So as long as the rates are equal it is fine, regardless of whether those extra and/or fewer people "should" have been convicted? Wow that is an interesting take. Instead of worrying about what makes the most fair and impartial jury, by analyzing cases and determining what the correct verdict would have been, you focus entirely on making sure that the same mistakes are made evenly across the board and then call it good. But even then, simply saying that the conviction rates are now even does nothing to account for the question of whether those convictions were right or wrong, so it is a false dichotomy. In this study they are racially profiling in reverse, assuming that lower rates of convictions for whites automatically means that the "right" verdict would cause more convictions, and that higher rates for blacks means that the right verdict implies fewer should have been convicted. Seems to me that the focus should be, regardless of race, on whether or not any individual "should" have been convicted in the first place. Since this data isn't presented in any form at all, my first thought is that it would be detrimental to their overall argument, so they left it out. They didn't even present any hard stats about overturned convictions, just anecdotes. Seems like one-sided and partial "science" to me.