Cross-Racial Witness Identification: A Review of ‘People v. Boone’

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Lynn K. Neuner and William T. Russell Jr.[/caption] The issue of cross-racial witness identification has emerged as a potentially significant source of error in criminal proceedings. One report by the National Academy of Sciences concluded that “at least one mistaken eyewitness identification was present in almost three-quarters” of cases in which the convicted defendant was later exonerated by DNA testing. Experts in the field have concluded that the risk of misidentification is substantially higher when the identifying-witness is of a different race than the identified-defendant. In People v. Boone, the Court of Appeals took up this issue in the context of jury instructions and held that, in a case in which a witness’s identification of the defendant is at issue, and the identifying witness and defendant appear to be of different races, a trial court is required to give, upon request, a jury charge on the cross-race effect during final instructions. In an opinion authored by Judge Eugene M. Fahey and joined by Chief Judge Janet DiFiore and Judges Paul Feinman, Jenny Rivera, and Peter Tom,[1] the court observed that there is a “near consensus among cognitive and social psychologists that people have significantly greater difficulty in accurately identifying members of a different race than in accurately identifying members of their own race.” The court referred to several studies and cases describing the prevalence of eyewitness misidentifications in wrongful convictions, citing in particular to a meta-analysis showing that participants were 1.56 times more likely to falsely identify a “novel other-race face when compared with performance on own-race faces.” Although one survey showed that 90 percent of psychologists believed that “the cross-race effect” is generally accepted and empirically reliable enough to present as expert evidence in court, another study showed that 48 percent of surveyed jurors thought cross-race and same-race identifications are of equal reliability. Based on the body of scientific and empirical data presented, the court held that a special jury instruction on potential problems with cross-race identification should be given where a party requests the instruction, there is an issue about a witness’s identification of the defendant, and the witness and defendant appear to be of different races. The court stated that the instruction should state:

(1) that the jury should consider whether there is a difference in race between the defendant and the witness who identified the defendant; and (2) that, if so, the jury should consider (a) that some people have greater difficulty in accurately identifying members of a different race than in accurately identifying members of their own race and (b) whether the difference in race affected the accuracy of the witness’s identification.