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KERA's One Crisis Away project focuses on North Texans living on the financial edge.

Race And Incarceration: A Stark Reality

Christopher Scott, wrongfully convicted of murder in Dallas, was exonerated in 2009. He spent 12 years in prison.
Allison V. Smith
Christopher Scott, wrongfully convicted of murder in Dallas, was exonerated in 2009. He spent 12 years in prison.

The statistics are startling: If you’re a black man in America, you’re five times as likely to go to state prison as a white man. Latinos and African Americans make up one-third of the U.S. population; they make up two-thirds of the prison population.

You can’t talk about incarceration without talking about race. Christopher Scott knows that too well.

In April 1997, Scott and Claude Simmons were driving through the wrong place at the wrong time. A man named Alfonso Aguilar had been murdered in Dallas.

Police were everywhere and they had just a brief description of the suspects.

“Two African-American men, one tall one short, dark complected with a low haircut. And I’m like, what kind of description is that?” Scott says. “You described half of the African-American men in the world today if that’s the description you have.”

"No way am I going to get a fair trial"

Scott and Simmons were arrested, convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison. There was no DNA evidence — nothing to link them to the crime except, Scott says, the color of their skin.

“I didn’t think I was going to get a fair trial anyway, because at the end of the day, all 12 jury members was white,” he said. “The judge was white, the prosecutor was white and my attorney was white. … There’s no way I’m going to get a fair trial with a stack like that.”

Twelve years later, both men were exonerated.

Since he got out of prison, Scott’s built a sort-of nonprofit detective agency focused on exonerations. It was the subject of a PBS documentary: “True Conviction.”

But before the national spotlight, his felt like just another black life thrown away.

“The day I was going to court, I was in a holdover with seven other African-American young men. I was the oldest out of them and I was 25,” Scott said. “None of us got no less than 75 years.”

If you’re a black man in America, you’re five times as likely to go to state prison as a white man, according to the Sentencing Project, a national advocacy group.

The criminal justice system was "created to control people of color"

The project finds racial disparity at every level of the legal process: African-Americans are more likely to be arrested; once arrested, they’re more likely to be convicted; and once convicted, they get stiffer sentences.

A Princeton study found the average black defendant pays more in bail: nearly $10,000 more than white defendants.

The conclusion for many people? The modern-day criminal justice system is broken.

But Chenelle Jones, program chair of the Department of Public Safety at Franklin University, says the criminal justice system isn’t broken — it was designed that way.

“In order for something to be broken, that means it has to start from being fixed, or correct to begin with,” she said. “It was designed and created to marginalize, subdue and control people of color. You have to think of it in the perspective the racialized history of the United States.”

Christopher Scott is now president of House of Renewed Hope, an organization he founded that works to exonerate wrongfully convicted prisoners.
Credit Allison V. Smith
Christopher Scott is now president of House of Renewed Hope, an organization he founded that works to exonerate wrongfully convicted prisoners.

Starting with slave codes. They were harsh restrictions designed to keep slaves from rebelling or escaping. They criminalized basic activities like congregating and learning how to read.

After emancipation and reconstruction came the Jim Crow era and a whole new set of restrictions around segregation in public places.

Over the centuries, it was fairly common for African-Americans to be shot, hanged or burned to death for minor offenses. Yet whites, Jones says, were rarely punished to that degree.

“These regulations were taking something that everybody does, but when an African-American does it, we then criminalize it,” Jones said. “That eventually evolved into perpetuating stereotypes and stigmas and this notion that black people are to be feared.”

And fear, she says, continues to fuel the racial disparities in the criminal justice system. The War on Drugs in the 1980s, mandatory minimum sentences, controversial policing practices like “stop and frisk” — Jones says the methods and names have changed over time, but the goal is still the same: to control black and brown populations, socially and financially.

“They have that [conviction] on their record,” Jones says. “Then that creates significant barriers to employment opportunities, the ability to vote in some states, to run for office, being able to get federal aid to go to college and get an education. They’re in a cycle that perpetuates itself. It keeps one population stuck, and then protects those who are already in power.”

This story is Part 3 of KERA's One Crisis Away: The Price of Prison series. Read the rest here.

Former KERA staffer Stephanie Kuo is an award-winning radio journalist who worked as a reporter and administrative producer at KERA, overseeing and coordinating editorial content reports and logistics for the Texas Station Collaborative – a statewide news consortium including KERA, KUT in Austin, Houston Public Media and Texas Public Radio in San Antonio.