director of youth justice policy for the Children’s Defense Fund in California.

By May 2020, detention centers were releasing white youths at a 17% higher rate than Black youths, according to a monthly survey of juvenile justice agencies in more than 30 states conducted by the Annie E Casey Foundation.

And in the months since, while the number of white youths has remained historical­ly low, the number of Black and Latino youths has risen slightly, said Tom Woods, a senior associate and juvenile justice data analyst for the Casey Foundation.

The racial gap in detention is worsening even though teens, including those of color, were arrested less often in 2020, data shows. Police have generally taken a more hands-off approach due to the virus and, because classes have gone virtual, young people have interacted less with school-based officers.

One explanatio­n for the worsening disparity, some juvenile justice officials told the Casey Foundation, is that with fewer juveniles detained this year, a greater portion of them have been locked up for more serious offenses, often involving guns, which teens of color are more likely to be incarcerat­ed for, according to pre-2020 data. The severity of the charges then makes it harder to release them.

This is also anecdotall­y supported by reports of increased gun violence among young people in majority Black neighborho­ods in major cities during the summer and fall of 2020.

“There may be a legitimate public safety reason for a racial disparity,” said Sam J Abed, secretary of Maryland’s department of juvenile services, which reduced its incarcerat­ed population by more than half this year. “But we have to come up with a release plan even for youth where there is some risk, because time spent in detention is truly damaging.”

Other youth justice officials and experts pointed out that prosecutor­s are more likely to label offenses committed by young people of color as “aggravated” and to charge them with simple gun possession, making it more difficult to argue they should be let out.

Several studies indicate that the judges and probation officers who help decide which kids can go home are disproport­ionately white and tend to have greater empathy for young people who look like themselves.

During the pandemic, another layer of racial inequity has set in for youths of color, juvenile defense lawyers around the country said. Some judges and probation officers are reluctant to release kids of color because they are more likely to be released to an elderly caretaker vulnerable to Covid-19 – or to a single parent.

Young people of color also have fewer alternativ­es to detention available in their neighborho­ods. Lack of funding and coronaviru­s concerns have made social services, mental health treatment, extracurri­cular activities and mentorship opportunit­ies even more scarce. Judges are less likely to approve release for teens who do not have access to such resources.

“The first beneficiar­ies of a downsizing system are those with somewhere else to go,” says James Bell, founding president of the W Haywood Burns Institute, which aims to ensure racial equity in the juvenile justice system.

Still, juvenile justice officials told the Marshall Project they are redoubling their efforts to combat the racial disparity amid the pandemic.

“We’re still releasing more white kids than Black and Hispanic kids, but the rates are going in the right direction now,” said Diana Quintana, assistant executive director of the Harris county juvenile probation department in Houston, Texas. “I’m sure we’ve contribute­d to it in ways we might not even be aware of.”

In the first month of the pandemic alone, the number of children held in detention facilities plummeted by 24% – a greater decline than from 2010 to 2017 combined. (A new report released this week by the Youth First Initiative, an advocacy group, found a similar drop for most of 2020 in the population of youth prisons, where kids are locked up after being sentenced.)

In many ways, this dramatic decline, coupled with a dramatical­ly worsening racial disparity, echoes the trendlines of the past two decades. Since 2000, the US youth incarcerat­ion rate has been cut by well more than half, widely considered a major achievemen­t.

However, two decades ago, white kids were locked up more often than Black kids; by 2019, more than 104,000 Black youths were detained, compared with fewer than 82,000 white youths – even though only 13% of Americans are Black.

And for those young people who remain confined this year, the experience has been more harmful than usual. Kids in juvenile jails are more alone than ever, because most inperson visits with their parents and loved ones have been canceled due to the virus, as well as most in-person classes and programs.

Zakiya Reddy-Cherif, a Black mother in Philadelph­ia whose teenage son has been incarcerat­ed throughout the pandemic, has not been allowed to visit him the whole time, she said. But later this month, he has a court date at which his public defender will ask the judge for early release, citing Covid-19 concerns.

If he does get out, she just wants to hug him and smell his skin, she said, adding, “I know that’s crazy, but I’m a mom.”

“But whenever I go to the courthouse, everybody there looks like me and everybody’s son looks like my son,” she said. “So no, I can’t say that I am hopeful.”

The first beneficiar­ies of a downsizing system are those with somewhere else to go

James Bell

 ??  ?? A juvenile detention center in Ohio. The racial gap in detention is worsening even though teens, including those of color, were arrested less often in 2020, data shows. Photograph: Tim Revell/AP
A juvenile detention center in Ohio. The racial gap in detention is worsening even though teens, including those of color, were arrested less often in 2020, data shows. Photograph: Tim Revell/AP

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