“…Our paper builds on, and expands, existing work across a range of related substantive areas. First, our results are relevant to the large scholarship on crime and criminal behavior which argues that criminals are likely to be more risk-acceptant than the general population, and points out the important implications of these risk preferences for policing and sentencing strategies (e.g., Becker, 1968;Ehrlich, 1973;Block and Lind, 1975;Grogger, 1991;Block and Gerety, 1995;Engel, Nagin et al, 2015;Mata et al, 2018; 2 For a related argument in the criminal justice literature see Copus, Hübert and Pellaton (2022), who show that inferences about whether female and minority judges decide cases differently are complicated by the fact that the kids of women and minorities appointed to the bench are different in other ways. Polinsky and Shavell, 1999).…”