Cover von: Racial Disparities in Criminal Sentencing Vary Considerably across Federal Judges
Nicholas Goldrosen, Christian Michael Smith, Maria-Veronica Ciocanel, Rebecca Santorella, Shilad Sen, Shawn Bushway, Chad M. Topaz

Racial Disparities in Criminal Sentencing Vary Considerably across Federal Judges

Rubrik: Conference Article 4
Jahrgang 179 (2023) / Heft 1, S. 92-113 (22)
Publiziert 31.01.2023
DOI 10.1628/jite-2023-0005
Veröffentlicht auf Englisch.
Normalpreis
  • Artikel PDF
  • lieferbar
  • 10.1628/jite-2023-0005
Beschreibung
Substantial race-based disparities exist in federal criminal sentencing. We analyze 380,000 recent (2006-2019) sentences in the JUSTFAIR database and show that these disparities are large and vary considerably across judges. Judges assign White defendants sentences 13% shorter than Black defendants' and 19% shorter than Hispanic defendants' sentences, on average, conditional on case characteristics and district. Judges one standard deviation above average in their estimated Black-White disparity give Black defendants sentences 39%conditionally longer than White defendants' sentences, vis-à-vis average disparity of 13%. Judges one standard deviation above average in their estimated Hispanic-White disparity give Hispanic defendants sentences 49% conditionally longer than White defendants' sentences, compared to the average disparity of 19%.