Correction for “Officer characteristics and racial disparities in
fatal officer-involved shootings,” by David J. Johnson, Trevor
Tress, Nicole Burkel, Carley Taylor, and Joseph Cesario, which
was first published July 22, 2019
The authors wish to note the following: “Recently, we published a report showing that, among civilians fatally shot, officer
race did not predict civilian race and there was no evidence of
anti-Black or anti-Hispanic disparities (1). Specifically, we estimated the probability that a civilian was Black, Hispanic, or
White given that a person was fatally shot and some covariates.
The dataset contains only information about individuals fatally
shot by police, and the race of the individual is predicted by a set
of variables. Thus, we compute Pr(racejshot, X) where X is a set
of variables including officer race.
“Although we were clear about the quantity we estimated and
provide justification for calculating Pr(racejshot, X) in our report
(see also 2, 3), we want to correct a sentence in our significance
statement that has been quoted by others stating ‘White officers
are not more likely to shoot minority civilians than non-White
officers.’ This sentence refers to estimating Pr(shotjrace, X). As
we estimated Pr(racejshot, X), this sentence should read: ‘As the
proportion of White officers in a fatal officer-involved shooting
increased, a person fatally shot was not more likely to be of a
racial minority.’ This is consistent with our framing of the results
in the abstract and main text.
“We appreciate the feedback that led us to clarify this sentence (4). To be clear, this issue does not invalidate the findings
with regards to Pr(racejshot, X) discussed in the report.”
Correction for “Officer characteristics and racial disparities in fatal officer-involved shootings,” by David J. Johnson, Trevor Tress, Nicole Burkel, Carley Taylor, and Joseph Cesario, which was first published July 22, 2019
The authors wish to note the following: “Recently, we published a report showing that, among civilians fatally shot, officer race did not predict civilian race and there was no evidence of anti-Black or anti-Hispanic disparities (1). Specifically, we estimated the probability that a civilian was Black, Hispanic, or White given that a person was fatally shot and some covariates. The dataset contains only information about individuals fatally shot by police, and the race of the individual is predicted by a set of variables. Thus, we compute Pr(racejshot, X) where X is a set of variables including officer race.
“Although we were clear about the quantity we estimated and provide justification for calculating Pr(racejshot, X) in our report (see also 2, 3), we want to correct a sentence in our significance statement that has been quoted by others stating ‘White officers are not more likely to shoot minority civilians than non-White officers.’ This sentence refers to estimating Pr(shotjrace, X). As we estimated Pr(racejshot, X), this sentence should read: ‘As the proportion of White officers in a fatal officer-involved shooting increased, a person fatally shot was not more likely to be of a racial minority.’ This is consistent with our framing of the results in the abstract and main text.
“We appreciate the feedback that led us to clarify this sentence (4). To be clear, this issue does not invalidate the findings with regards to Pr(racejshot, X) discussed in the report.”