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89 Wash. L. Rev. 1425 (2014)
Racial Impact Statements: Considering the Consequences of Racial Disproportionalities in the Criminal Justice System

handle is hein.journals/washlr89 and id is 1455 raw text is: RACIAL IMPACT STATEMENTS: CONSIDERING THE
CONSEQUENCES OF RACIAL
DISPROPORTIONALITIES IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE
SYSTEM
Jessica Erickson
Abstract: The American criminal justice system is currently suffering from a dramatic
increase in mass incarceration and staggering rates of racial disproportionalities and
disparities. Many facially neutral laws, policies, and practices within the criminal justice
system have disproportionate impacts on minorities. Racial impact statements provide one
potential method of addressing such disproportionalities. These proactive tools measure the
projected impacts that new criminal justice laws and policies may have upon minorities, and
provide this information to legislators before they decide whether to enact the law. Four
states currently conduct racial impact statements, and other states are considering adopting
their own versions. The triggering circumstances and methods of collecting racial impact
data differ among states, resulting in a great variety of racial impact statements that are
actually completed. This Comment reviews current racial impact statements and suggests
three improvements for states that are considering adopting them. First, racial impact
statements should attach automatically to legislation without the prompting of legislators'
votes. Second, states should consider developing more thorough data collection standards.
Finally, more effective racial impact legislation should ensure that lawmakers address racial
disproportionalities by requiring legislators to follow additional procedures when
disproportionate racial impacts are projected.
INTRODUCTION
African Americans and Latinos account for fifty-eight percent of the
United States prison population-nearly twice their accumulated
representation in the general population of thirty percent.' The current
rates of racial disproportionality in the criminal justice system are
staggering. Racial disproportionality exists at many stages within the
criminal justice system, from crime commission, to arrest, to conviction,
to sentencing.2 Implicit racial biases affect each of these points in the
The author initiated her research on racial impact statements as an intern with the Washington
Defender Association in 2013.
1. E. ANN CARSON & WILLIAM J. SABOL, U.S. DEP'T OF JUSTICE, BUREAU OF JUSTICE
STATISTICS, PRISONERS IN 2011, at 37 tbl.4 (2012), available at http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/
pdf/p 1.pdf.
2. Justin Murray, Reimagining Criminal Prosecution: Toward a Color-Conscious Professional
Ethic for Prosecutors, 49 AM. CRIM. L. REV. 1541, 1544 (2012); THE SENTENCING PROJECT,

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