Jim Rankin
Betsy Powell
Staff Reporters
Visible minorities charged with a crime in
These differences were identified in a Star analysis of the criminal histories of nearly 3 million people. The data comes from the Canadian Police Information Centre database, in which race is recorded as white or non-white.
While the differences between the two groups are clear, the reasons for them are less so. On the surface, they raise questions about the fairness of
The data, obtained in an access to information request that took 2 1/2 years, is a snapshot of Canadian criminal histories as of late 2005. The cases were serious enough to require fingerprints and were submitted by local police to the RCMP-administered CPIC database in
The Star asked criminologists, lawyers, a judge, and a police chief for their theories on the key differences.
NO CONVICTION
The data obtained by the Star contains two kinds of files: 2.4 million criminal records where a conviction was registered and 500,000 criminal histories, where there was a charge but no conviction.
A "no conviction" notation means there was one of the following:
Even without a conviction, the record of having been charged can remain for years in the CPIC database, which is accessed tens of millions of times a year by police, other enforcement agencies and even potential employers.
The Star's analysis of the data shows that non-whites were 53 per cent more likely than whites not to be convicted.One explanation for the difference is that judges could be giving more discharges to non-white offenders as a "reward" for dead time spent in jail awaiting trial. The 1995 Report of the Commission on Systemic Racism in the Ontario Criminal Justice System determined that black accused, for example, are more often held without bail.
"My guess," said an Ontario judge who reviewed the findings but who asked not to be identified, "is that if the 'non-whites' have spent more time than 'whites' in pre-trial custody, one of the ways judges may 'reward' them is by giving a discharge rather than registering a conviction, especially as there may be immigration consequences if a conviction is registered."
That same systemic racism report found that black accused were more likely than white accused to plead not guilty, which would increase the chance of not being convicted.
Defence lawyer Daniel Brown, of the
"We see this all the time in large gang projects where hundreds are arrested and thousands of charges are laid, only to see a few accused left at the end of the day facing a handful of charges."
There have been similar sweeps of Aboriginal gangs out West, which might also explain this phenomenon.
It may mean, he said, that more Crowns are "withdrawing charges they feel are the product of racial profiling. This is a positive thing."
Scot Wortley, a
"For whatever reason, the data suggests that minorities are much more likely to be charged without enough evidence for prosecutors to get a conviction.
"If they are concentrated in particular communities, it could undermine the legitimacy of law enforcement – that the community itself may believe police lay bogus or unwarranted charges as a means of harassment."
Lawyer Adam Weisberg, also with Pinkofskys, suggests fewer findings of guilt for non-whites were due to heavier policing in poorer neighbourhoods with a higher proportion of new immigrants. "In a neighbourhood with a heavy police presence there are more charges, and with quantity, there is often a decline in quality."
"It is the job of defence counsel to create reasonable doubt, obfuscate, and one of the ways they might do that is to undermine the credibility and confidence the criminal justice system would have in the police," says Blair.
"So they're suggesting the police would be responsible for this in the absence of a great deal more information which would be required to determine what is really going on."
Police do deploy more officers in troubled neighbourhoods "where are people being hurt, where people are being injured, where violence is taking place," says Blair. "Yes, there are criminal acts that take place in other neighbourhoods but they don't represent the same level of risk to the broader community."
As for his thoughts on the difference on convictions, Blair said he would need to know more.
"Without knowing what charges we're talking about, what were the reasons by which they were not convicted . . . it would be difficult to speculate on why that would be."
The Star analysis of CPIC data shows that 32.5 per cent of those required to provide
For sex crimes, kidnapping and murder, a
For other major, yet less serious crimes, such as criminal mischief, robbery and assault, judges have discretion to decide if
The difference in who gives samples cannot be explained simply by differences in the seriousness of charges. (Non-whites account for a disproportionately high 23.9 per cent of records for violent offences; the same for robbery.)
Comparing the same kinds of criminal records still shows a difference between whites and non-whites. For example, of people who have a criminal record for violence, 10.5 per cent of non-whites had
For with a record for robbery (and nothing else) non-whites are 50 per cent more likely to have had a sample taken.
"The
Brown, the lawyer with Pinkofskys, questions giving judges discretion to order
Chief Blair says the difference here is "interesting," but believes it reflects differences in the kinds of crimes being committed by the two groups.
DANGER WARNINGS
Non-whites are more likely to have warnings on their file than whites indicating they are considered violent or a suicide risk. These, along with notations for mental instability and escape risk, are entered by local police forces.
The differences remain even when looking at whites and non-whites with similar records.
For example, of those with criminal records for violent offences, non-whites are more likely to also have a notation for violent behaviour marked on their record.
Chief Blair believes the difference here simply reflects reality and that skin colour is not a factor. The warnings are "determined entirely by the behaviour and the crime in which they're charged."
Police routinely see these warnings while accessing CPIC records from computers in their cruisers and that helps "protect" officers, says Blair.
But Wortley says having more warnings can "lead to an exponential increase" in how harshly the justice system handles individuals. "It might justify further surveillance. It might justify holding somebody for bail. It may justify tougher treatment when individuals discover that the special designation exists."
Wortley connected the extra warnings on the records of non-whites with a study he and a colleague did of
York University Professor Frances Henry and Carol Tator, researchers who have co-authored a book on racial profiling in
The Star also asked the Canadian Association of Black Lawyers to review the differences. President Frank Walwyn echoed a point raised by everyone contacted for this story. His association would like to know more.
"While the numbers on their face seem to support anecdotal references to pervasive stereotyping and racism within the criminal justice system," said Walwyn, "one thing we can say definitively is that more information is needed in order to draw meaningful conclusions from these numbers."