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2016 U. Chi. Legal F. 485 (2016)
Testing Racial Profiling: Empirical Assessment of Disparate Treatment by Police

handle is hein.journals/uchclf2016 and id is 491 raw text is: 










Testing Racial Profiling: Empirical Assessment of

                Disparate Treatment by Police


                                 Sonja  B. Starrt





     Statistical  evidence   plays  a central  role  in litigation, scholarship,
and  public  debates   about  race  and  policing. At one  level, the  statistical
picture  is clear:  people  of color  in the  United   States,  especially  black
men,   interact   with  police  far  more   often  than  white   Americans do.
Black   Americans are about 2.5 times more likely to be arrested each
year  as their  white  counterparts.'  Local  studies  show   even  larger racial
disparities  in the frequency   of stops and  use  of force, although  there  are
no  national  numbers.2
     But   while  these  gaps'  existence  is  not contested,   the  reasons  for
them   are. An  especially  hotly disputed   question  is whether   and  to what



    t Professor of Law, University of Michigan. For comments and helpful discussions on prior
versions, I am grateful to Alicia Davis, Aviana Eisenberg, Mark Fancher, Jim Greiner, Sam Gross,
Louis Kaplow, Randy Kennedy, Anup Malani, Jonathan Masur, David Moran, J.J. Prescott, Eve
Brensike Primus, Jon Sacks, Margo Schlanger, Michael Steinberg, Matthew Stephenson, and Kim
Thomas, as well as Legal Forum participants and workshop participants at Harvard, University of
Chicago, University of Michigan, University of Texas, University of Wisconsin, University of
Colorado, and UC-Berkeley. Brian Apel, Grady Bridges, Alex Harris, Avi Kupfer, Linfeng Li, and
Andrew Sand provided excellent research assistance.
    ' According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics Arrest Data Analysis Tool, the 2012 arrest
rate was ten percent for black adults and four percent for whites; disparities are larger for more
serious crimes. The Bureau of Justice Statistics's national estimates are not broken down by
Hispanic ethnicity, or by race and sex combined. Arrest Data Analysis Tool, BUREAU OF JUST.
STATISTICS, http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=datool&surl=/arrests/index.cfm# (follow National
Estimates hyperlink, then follow Trend Tables by Race hyperlink).
      See, e.g., ACLU, BLACK, BROWN,  AND  TARGETED: A  REPORT  ON BOSTON  POLICE
DEPARTMENT STREET ENCOUNTERS FROM 2007-2010, 1 (2014), https://aclum.org/app/uploads/2015/
06/reports-black-brown-and-targeted.pdf [https://perma.cc/GT9J-QTSC] (finding large disparities
in pedestrian stop-and-frisk rates in Boston); see Jodi M. Brown & Patrick A. Langan, BUREAU OF
JUST. STATISTICS, NCJ 180987, POLICING AND HOMICIDE, 1976-1998: JUSTIFIABLE HOMICIDE BY
POLICE, POLICE OFFICERS MURDERED BY FELONS (2001), at iii (finding blacks four times as likely
as whites to be killed by police); Bernard E. Harcourt, Rethinking Racial Profiling: A Critique of
the Economics, Civil Liberties, and Constitutional Literature, and of Criminal Profiling More
Generally, 71 U. CHI. L. REV. 1275, 1275-76 (2004) (describing traffic stop disparities); Rachel
Harmon, Why Do We (Still) Lack Data on Policing?, 96 MARQ. L. REV. 1119, 1139-40 (2013) (calling
for better data collection). A new, federally funded initiative seeks to build a national database on
stops and use of force. Ctr. for Policing Equity, Nation's First Police Profiling Database Awarded
Grant By  NSF  (Nov. 7, 2013), http://policingequity.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/database
_releasejfinal.pdf [https://perma.cc/XW8B-ZJLK].


485

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