RT Article T1 Minority Victim Neglect and the Case Processing of Firearm Crimes JF Victims & offenders VO 18 IS 6 SP 1046 OP 1069 A1 Vaughn, Paige E. A2 Williams, Joshua H. A2 Rosenfeld, Richard A2 Deckard, Mica LA English YR 2023 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1852221542 AB Studies find mixed results regarding the effects of race on criminal justice case processing, likely because they rarely account for the race of both the victim and offender, and few consider how prosecutorial case screening may influence later criminal justice stages. This study examines the impact of victim and defendant race on case screening, bail, and sentencing outcomes for 1,131 firearm offenses that occurred between 2015 and 2018 in St. Louis, MO. Regressions modeling the relationships between each outcome and victim and defendant race (estimated separately and as defendant-victim racial dyads) find that cases involving Black victims, alone and in combination with Black defendants, are more likely than others to be dismissed by prosecutors during case screening, whereas legally relevant factors affect bail and sentencing outcomes. The results suggest that disregarding initial gatekeeping stages of criminal justice case processing may lead to the mistaken conclusion that racial disparities do not exist. K1 Sentencing K1 Bail K1 Prosecution K1 Race K1 firearm violence K1 Victims DO 10.1080/15564886.2022.2062081