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RACE AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF DRUG DELIVERY LAWS IN ...

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SUMMARY <strong>OF</strong> KEY F<strong>IN</strong>D<strong>IN</strong>GS<br />

F<strong>IN</strong>D<strong>IN</strong>G 1<br />

The majority of those who use and deliver serious drugs in Seattle are<br />

white.<br />

• Data from multiple sources – surveys of public school students,<br />

needle exchange clients, and the general Seattle population;<br />

mortality data; drug treatment admission data; and an observational<br />

study of two outdoor Seattle drug markets – all support the<br />

conclusion that a majority of those who use and deliver serious<br />

illegal drugs with the possible exception of crack cocaine in Seattle<br />

are white.<br />

F<strong>IN</strong>D<strong>IN</strong>G 2<br />

The majority of those purposefully arrested for delivering a serious drug<br />

in Seattle are black, and blacks are over-represented among drug<br />

arrestees to a greater degree than in nearly all other mid-sized cities.<br />

• Although the city population is 8 percent black, two-thirds (67<br />

percent) of those arrested in Seattle for delivery of a serious drug in<br />

a four-month sample from 2005–2006 were black.<br />

• The black drug arrest rate in 2006 was more than 13 times higher<br />

than the white drug arrest rate.<br />

• The black drug arrest rate for delivery of a serious drug is more than<br />

21 times higher than the white arrest rate for the same crime.<br />

• In 2006, only one of 38 comparable mid-sized cities had a higher<br />

degree of racial disproportionality in drug arrests than Seattle.<br />

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