Wrongful Convictions, Deterrence, and Stigma Dilution
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-2017
Journal Title
Supreme Court Economic Review
ISSN
0736-9921
DOI
10.1086/699725
Abstract
There is no consensus in the economics of law enforcement literature regarding the likely effects of wrongful convictions on deterrence. Although many assert that wrongful convictions and wrongful acquittals are likely to cause similar reductions in deterrence, others have claimed that certain types of wrongful convictions are unlikely to affect deterrence. However, the stigmatizing effects of convictions are not taken into account in the formalization of either view. Frequent wrongful convictions naturally make criminal records less meaningful, because they reduce the proportion of truly guilty individuals among the convicted population. This stigma dilution effect, along with similar effects regarding the probability of stigmatization, are formalized via a model wherein criminal records act as noisy signals of offenders’ characteristics. The analysis reveals that when criminal records cause stigmatization, wrongful convictions reduce deterrence, even if they are caused by adjudication mistakes that were previously shown to have no effect on deterrence. This suggests that prodefendant biases in various criminal procedures can potentially be explained through interactions between stigmatization and wrongful convictions.
First Page
199
Last Page
216
Num Pages
18
Volume Number
25
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Recommended Citation
Murat C. Mungan,
Wrongful Convictions, Deterrence, and Stigma Dilution,
25
Sup. Ct. Econ. Rev.
199
(2017).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.tamu.edu/facscholar/1861