You must not be counting corporate welfare and white collar crime.
Sad thing is that blacks commit a disproportionate amount of ALL crime.
"Blacks as a group are also overrepresented among persons arrested for so-called white-collar crimes such as counterfeiting, fraud and embezzlement."
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/jul/21/family-secret-what-the-left-wont-tell-you-about-bl/
"for anti-trust and security fraud offenses in particular, whites account for some 99% of the perpetrators. But for every single other form of white collar crime, whites are actually under-represented compared to their share of the employed population."
https://www.counter-currents.com/2018/10/poverty-does-not-cause-crime/
Facts aren't "racist." The underlying causes of racial disparities in crime statistics are either racist or racial. If you think their racist, you say things like...
If that reflected individual choice and not unequal opportunity, the distribution would not be skewed according to the arbitrary racial system of distribution of opportunity. Because unless one race is superior (the racist position), race would have nothing to do with whether an individual freely made a choice without being compelled by circumstances determined for them by a racist society.
If you say things like that, you need facts to support your position and documentation to back up those facts.
If you believe that the underlying causes of racial disparities in crime statistics are racial, the burden of proof in the present ideological environment of America is on you, so you point to articles like this one:
https://www.counter-currents.com/2018/10/poverty-does-not-cause-crime/
that says things like, 'The “poverty causes crime” thesis does not hold water when we compare crime and poverty rates between racial groups today'
and articles like this one:
https://quillette.com/2019/01/25/how-real-is-systemic-racism-today/
that says things like, 'The beauty of “systemic racism” is its air of permanence. It is here forever, and its victims must be compensated in perpetuity. It has become the elusive and inexpugnable cause of all the ills of people of color.'