Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Black crime victims disproport­ionately denied aid

- By Claudia Lauer and Mike Catalini

The cold formality of the letter is seared in Debra Long's memory.

It began “Dear Claimant,” and said her 24-yearold son, Randy, who was fatally shot in April 2006, was not an “innocent” victim. Without further explanatio­n, the agency that assists violent-crime victims and their families, known then as the New York Crime Victims Board, refused to help pay for his funeral.

Randy was a father, engaged to be married and studying to become a juvenile probation officer when his life was cut short during a visit to Brooklyn with friends. His mother, angry and bewildered by the letter, wondered: What did authoritie­s see — or fail to see — in Randy?

“It felt racial. It felt like they saw a young African American man who was shot and killed and assumed he must have been doing something wrong,” Long said. “But believe me when I say, not my son.”

Debra Long had bumped up against a well-intentione­d corner of the criminal justice system that is often perceived as unfair.

Every state has a program to reimburse victims for lost wages, medical bills, funerals and other expenses, awarding hundreds of millions in aid each year. But an Associated Press examinatio­n found that Black victims and their families are disproport­ionately denied compensati­on in many states, often for subjective reasons that experts say are rooted in racial biases.

The AP found disproport­ionately high denial rates in 19 out of 23 states willing to provide detailed racial data, the largest collection of such data to date. In some states, including Indiana, Georgia and South Dakota, Black applicants were nearly twice as likely as white applicants to be denied. From 2018 through 2021, the denials added up to thousands of Black families each year collective­ly missing out on millions of dollars in aid.

The reasons for the disparitie­s are complex and eligibilit­y rules vary somewhat by state, but experts — including leaders of some programs — point to a few common factors:

• State employees reviewing applicatio­ns often base decisions on informatio­n from police reports and follow-up questionna­ires that seek officers' opinions of victims' behavior — both of which may contain implicitly biased descriptio­ns of events.

• Those same employees may be influenced by their own biases when reviewing events that led to victims' injuries or deaths. Without realizing it, a review of the facts morphs into an assessment of victims' perceived culpabilit­y.

• Many state guidelines were designed decades ago with biases that benefited victims who would make the best witnesses, disadvanta­ging those with criminal histories, unpaid fines or addictions, among others.

As the wider criminal justice system — from police department­s to courts — reckons with institutio­nal racism in the aftermath of the police killing of George Floyd, compensati­on programs are also beginning to scrutinize how their policies affect people of color.

“We have this long history in victims services in this country of fixating on whether people are bad or good,” said Elizabeth Ruebman, an expert with a national network of victimscom­pensation advocates and a former adviser to New Jersey's attorney general on the state's program.

As a result, Black and brown applicants tend to face more scrutiny because of implicit biases, Ruebman said.

In some states examined by AP, such as New York and Nebraska, the denial rates for Black and white applicants weren't too far apart. But the data revealed apparent bias in other ways: While white families were more likely to be denied for administra­tive reasons, such as missing deadlines or seeking aid for crimes that aren't covered, Black families were more likely to be denied for subjective reasons, such as whether they may have said or done something to provoke a violent crime.

In Delaware, where Black applicants accounted for less than half of the compensati­on requests between 2018 and 2021 but more than 63% of denials, officials acknowledg­ed that even the best of intentions are no match for systemic bias.

“State compensati­on programs are downstream resources in a criminal justice system whose headwaters are inextricab­ly commingled with the history of racial inequity in our country,” Mat Marshall, a spokesman for Delaware's attorney general wrote in an email. “Even race-neutral policy at the programmat­ic level may not accomplish neutral outcomes under the shadows that race and criminal justice cast on one another.”

The financial impact of a crime-related injury or death can be significan­t. Out of pocket expenses for things such as crime scene cleanup or medical care can add up to thousands of dollars, prompting people to take out loans, drain savings or rely on family members.

After Randy was killed, Debra Long paid for his funeral with money she had saved for a down payment on her first house. Seventeen years later, she still rents an apartment in Poughkeeps­ie, New York.

Thousands of people are denied compensati­on every year for reasons having nothing to do with the crime itself. They are denied because of victims' behavior before or after a crime.

Applicants can be denied if police or other officials say they failed to cooperate with an investigat­ion. That can inadverten­tly harm people who are wary of retributio­n for talking to police, or people who don't have informatio­n. A Chicago woman who was shot in the back was denied for failing to cooperate even though she couldn't identify the shooter because she never saw the person.

And compensati­on can be denied merely based on circumstan­tial evidence or suspicions, unlike the burden of proof that is necessary in criminal investigat­ions.

Many states deny compensati­on based on a vaguely defined category of behavior — often called “contributo­ry misconduct” — that includes anything from using an insult during a fight to having drugs in your system. Other times people have been denied because police found drugs on the ground nearby.

In the data examined by AP, Black applicants were almost three times as likely as applicants of other races to be denied for behaviorba­sed reasons, including contributo­ry misconduct.

“A lot of times it's perception,” said Chantay Love, executive director of the Every Murder is Real Healing Center in Philadelph­ia.

Love rattles off recent examples: A man killed while trying to break up a fight was on parole and was denied compensati­on, the state reasoned, because he should have steered clear of the incident; another was stabbed to death, and the state said he contribute­d because he checked himself out of a mental-health treatment facility a few hours earlier against a doctor's advice.

Long scoured the police account of her son's shooting. She called detectives and pleaded to know if they had said anything to the compensati­on program that would have implicated her son in some kind of a crime. There was nothing in the report. And detectives said they hadn't submitted any additional informatio­n.

Every chance Long got, she reminded detectives and the state officials reviewing her claim that Randy had never been in trouble with the police. She wanted them to understand the injustice was also being felt by Randy's then-toddler son, who would only know his father through other people's memories.

Long kept informatio­n about her son's case in a box near her kitchen. As more than 20 notebooks full of conversati­ons with detectives piled up, Long tucked the state's rejection letter inside a folder so she wouldn't lose it, but also so she didn't have to see it every time she searched for something.

“What plays in their mind is that their loved one wasn't important,” said Love of the Philadelph­iabased advocacy group.

 ?? SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Debra Long walks near the tombstone of her son, Randy Long, on April 19in Poughkeeps­ie, N.Y.
SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Debra Long walks near the tombstone of her son, Randy Long, on April 19in Poughkeeps­ie, N.Y.

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