The Mercury News Weekend

Dueling statistics used at hearing on racial bias in stings

- By Michael Tarm The Associated Press

CHICAGO » Dueling experts deployed statistics to make their case Thursday in U.S. District Court in Chicago in a first- of-its-kind hearing to determine if phony drug stash-house stings run by federal agents dating back to the 1990s are racially biased.

More than 40 people convicted in such stings could go free if a special ninejudge panel eventually rules that discrimina­tion underpins the stings. The operations run by the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives typically involve agents posing as cartel couriers who talk suspects into agreeing to rob drugs that don’t exist from stash houses that are also fictitious.

While the same question has come up in courts elsewhere, it is the federal trial judges in Chicago who have taken the lead in seeking an answer. And how they decide the sensitive and complex issue could determine if agencies curtail or even abandon their use nationwide. The answer to whether the stings do or don’t discrimina­te based on race largely hinges on competing interpreta­tions of statistics.

Jeffrey Fagan, a defense expert who took the stand first, testified that data clearly shows blacks, and in some cases Hispanics, are disproport­ionately singled out for the stings. Government witness Max Schanzenba­ch argued later that Fagan’s methodolog­y was flawed.

One panelist, Judge Rob- ert Gettleman, sounded doubtful that competing stats can decide the question. Highlighti­ng the unreliabil­ity of statistics, he referred to Mark Twain’s quip about three kinds of lies: “Lies, damned, lies and statistics.”

The judges on the panel each presides over 12 separate stash-house cases with 43 defendants, a dozen of whom sat Thursday in a jury box. Some yawned or sank in their seats as testimony strayed into math.

The judges chose to hear evidence simultaneo­usly after lawyers for all 43 defendants moved for the stas hhouse charges to be tossed on grounds of racial bias. How they decide — possibly in a single ruling — is expected to influence how courts nationwide deal with similar claims.

Courts have ruled previously that proving racial bias doesn’t necessaril­y require proof of explicit racist behavior, such as an official caught using racial slurs. It can sometimes be enough to point to statistica­l evidence that a racial group is disproport­ionately hurt by a policy. Fagan noted that out of 94 stash-house defendants in the Chicago area between 2006 and 2013, 74 were black, 12were Hispanic and just eight were white. If the ATF criteria for picking targets were truly colorblind, he said, far more whites would have been snared.

But government lawyers have argued it’s only natural that traffickin­g-related stings are focused where traffickin­g activity is highest — in low-income areas on Chicago’s South and West Sides.

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