https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4369574/
In substantial agreement with previous data on the MAOA allelic distribution in the general population (Sabol et al. 1998), we found a trend (P=0.08) toward a significantly higher frequency of African-American carriers of low-activity MAOA variants, as compared with their Caucasian counterparts (Fig. 1A). Notably, low-activity MAOA variants were displayed by 61.22% violent and 20% non-violent offenders, indicating a robust association of these alleles with violent crime
race deniers?
In substantial agreement with previous data on the MAOA allelic distribution in the general population (Sabol et al. 1998), we found a trend (P=0.08) toward a significantly higher frequency of African-American carriers of low-activity MAOA variants, as compared with their Caucasian counterparts (Fig. 1A). Notably, low-activity MAOA variants were displayed by 61.22% violent and 20% non-violent offenders, indicating a robust association of these alleles with violent crime
race deniers?
