"Driving while black" (DWB) is a sardonic description of racial profiling of African American motorized vehicle drivers. It implies that a motorist may be stopped by a police officer largely because of racial bias rather than any visible violation of traffic law.
"Driving while black" is word play on driving while intoxicated,
or DWI, the legal designation used in some US jurisdictions for the
crime of driving while under the intoxicating effect of alcohol.
Origins
The phrase "driving while black" has been used in both the public and private discourse relating to the racial profiling of black motorists.
The term rose to prominence during the 1990s, when it was brought to
public knowledge that American police officers were intentionally
targeting racial minorities to curb the trafficking of drugs.
For example, New Jersey released state documents in 2000 which showed
police training memos instructing officers to make racial judgments in
order to identify "Occupant Identifiers for a possible Drug Courier" on
the highway.
The phrase was magnified after the ruling of Whren v. United States (1996), when the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that police officers may stop any motor vehicle operator if any traffic violation has been observed.
Subsequent media coverage of the phrase "driving while black" since the 1990s has been expansive and more common.The phrase is often used in anecdotal accounts of racial profiling of
motor vehicle operators as well as statistical and legal analyses of
racial profiling, a notable example being the case of Tolan v. Cotton.
In 2014 Portland lawyers Melvin Oden-Orr and Marianne Hyland
created an app named "Driving While Black" in which users can record
police and alert people when they are stopped by police on the road.It also supplies users with information on how to handle a traffic
stop, including their legal rights and "best practices" for "how to be
safe". The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) released a similar app called "Mobile Justice" in which users can record and upload videos to the ACLU office.
The phrase DWB was amplified through social media by which
African Americans can record police encounters and disseminate them to a
large audience. The phrase was used in the media after the deaths of African Americans Sandra Bland (2015) and Philando Castile (2016), both of whom were stopped by police while driving.
Studies
Nationwide
In 2019, as reported by NBC, the Stanford Open Policing Project
found that "police stopped and searched black and Latino drivers on the
basis of less evidence than used in stopping white drivers, who are
searched less often but are more likely to be found with illegal items."
The finding emerged from data-mining
nearly 100 million traffic stops dating from 2011 to 2017 and recorded
by 21 state patrol agencies, including California, Illinois, New York,
and Texas, and 29 municipal police departments, including New Orleans,
Philadelphia, San Francisco and St. Paul, Minnesota.
Florida
The
American Civil Liberties Union reported that in 2014, Florida-resident
black drivers received nearly 22 percent of all seat belt citations even
though they made up only 13.5 percent of that state's drivers. Seat
belt compliance was 91.5 percent for white drivers versus 85.8 percent
for black drivers, a difference too small to explain the different rate
of ticketing between black and white drivers. The ACLU analysis showed
that black drivers would have had over 14,000 fewer seat belt citations
if they were ticketed proportionally to total drivers in Florida. The
rate that black drivers are ticketed more often than white drivers is
four times more in Escambia County, three times more in Palm Beach
County and 2.8 times more in Orange County. In Tampa, black drivers
received 575 seat belt citations versus 549 for white drivers even
though black people make up only 23 percent of Tampa’s population.
Illinois
On
April 18, 2003, the Illinois State Senate passed a bill that mandates
Illinois law enforcement to maintain racial statistics regarding traffic
stops. The bill originally mandated the statistics-keeping to continue
until 2007, but the bill was extended and traffic stop statistics will
continue to be maintained indefinitely.
An ACLU analysis of the 2013 Illinois traffic stop report found that
African Americans and Latinos are "twice as likely" to be pulled over by
police even though whites were more likely to have been discovered with
contraband in their car.
Maryland
In Robert L. Wilkins, et al. v. Maryland State Police, et al.
(1993), the ACLU sued the Maryland State Police for racial profiling of
then defense attorney Robert L. Wilkins. Part of the settlement
agreement between the parties held that the state of Maryland had to
maintain racial statistics regarding its traffic stops, making Maryland
the first to do so. The case started a "national conversation on racial profiling" and was seen as a large victory by the ACLU.
Dr. Lamberth conducted a study again in the state of Maryland, once
again finding evidence of racial discrimination in traffic stops,
although the scope of his study was more limited.
New Jersey
In New Jersey v. Soto
(1996), a case where Superior Court Justice Robert E. Francis
consolidated 17 claims of racial profiling in traffic stops, Dr. John
Lamberth of Temple University conducted a study to determine the level
to which racial discrimination occurred on the highway in the state of
New Jersey.
Dr. Lamberth found that cars driven by African Americans accounted for
about 42% of the total drivers pulled over out of a total 43,000 cars.
However, cars operated for African Americans accounted only for 13.5% of
the total cars on the road.
New Jersey later received public attention for its racial
profiling on the highway in 1998 when police wounded three men during a
traffic stop, all of whom were either black or Hispanic, prompting then
New Jersey Governor Christine Whitman
to let a federal judge monitor the NJ police. As a result, thousands of
documents were released to the public, displaying ample evidence that
police were instructed to use race-based tactics to identify and stop
possible drug couriers on the highway.
Kentucky
The
Louisville Metro Police Department has received negative public
attention for "hyper-policing" to fight violent crime in the West End of
Louisville. In 2016, Jefferson County Circuit Judge Brian Edwards
throughout evidence obtained in a traffic stop saying he is "well aware
of the troubling levels of gun and drug-related violence in west
Louisville." Edward added, "this does not mean that citizens driving in
west Louisville should be subjected to a lesser degree of constitutional
protection than citizens driving in other parts our community."
In 2019, Tae-Ahn Lea sued LMPD claiming that his civil rights were
violated when he was pulled over, searched and handcuffed by officers,
after he allegedly made a wide turn.
Examples
A
number of well-known African Americans have described experiences they
characterize as of being racially profiled in their cars and some have
related it to the phenomenon of DWB.
In his memoir, The Sky Is Not the Limit: Adventures of an Urban Astrophysicist, prominent astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson
recounts his many encounters with police on the road and their
ambiguous reasons for pulling him over. After learning about other
African American physicists who have had similar encounters, he writes,
"we were guilty not of DWI (driving while intoxicated), but of other
violations none of us knew were on the books: DWB (driving while black),
WWB (walking while black), and of course, JBB (just being black)."
Senator Tim Scott
of South Carolina, the only African American Republican in the Senate,
spoke on the Senate floor in 2016 about how he experienced racial
profiling while driving in his car, adding "I do not know many
African-American men who do not have a very similar story to tell – no
matter their profession, no matter their income, no matter their
disposition in life."
In 2015 comedian Chris Rock
posted a series of different pictures on Twitter of himself in the
driver's seat of his car while being pulled over by police, captioning
one of his posts, "Stopped by the cops again wish me luck." The posts
came just a year after racial profiling in the U.S. had become a salient
topic in the public following the deaths of Eric Garner and Michael Brown. CNN's Don Lemon stipulated that "Chris Rock may be in the middle of a case of Driving While Black."
In 2016, tennis player Serena Williams made a public Facebook post in which she spoke about the fears she had for her nephew after he had driven her to her matches. Likely referring to the death of Sandra Bland,
she spoke about her worries that her nephew might be harmed by a police
officer after being pulled over. The NYTimes documented her post in an
article titled "'I Won't Be Silent': Serena Williams on the Fear of Driving While Black".
There have also been accusations of excessive force by police
officers against black drivers. In this example, a police officer tries
to explain a fear of blacks: Breaion King, an African-American
elementary school teacher, was stopped for speeding in June 2015 in
Austin, Texas. Officer Bryan Richter ordered King out of her car, and
then threw her violently to the ground while arresting her in a parking
lot. King felt the officer's reaction was because she was responding too
slowly to the officer's orders. She was charged with resisting arrest
as well as speeding. When another officer, Patrick Spradlin, was driving
King to jail, he answered the question of "why are so many people
afraid of black people". Spradlin's answer was because of "violent
tendencies" adding "I don’t blame" white people for being afraid of
blacks "because of their appearance and whatnot, some of them are very
intimidating". Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo found the incident
disturbing and put both officers involved under investigation.
Prosecutors dropped the charge of resisting arrest, but King still had
to pay a $165 fine for speeding.
Biking while black
The phrase cycling while black or biking while black
refers to reportedly discriminatory treatment experienced by black
cyclists at the hands of police officers. Such apparent discrimination
has been the subject of media investigations in cities of the US such as
Tampa and Chicago, and the subject of lawsuits elsewhere.
Criticism of the concept
On October 31, 2007, African-American economist Thomas Sowell devoted an editorial column to arguing against the common claim that police officers stop black drivers because of their race. He cites data from the book Are Cops Racist?
by Heather MacDonald which proposes that a close analysis of data
reveals that driving while black incidents are not a widespread problem.
In a 2016 report, Vice News and a group from the Seton Hall Law School
found that 70 percent of all police traffic stops in Bloomfield New
Jersey were against black and Latino drivers even though 60 percent of
the residents were white. According to Bloomfield's police director,
Samuel A DeMaio, violations were 576 against Hispanics, 574 against
blacks and 573 against whites from a recent period. In explaining why
blacks and Hispanics had disproportionately more violations than whites,
DeMaio said it was not racial profiling nor was it a case of blacks and
Latinos being worse drivers. Rather it was because police were
concentrated much more in "high-crime" areas, inhabited
disproportionally by black and Latino residents, rather than in
low-crime areas where whites largely reside. Vice News noticed a heavy
police presence in the "high-crime" area where police vigorously pursue
misdemeanor violations using tactics such as tailing drivers until they
make a mistake, or searching a stopped vehicle for violations that may
be unrelated to the reason for the police stop. The Seton Hall group
concluded the police were effectively raising revenue for the
municipality from people living in or driving through the "high-crime"
area.
Police-Public Contact Surveys by the US Bureau of Justice
Statistics found that white, black, and Hispanic drivers were stopped by
police at similar rates in 2002, 2005, and 2008.
Pretextual stop
In
a pretextual stop (also called an investigatory stop), officers pull
over people citing a minor issue, then start asking unrelated questions.
University of Kansas professor Charles Epp in a study found that black
drivers were three times more likely than whites to be subjected to
"pretextual" stops, and five times more likely to be searched during
them. However, Epp found no difference in the frequency and treatment
with which black and white drivers were stopped for serious violations
like speeding. The bias, however, was significant for stops over minor
issues such as a broken tail light, a missing front plate or a failure
to signal a lane change.
For example, Philando Castile
had 52 police stops in 14 years prior to the last fatal stop. Half his
charges were dismissed, and none of his convictions were for dangerous
offences. The pretext for the fatal stop was a broken tail light, but
the real reason was that the police officer thought Castile resembled a
robbery suspect.
The Supreme Court ruled in Whren v. United States
(1996) that any minor traffic violation is a legitimate justification
for a stop, even if the real reason is some other crime-fighting
objective. Police chiefs consider pretextual stops as an essential
tactic and train their officers to conduct them.
According to an October 2015 article in the New York Times, many
police departments use traffic stops as a tool to make contact with the
community often in higher crime areas where more African-Americans live.
Police hope that by being proactive, criminals will avoid the area.
However, criminologists argue that such police stops alienate
law-abiding residents and undermine their trust in the police. Traffic
stops often lead to searches, arrests and convictions often for minor
offences, with a police record that can lead to lifelong difficulties.
This makes it difficult for police to obtain community cooperation in
preventing and solving crimes. Criminologists doubt that performing more
traffic stops leads to reduced crime. Ronald L. Davis, of the Justice
Department’s Office of Community Oriented Policing Services said: "There
is no evidence that just increasing stops reduces crime."
Variations on the phrase
Variations on the phrase ("snowclones") include "walking while black" for pedestrian offenses, "learning while black" for students in schools, "shopping while black" for browsing in stores, and "eating while black" for restaurants.Actor Danny Glover held a press conference in 1999 because cab drivers in New York City were not stopping for him; this was called "hailing while black". The phenomenon was investigated further on Michael Moore's television series TV Nation.
A pain specialist who treats sickle-cell disease patients at Manhattan's Beth Israel Medical Center
reported that for many years doctors forced African American
sickle-cell sufferers to endure pain because they assumed that blacks
would become addicted to medication; Time magazine labeled this "ailing while black".
In late 2013 the phrase "seeking help while black" or "asking for help while black" was coined in response to the deaths of Jonathan Farrell and Renisha McBride.
In separate incidents, Farrell and McBride, both African-American, were
shot and killed after they experienced a motor vehicle accident and
went to the nearby home of a white stranger to ask for help.
The phrase is also used with other racial, ethnic and cultural (minority) groups. An example is "flying while Muslim",
referring to the scrutiny that Arabs and Muslims face as airline
passengers. Variants on "⟨verb⟩ing while female" are also encountered,
as are phrases like "walking/traveling/etc. while trans".
Following the Boston Marathon bombing, the phrase Running while Arab has come up on social media (although the bombers in question were not Arab, but Chechen)
in response to the interrogation of a Saudi student who, allegedly,
acted suspiciously in the vicinity of the attacks. Said suspicious
behavior consisted of running away from the area of the blast, something
many other people did at the time. His house was searched, but he would
later be cleared by law enforcement officials.
In May 2018, after a black Yale student, napping in her common
room, was reported to police without justification by a white Yale
student, a Washington Post reporter compiled a list of recent,
separate incidents in which black people in North America appear to have
been racially profiled while performing innocent activities, and
proposed coining corresponding terms such as "napping while black",
"couponing while black", "waiting for a school bus while black", and
"waiting at Starbucks while black".
In August 2018, 61-year-old Marine veteran Karle Robinson was
detained at gunpoint by Kansas police for carrying his television into
the house he had bought and was moving into. The ACLU described the
incident as "moving while black".
In September 2018, an incident in which a black actuary was shot and killed
at his home in Dallas, Texas, by an off-duty police officer who later
claimed she mistook his home for her own, was described as a case of
"being at home while black".
In November 2018, security guard Jemel Roberson was killed by police in Illinois while Roberson was restraining a suspected active shooter. An ACLU
spokesperson condemned the incident, saying "Working as a security
guard while black should not be a death sentence. In this case, police
were more dangerous to him than an active shooter who he apparently
subdued."
Also in November 2018, good samaritan Emantic Bradford Jr. was killed by Alabama police while he was attempting to stop a different active shooter. The tragedy was later described as "helping while black".
In December 2018, a bank teller in Ohio denied service to a black
customer, and instead called the police, having wrongly concluded that
the customer was attempting to cash a fraudulent check. The incident was
later described as "banking while black".
In July 2009, a black Canadian named Joel Debellefeuille was pulled over (for the fourth time in several days) by Longueuil police because, according to documents, "his Quebecois name did not match his skin tone".
He refused to provide identification or car insurance documents when
requested by the officer, and was accordingly fined by a municipal
court. Debellefeuille filed complaints with the Human Rights Commission and the police, seeking $30,000 in damages.
Crown prosecutor Valérie Cohen defending the police claimed that
officers were in their rights to check the ownership of the car on a
reasonable suspicion: "the officers' actions were comparable to stopping
a man for driving a car registered to a woman called 'Claudine'."
In December 2012, his tickets were dismissed and the officers were
suspended without pay. The judge wrote that the mentioned rationale for
pulling over demonstrated flagrant ignorance of Quebec society.
Debellefeuille's provincial human rights complaint could not be pursued
because it had been filed too long a time after receiving the initial
ticket.
Akwasi Owusu-Bempah, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Toronto, and Anthony Morgan, a civil rights lawyer, said that in the 1980s and 1990s the RCMP introduced Operation Pipeline, a drug interdiction strategy developed by the Los Angeles Police Department.
However, the strategy came under criticism because it directed police
officers to allow racial profiling to motivate police stops.
A 2002 analysis by the Toronto Star found that police were more likely to stop black drivers than white drivers in Toronto
without evidence of an offence. The Star looked at "out-of-sight"
offences such as failing to update a driver's licence or driving without
insurance when no other offence was found. "Out-of-sight" offences
could only be discovered if police had some other reason to stop the
driver, thus suggesting racial profiling.
"Contempt of cop" is law enforcementjargon in the United States for behavior by people toward law enforcement officers that the officers perceive as disrespectful or insufficiently deferential to their authority. It is a play on the phrase contempt of court, and not an actual offense. The phrase is associated with unlawful arbitrary arrest and detention
of individuals, often for expressing or exercising rights guaranteed to
them by the United States Constitution. Contempt of cop is often
discussed in connection to police misconduct such as use of excessive force or even police brutality as a reaction to perceived disrespectful behavior rather than for any legitimate law enforcement purpose.
Arrests for contempt of cop may stem from a type of "occupational
arrogance" when a police officer thinks his or her authority cannot or
should not be challenged or questioned.
From such officers' perspective, contempt of cop may involve perceived
or actual challenges to their authority, including a lack of deference (such as disobeying instructions, or expressing interest in filing a complaint against the officer). Fleeing from the police is sometimes considered a variant of contempt of cop. Contempt of cop situations may be exacerbated if other officers witness the allegedly contemptuous behavior.
Freedom of speech is protected under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, so non-threatening verbal "abuse" of a police officer is not in itself criminal behavior, though some courts have disagreed on what constitutes protected speech in this regard.
The United States Supreme Court ruled in 1942 that fighting words
that "tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace" are not
protected speech, but later cases have interpreted this narrowly, especially in relation to law enforcement officers. In 2013, a federal appeals court ruled that giving the finger "alone cannot establish probable cause to believe a disorderly conduct violation has occurred".
In the case of Nieves v. Bartlett, the Supreme Court of the United States held that the existence of probable cause
to make an arrest could generally defeat a retaliatory arrest claim.
However, it made an exception "for circumstances where officers have
probable cause to make arrests, but typically exercise their discretion
not to do so." The majority opinion held that a plaintiff may still
prevail on a retaliatory arrest claim "when a plaintiff presents
objective evidence that he was arrested when otherwise similarly
situated individuals not engaged in the same sort of protected speech
had not been."
Racial aspects
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer conducted a study in 2008 that found that in the city of Seattle, "African-Americans were arrested for the sole crime of obstructing eight times as often as whites when population is taken into account." In 2009 the New Jersey Attorney General also found a significant number of contempt of cop cases while investigating racial profiling by the New Jersey State Police, and concluded that "improper attitude and demeanor" of officers toward the public was a nationwide problem.
Terminology
Contempt of cop has been in use since the 1960s. The word cop is slang for police officer; the phrase is derived by analogy from contempt of court,
which, unlike contempt of cop, is an offense in many jurisdictions
(e.g., California Penal Code section 166, making contempt of court a
misdemeanor). Similar to this is the phrase "disturbing the police", a
play on "disturbing the peace". It has also been referred to as
"flunking the attitude test".
In some areas it is called P.O.P. (for "Pissing Off the Police") when a
suspect's demeanor influences officer's response to people. "Leniency
might be afforded to persons who treat officers with respect, whereas
the heavy hand of the law is extended to persons who are disrespectful,
ill mannered or rude."
In crime writing and works about police misconduct, it has become something of a cliché to sardonically refer to contempt of cop as the worst possible crime.
Federal case law
Several
federal court decisions have found that expressing contempt for police
officers is protected speech under the First Amendment. In City of Houston v. Hill (1987), the Supreme Court
ruled that the First Amendment "protects a significant amount of verbal
criticism and challenge directed at police officers." In Swartz v. Insogna (2013), the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled that extending the middle finger at an officer is not grounds to stop or arrest an individual.
However, individual state laws that do not directly pertain to police
officers, such as statutes for disorderly conduct and curse and abuse,
can be legally used in such an arrest.
In March 2019, the Federal Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
ruled in favor of a woman who filed suit against a police officer who
increased the severity of a traffic ticket after she extended her middle
finger at him upon receiving the original ticket. In June 2019, the Federal Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
ruled in favor of a man who filed suit against a police officer who
arrested him for shouting a derogatory obscenity at him. In both cases,
the courts ruled that the plaintiffs' First Amendment rights had been violated and rejected the officers' assertions of qualified immunity.
Racial or ethnic profiling is the act of suspecting or targeting a person on the basis of assumed characteristics or behavior of a racial or ethnic group, rather than on individual suspicion.
Racial profiling, however, is not limited only to an individual's
ethnicity or race, but can also be based on the individual's religion,
or national origin. In European countries, the term "ethnic profiling" is also used instead of racial profiling.
Canada
Accusations of racial profiling of visible minorities who accuse police of targeting them due to their ethnic background is a growing concern in Canada. In 2005, the Kingston Police released the first study ever in Canada which pertains to racial profiling. The study focused on the city of Kingston, Ontario,
a small city where most of the inhabitants are white. The study showed
that black-skinned people were 3.7 times more likely to be pulled over
by police than white-skinned people, while Asian and White people are
less likely to be pulled over than more than Black people.
Several police organizations condemned this study and suggested more
studies like this would make them hesitant to pull over visible
minorities.
Canadian Aboriginals are more likely to be charged with crimes, particularly on reserves.
The Canadian crime victimization survey does not collect data on the
ethnic origin of perpetrators, so comparisons between incidence of
victimizations and incidence of charging are impossible.
Although aboriginal persons make up 3.6% of Canada's population, they
account for 20% of Canada's prison population. This may show how racial
profiling increases effectiveness of police, or be a result of racial
profiling, as they are watched more intensely than others.
In February 2010, an investigation of the Toronto Star
daily newspaper found that black people across Toronto were three times
more likely to be stopped and documented by police than white people.
To a lesser extent, the same seemed true for people described by police
as having "brown" skin (South Asians, Arabs and Latinos). This was the result of an analysis of 1.7 million contact cards filled out by Toronto Police officers in the period 2003–2008.
The Ontario Human Rights Commission states that "police services
have acknowledged that racial profiling does occur and have taken [and
are taking] measures to address [the issue], including upgrading
training for officers, identifying officers at risk of engaging in
racial profiling, and improving community relations". Ottawa Police
addressed this issue and planned on implementing a new policy regarding
officer racially profiling persons, "the policy explicitly forbids
officers from investigating or detaining anyone based on their race and
will force officers to go through training on racial profiling". This policy was implemented after the 2008 incident where an African-Canadian woman was strip searched by members of the Ottawa police. There is a video showing the strip search
where one witnesses the black woman being held to the ground and then
having her bra and shirt cut ripped/cut off by a member of the Ottawa
Police Force which was released to the viewing of the public in 2010.
China
The Chinese
government has been using a facial recognition technology, analysing
output of surveillance cameras to track and control Uyghurs, a Muslim minority in China's Western province of Xinjiang. The extent of the vast system was published in the spring of 2019 by the NYT who called it "automated racism".
In research projects aided by European institutions it has combined the
facial output with people's DNA, to create an ethnic profile. The DNA
was collected at the prison camps, which are interning more than one
million Uyghurs, as had been corroborated in November 2019 by data
leaks, such as the China Cables.
Germany
In
February 2012, the first court ruling concerning racial profiling in
German police policy, allowing police to use skin color and "non-German
ethnic origin" to select persons who will be asked for identification in
spot-checks for illegal immigrants. Subsequently, it was decided legal for a person submitted to a spot-check to compare the policy to that of the SS in public.
A higher court later overruled the earlier decision declaring the
racial profiling unlawful and in violation of anti-discrimination
provisions in Art. 3 Basic Law and the General Equal Treatment Act of
2006.
The civil rights organisation Büro zur Umsetzung von Gleichbehandlung
(Office for the Implementation of Equal Treatment) makes a distinction
between criminal profiling, which is legitimate in Germany, and ethnic
profiling, which is not.
According to a 2016 report by the Interior ministry in Germany,
there had been an increase in hate crimes and violence against migrant
groups in Germany. The reports concluded that there were more than 10 attacks per day against migrants in Germany in 2016.
This report from Germany garnered the attention of the United Nations,
which alleged that people of African descent face widespread
discrimination in Germany.
A 2016 statement by the Office of the UN High Commissioner for
Human Rights after a visit to Germany said that "although the [German]
constitution guarantees equality, bans racial discrimination and
enshrines the inviolability of human dignity, these principles are not
put into practice." and called racial profiling against Africans
endemic.
Israel
In 1972, terrorists from the Japanese Red Army launched an attack that led to the deaths of at least 24 people at Ben Gurion Airport.
Since then, security at the airport has relied on a number of
fundamentals, including a heavy focus on what Raphael Ron, former
director of security at Ben Gurion, terms the "human factor", which he
generalized as "the inescapable fact that terrorist attacks are carried out by people who can be found and stopped by an effective security methodology."
As part of its focus on this so-called "human factor," Israeli security
officers interrogate travelers using racial profiling, singling out
those who appear to be Arab based on name or physical appearance.
Additionally, all passengers, including those who do not appear to be
of Arab descent, are questioned as to why they are traveling to Israel,
followed by several general questions about the trip in order to search
for inconsistencies. Although numerous civil rights groups have demanded an end to the profiling, the Israeli government maintains that it is both effective and unavoidable. According to Ariel Merari, an Israeli terrorism expert,
"it would be foolish not to use profiling when everyone knows that most
terrorists come from certain ethnic groups. They are likely to be Muslim and young, and the potential threat justifies inconveniencing a certain ethnic group."
Mexico
The
General Law on Population (Reglamento de la Ley General de Poblacion) of
2000 in Mexico has been cited as being used to racially profile and
abuse immigrants to Mexico.
Mexican law makes illegal immigration punishable by law and allows law
officials great discretion in identifying and questioning illegal
immigrants. Mexico has been criticized for its immigration policy. Chris Hawley of USA Today
stated that "Mexico has a law that is no different from Arizona's",
referring to legislation which gives local police forces the power to
check documents of people suspected of being in the country illegally.
Immigration and human rights activists have also noted that Mexican
authorities frequently engage in racial profiling, harassment, and
shakedowns against migrants from Central America.
Spain
Racial profiling by police forces in Spain is a common practice. A study by the University of Valencia, found that people of non-white aspect are up to ten times more likely to be stopped by the police on the street. Amnesty International accused Spanish authorities of using racial and ethnic profiling, with police singling out people who do not look Caucasian in the street and public places.
In 2011, the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD)
urged the Spanish government to take "effective measures" to ethnic
profiling, including the modification of existing laws and regulations
which permit its practice. In 2013, the UN Special Rapporteur,
Mutuma Ruteere, described the practice of ethnic profiling by Spanish
law enforcement officers "a persisting and pervasive problem". In 2014, the Spanish government approved a law which prohibited racial profiling by police forces.
'Racial
profiling' refers to the practice by law enforcement officials of
targeting individuals for suspicion of crime based on the individual's
race, ethnicity, religion or national origin. Criminal profiling,
generally, as practiced by police, is the reliance on a group of
characteristics they believe to be associated with crime which
unfortunately leads to innocent people dying. Examples of racial
profiling are the use of race to determine which drivers to stop for
minor traffic violations (commonly referred to as 'driving while black,
Asian, Native American, Middle Eastern, Hispanic, or brown'), or the use
of race to determine which pedestrians to search for illegal
contraband.
Besides such disproportionate searching of African Americans, and members of other minority groups, other examples of racial profiling by law enforcement in the U.S. include the targeting of Hispanic and Latino Americans in the investigation of illegal immigration; and the focus on Middle Eastern and South Asians present in the country in screenings for ties to Islamic terrorism.
These suspicions may be held on the basis of belief that members of a
target racial group commit crimes at a higher rate than that of other
racial groups.
According to Minnesota House of Representatives
analyst Jim Cleary, "there appears to be at least two clearly
distinguishable definitions of the term 'racial profiling': a narrow
definition and a broad definition... Under the narrow definition, racial
profiling occurs when a police officer stops and/or searches someone
solely on the basis of the person's race or ethnicity... Under the
broader definition, racial profiling occurs whenever police routinely
use race as a factor that, along with an accumulation of other factors,
causes an officer to react with suspicion and take action."
A study conducted by Domestic Human Rights Program of Amnesty
International USA, found that racial profiling had increased from the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks to 2004, and that state laws had
provided inconsistent and insufficient protections against racial
profiling.
More commonly in the United States, racial profiling is referred to regarding its use by law enforcement
at the local, state, and federal levels, and its use leading to
discrimination against people in the African American, Native American,
Asian, Pacific Islander, Latino, Arab, and Muslim communities of the
U.S.
History
Sociologist
Robert Staples emphasizes that racial profiling in the U.S. is "not
merely a collection of individual offenses" but, rather, a systemic
phenomenon across American society, dating back to the era of slavery,
and, until the 1950s, was, in some instances, "codified into law". Enshrinement of racial profiling ideals in United States law can be exemplified by several major periods in U.S. history.
In 1693, Philadelphia's court officials gave police legal
authority to stop and detain any Negro (freed or enslaved) seen
wandering about.
Starting around the mid 18th century, slave patrols were used to stop
slaves at any location in order to ensure they were being lawful. In the mid 19th century, the Black Codes,
a set of statutes, laws and rules, were enacted in the South in order
to regain control over freed and former slaves and relegate African
Americans to a lower social status. Similar discriminatory practices continued through the Jim Crow era.
Prior to U.S. immigration restrictions following the September 11 attacks, Japanese immigrants were rejected U.S. citizenship during World War II, for fear of disloyalty following the attacks on Pearl Harbor. What resulted was the government's preemptive internment
of more than 100,000 Japanese immigrants and Japanese American citizens
during World War II, as a measure against potential Japanese espionage,
constituting a form of racial profiling.
In the late 1990s racial profiling became politicized when police
and other law enforcement fell under scrutiny for the disproportionate
traffic stops of minority motorists. Researchers from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) provided evidence of widespread racial profiling, one study showed that while blacks only made up 42 percent of New Jersey's driving population, they accounted for 79 percent of motorists stopped in the state.
Supreme Court cases
Terry v. Ohio
was the first challenge to racial profiling in the United States in
1968. This case was about African American people who were thought to be
stealing.
The police officer arrested the three men and searched them and found a
gun on two of the three men, and John W. Terry (one of the three men
searched) was convicted and sentenced to jail. Terry challenged the arrest on the grounds that it violated the search and seizure clause of the Fourth Amendment; however, in an 8-1 ruling, the Supreme Court decided that the police officer acted in a reasonable manner, and with reasonable suspicion, under the Fourth Amendment. The decision in this case allowed for greater police discretion in identifying suspicious or illegal activities.
In 1975, United States v. Brignoni-Ponce
was decided. Felix Humberto Brignoni-Ponce was traveling in his vehicle
and was stopped by border patrol agents because he appeared to be Mexican.
The agents questioned Brignoni-Ponce and the other passengers in the
car and discovered that the passengers were illegal immigrants, and the
border agents subsequently arrested all occupants of the vehicle. The Supreme Court
determined that the testimonies that led to the arrests, in this case,
were not valid, as they were obtained in the absence of reasonable
suspicion and the vehicle was stopped without probable cause, as
required under the Fourth Amendment.
In 1996, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in United States v. Armstrong
that disparity in conviction rates is not unconstitutional in the
absence of data that "similarly situated" defendants of another race
were disparately prosecuted,
overturning a 9th Circuit Court ruling that was based on "the
presumption that people of all races commit all types of crimes – not
with the premise that any type of crime is the exclusive province of any
particular racial or ethnic group", waving away challenges based on the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution
which guarantees the right to be safe from search and seizure without a
warrant (which is to be issued "upon probable cause"), and the Fourteenth Amendment
which requires that all citizens be treated equally under the law. To
date, there have been no known cases in which any U.S. court dismissed a
criminal prosecution
because the defendant was targeted based on race. This Supreme Court
decision doesn't prohibit government agencies from enacting policies
prohibiting it in the field by agents and employees.
The Supreme Court also decided the case of Whren v. United States
in 1996. Michael Whren was arrested on felony drug charges after police
officers observed his truck sitting at an intersection for a long
period of time before he failed to use his turn signal to drive away, and the officers stopped his vehicle for the traffic violation. Upon approaching the vehicle the officers observed that Whren was in possession of crack cocaine.
The Court determined the officers did not violate the Fourth Amendment
through an unreasonable search and seizure and that the officers were
permitted to stop the vehicle after it committed a traffic violation and
the subsequent search of the vehicle was permitted regardless of the
pretext of the officers.
In June 2001 the Bureau of Justice Assistance, a component of the Office of Justice Programs of the United States Department of Justice,
awarded a Northeastern research team a grant to create the web-based
Racial Profiling Data Collection Resource Center. It now maintains a
website designed to be a central clearinghouse for police agencies,
legislators, community leaders, social scientists, legal researchers,
and journalists to access information about current data collection
efforts, legislation and model policies, police-community initiatives,
and methodological tools that can be used to collect and analyze racial
profiling data. The website contains information on the background of
data collection, jurisdictions currently collecting data, community
groups, legislation that is pending and enacted in states across the
country, and has information on planning and implementing data
collection procedures, training officers in to implement these systems,
and analyzing and reporting the data and results.
Statutory law
In April 2010, Arizona enacted SB 1070,
a law that would require law-enforcement officers to verify the
citizenship of individuals they stop if they have reasonable suspicion
that they may be in the United States illegally. The law states that
"Any person who is arrested shall have the person's immigration status
determined before the person is released". United States federal law
requires that all immigrants who remain in the United States for more
than 30 days register with the U.S. government. In addition, all immigrants age 18 and over are required to have their registration documents with them at all times.
Arizona made it a misdemeanor crime for an illegal immigrant 14 years
of age and older to be found without carrying these documents at all
times.
According to SB 1070, law-enforcement officials may not consider
"race, color, or national origin" in the enforcement of the law, except
under the circumstances allowed under the United States and Arizona
constitutions. In June 2012, the majority of SB 1070 was struck down by the United States Supreme Court, while the provision allowing for an immigration check on detained persons was upheld.
Some states contain "stop and identify" laws that allow officers
to detain suspected persons and ask for identification, and if there is a
failure to provide identification punitive measures can be taken by the
officer.
As of 2017, there are 24 states that have "stop and identify" statues;
however, the criminal punishments and requirements to produce
identification vary from state to state.
Utah HB 497 requires residents to carry relevant identification at all
times in order to prove resident status or immigration status; even so,
police may still dismiss provided documents under suspicion of
falsification and arrest or detain suspects.
In early 2001, a bill was introduced to Congress named "End Racial Profiling Act of 2001" but lost support in the wake of the September 11 attacks. The bill was re-introduced to Congress in 2010 but also failed to gain the support it needed.
Several U.S. states now have reporting requirements for incidents of
racial profiling. Texas, for example, requires all agencies to provide
annual reports to its Law Enforcement Commission. The requirement began
on September 1, 2001, when the State of Texas passed a law to require
all law enforcement agencies in the state to begin collecting certain
data in connection to traffic or pedestrian stops beginning on January
1, 2002. Based on that data, the law mandated law enforcement agencies
to submit a report to the law enforcement agencies' governing body
beginning March 1, 2003 and each year thereafter no later than March 1.
The law is found in the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure beginning with
Article 2.131.
Additionally, on January 1, 2011, all Texas law enforcement
agencies began submitting annual reports to the Texas State Law
Enforcement Officers Standards and Education Commission. The submitted
reports can be accessed on the Commission's website for public review.
In June 2003, the Department of Justice issued its Guidance Regarding the Use of Race by Federal Law Enforcement Agencies forbidding racial profiling by federal law enforcement officials.
Support
Supporters defend the practice of racial profiling by emphasizing the crime control model. They claim that the practice is both efficient and ideal due to utilizing the laws of probability in order to determine one's criminality.[64] This system focuses on controlling crime with swift judgment, bestowing full discretion on police to handle what they perceive as a threat to society.
The use and support of racial profiling has surged in recent
years, namely in North America due to heightened tension and awareness
following the events of 9/11. As a result, the issue of profiling has created a debate that centers on the values of equality and self-defense. Supporters uphold the stance that sacrifices must be made in order to maintain national safety, even if it warrants differential treatment. According to a 2011 survey by Rasmussen Reports, a majority of Americans support profiling as necessary "in today's society".
In December 2010, Fernando Mateo, then president of the New York
State Federation of Taxi Drivers, made pro-racial profiling remarks in
the case of gun-shot taxi-cab driver: "You know sometimes it's good that
we are racially profiled because the God's-honest truth is that 99
percent of the people that are robbing, stealing, killing these drivers
are blacks and Hispanics." "Clearly everyone knows I'm not racist. I'm
Hispanic and my father is black. ... My father is blacker than Al Sharpton." When confronted with accusations of racial profiling the police
claim that they do not participate in it. They emphasize that numerous
factors (such as race, interactions, and dress) are used to determine if
a person is involved in criminal activity and that race is not a sole
factor in the decision to detain or question an individual.
They further claim that the job of policing is far more imperative than
to concerns of minorities or interest groups claiming unfair targeting.
Proponents of racial profiling believe that inner city residents
of Hispanic communities are subjected to racial profiling because of
theories such as the "gang suppression model". The "gang suppression
model" is believed by some to be the basis for increased policing, the
theory being based on the idea that Latinos are violent and out of
control and are therefore "in need of suppression". Based on research, the criminalization of a people can lead to abuses of power on behalf of law enforcement.
Criticism
Critics
of racial profiling argue that the individual rights of a suspect are
violated if race is used as a factor in that suspicion. Notably, civil
liberties organizations such as the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) have labeled racial profiling as a form of discrimination, stating, "Discrimination based on race, ethnicity, religion, nationality or on any other particular identity undermines the basic human rights and freedoms to which every person is entitled."
Conversely, those in opposition of the police tactic employ the teachings of the due process model, arguing that minorities are not granted equal rights and are thus subject to unjust treatment. In addition, some argue that the singling out of individuals based on their ethnicity comes in violation of the Rule of Law, having voided all instance of neutrality. Those in opposition also make note of the role that the news media plays within the conflict. The general public internalizes
much of its knowledge from the media, relying on sources to convey
information of events that transpire outside of their immediate domain. In conjunction with this power, media outlets are aware of the public's intrigue with controversy and have been known to construct headlines that entail moral panic and negativity.
In the case of racial profiling drivers, the ethnic backgrounds
of drivers stopped by traffic police in the U.S. suggests the
possibility of biased policing against non-white drivers.
Black drivers felt that they were being pulled over by law enforcement
officers simply because of their skin color. However, some argue in
favor of the "veil of darkness" hypothesis, which states that police are
less likely to know the race of a driver before they make a stop at
nighttime as opposed to in the daytime. Referring to the veil of
darkness hypothesis, it is suggested that if the race distribution of
drivers stopped during the day differs from that of drivers stopped at
night, officers are engaging in racial profiling. For example, in one
study done by Jeffrey Grogger and Greg Ridgeway, the veil of darkness
hypothesis was used to determine whether or not racial profiling in
traffic stops occurs in Oakland, California. The conductors found that
there was little evidence of racial profiling in traffic stops made in
Oakland.
Research through random sampling in the South Tucson, Arizona
area has established that immigration authorities sometimes target the
residents of barrios with the use of possibly discriminatory policing
based on racial profiling.
Author Mary Romero writes that immigration raids are often carried out
at places of gathering and cultural expression such as grocery stores
based on the fluency of language of a person (e.g. being bilingual
especially in Spanish) and skin color of a person.
She goes on to state that immigration raids are often conducted with a
disregard for due process, and that these raids lead people from these
communities to distrust law enforcement.
In a recent journal comparing the 1990s to the present, studies
have established that when the community criticized police for targeting
the black community during traffic stops it received more media
coverage and toned down racial profiling. However, whenever there was a
significant lack of media coverage or concern with racial profiling, the
amount of arrests and traffic stops for the African-American community
would significantly rise again.
New York Police Department
Suspicionless surveillance of Muslims
Between 2003 and 2014, the New York City Police Department
(NYPD) operated the "Demographics Unit" (later renamed "Zone Assessment
Unit") which mapped communities of 28 "ancestries of interest",
including those of Muslims, Arabs, and Albanians. Plain-clothed
detectives were sent to public places such as coffee shops, mosques and
parks to observe and record the public sentiment, as well as map
locations where potential terrorists could "blend in". In its 11 years
of operation, however, the unit did not generate any information leading
to a criminal charge. A series of publications by the Associated Press during 2011–12 gave rise to public pressure to close the unit, and it was finally disbanded in 2014.
Racial profiling not only occurs on the streets but also in many institutions. Much like the book Famous all over Town where the author Danny Santiago
mentions this type of racism throughout the novel. According to Jesper
Ryberg's 2011 article "Racial Profiling And Criminal Justice" in the Journal of Ethics,
"It is argued that, given the assumption that criminals are currently
being punished too severely in Western countries, the apprehension of
more criminals may not constitute a reason in favor of racial profiling
at all." It has been stated in a scholarly journal that for over 30
years the use of racial and/or demographic profiling by local
authorities and higher level law enforcement's continue to proceed. NYPD
Street cops use racial profiling more often, due to the widespread
patterns. They first frisk them to check whether they have enough
evidence to be even arrested for the relevant crime. "As a practical
matter, the stops display a measurable racial disparity: black and
Hispanic people generally represent more than 85 percent of those
stopped by the police, though their combined populations make up a small
share of the city's racial composition." (Baker)
Stop-and-frisk
The NYPD has been subject to much criticism for its "stop-and-frisk" tactics. According to statistics on the NYPD's stop and frisk policies, collected by the Center for Constitutional Rights,
51% of the people stopped by the police were Black, 33% were Latino,
and 9% were White, and only 2% of all stops resulted in contraband
findings. Starting in 2013, use of racial profiling by the NYPD was drastically curtailed, as New York Mayor Bill de Blasio was campaigning for the office, and this policy has continued into his term.
In June 2019, the independent Office of the Inspector General for
the NYPD (OIG-NYPD), under New York City's Department of Investigation
(DOI), released a report
which found deficiencies in how NYPD tracked and investigated
allegations of racial profiling and other types of biased policing
against NYPD officers. The report concluded that NYPD had never substantiated any complaints of biased policing since it began tracking them in 2014.
Dealing with terrorism
The September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon
have led to targeting of some Muslims and Middle Easterners as
potential terrorists and, according to some, are targeted by the
national government through preventive measures similar to those
practiced by local law enforcement. The national government has passed laws, such as the Patriot Act
of 2001, to increase surveillance of potential threats to national
security as a result of the events that occurred during 9/11.
It is argued that the passage of these laws and provisions by the
national government leads to justification of preventative methods, such
as racial profiling, that has been controversial for racial profiling
and leads to further minority distrust in the national government.
One of the techniques used by the FBI to target Muslims was monitoring
100 mosques and business in Washington DC and threatened to deport
Muslims who did not agree to serve as informers.
The FBI denied to be taking part in blanket profiling and argued that
they were trying to build trust within the Muslim community.
On September 14, 2001, three days after the September 11th attacks,
an Indian American motorist and three family members were pulled over
and ticketed by a Maryland state trooper because their car had broken
taillights. The trooper interrogated the family, questioned them about
their nationality, and asked for proof of citizenship. When the motorist
said that their passports were at home, the officer allegedly stated,
"You are lying. You are Arabs involved in terrorism." He ordered them
out of the car, had them put their hands on the hood, and searched the
car. When he discovered a knife in a toolbox, the officer handcuffed the
driver and later reported that the driver "wore and carried a butcher
knife, a dangerous, deadly weapon, concealed upon and about his person."
The driver was detained for several hours but eventually released.
In December 2001, an American citizen of Middle Eastern descent named Assem Bayaa cleared all the security checks at Los Angeles airport and attempted to board a flight to New York City.
Upon boarding, he was told that he made the passengers uncomfortable by
being on board the plane and was asked to leave. Once off the plane, he
wasn't searched or questioned any further and the only consolation he
was given was a boarding pass for the next flight. He filed a lawsuit on
the basis of discrimination against United Airlines.
United Airlines filed a counter motion which was dismissed by a
district judge on October 11, 2002. In June 2005, the ACLU announced a
settlement between Bayaa and United Airlines who still disputed Bayaa's
allegations, but noted that the settlement "was in the best interest of
all".
The events of 9/11 also led to restrictions in immigration laws.
The U.S. government imposed stricter immigration quotas to maintain
national security at their national borders. In 2002, men over sixteen
years old who entered the country from twenty-five Middle Eastern
countries and North Korea were required to be photographed,
fingerprinted, interviewed and have their financial information copied,
and had to register again before leaving the country under the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System. No charges of terrorism resulted from the program, and it was deactivated in April 2011.
In 2006, 18 young men from the Greater Toronto Area were charged with conspiring to carry out a series of bombings and beheadings, resulting in a swell of media coverage. Two media narratives stood out with the former claiming that a militant subculture was forming within the Islamic community while the latter attributed the case to a bunch of deviant youth who had too much testosterone brewing.
Eventually, it was shown that government officials had been tracking
the group for some time, having supplied the youth with the necessary compounds to create explosives, prompting critics to discern whether the whole situation was a set-up. Throughout the case, many factors were put into question but none more than the Muslim community who faced much scrutiny and vitriol due to the build-up of negative headlines stemming from the media.
Studies
Statistical
data demonstrates that although policing practices and policies vary
widely across the United States, a large disparity between racial groups
in regards to traffic stops and searches exists. However, whether this
is due to racial profiling or the fact that different races are involved
in crime in different rates, is still highly debated. Based on academic
search, various studies have been conducted regarding the existence of
racial profiling in traffic and pedestrian stops. For motor vehicle
searches, academic research showed that the probability of a successful
search is very similar across races. This suggests that police officers
are not motivated by racial preferences but by the desire to maximize
the probability of a successful search. Similar evidence has been found
for pedestrian stops, with identical ratios of stops to arrests for
different races.
The studies have been published in various Academic Journals
aimed towards Academic professionals as well practitioners such as law
enforcers. Some of these journals include, Police Quarterly and the
Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, so that both sides of the
argument are present and evaluated. Of those gathered the most noted
study refuting racial profiling was the conducted using the veil of
darkness hypothesis stating that it will be difficult, if not
impossible, for officers to discern race in the twilight hours. The
results of this study concluded that the ratio of different races
stopped by New York cops is about the same for all races tested.
Some of the most referenced organizations, who offer evidence on
the existence of racial profiling, are The American Civil Liberties
Union, which conducted studies in various major U.S. cities, and RAND.
In a study conducted in Cincinnati, Ohio, it was concluded that "Blacks
were between three and five times more likely to (a) be asked if they
were carrying drugs or weapons, (b) be asked to leave the vehicle, (c)
be searched, (d) have a passenger searched, and (e) have the vehicle
physically searched in a study conducted. This conclusion was based on
the analysis of 313 randomly selected, traffic stop police tapes
gathered from 2003 to 2004."
A 2001 study analyzing data from the Richmond, Virginia
Police Department found that African Americans were disproportionately
stopped compared to their proportion in the general population, but that
they were not searched more often than Whites. The same study found
that Whites were more likely than African Americans to be "the subjects
of consent searches," and that Whites were more likely to be ticked or
arrested than minorities, while minorities were more likely to be
warned.
A 2002 study found that African Americans were more likely to be
watched and stopped by police when driving through white areas, despite
the fact that African Americans' "hit rates" were lower in such areas.
A 2004 study analyzing traffic stop data from suburban police
department found that although minorities were disproportionately
stopped, there is only a "very weak" relationship between race and
police decisions to stop.
Another 2004 study found that young black and Hispanic men were more
likely to be issued citations, arrested, and to have force used against
them by police, even after controlling for numerous other factors.
A 2005 study found that the percent of speeding drivers who were black (as identified by other drivers) on the New Jersey Turnpike was very similar to the percent of people pulled over for speeding who were black. A 2004 study looking at motor vehicle searches in Missouri found that unbiased policing did not explain the racial disparity in such searches. In contrast, a 2006 study examining data from Kansas
concluded that its results were "consistent with the notion that police
in Wichita choose their search strategies to maximize successful
searches,"
and a 2009 study found that racial disparities in people being searched
by the Washington state patrol was "likely not the result of
intentional or purposeful discrimination." Another 2009 study found that police in Boston
were more likely to search if their race was different from that of the
suspect, in contrast to what would be expected if preference based
discrimination was not occurring (which would be that police search
decisions are independent of officer race).
A 2010 study found that black drivers were more likely to be
searched at traffic stops in white neighborhoods, whereas white drivers
were more likely to be searched by white officers at stops in black
neighborhoods. A 2013 study found that police were more likely to issue warnings and citations, but not arrests, to young black men. A 2014 study analyzing data from Rhode Island
found that blacks were more likely than whites to be frisked and, to a
lesser extent, searched while driving; the study concluded that "Biased
policing is largely the product of implicit stereotypes that are
activated in contexts in which Black drivers appear out of place and in
police actions that require quick decisions providing little time to
monitor cognitions."
As a response to the shooting of Michael Brown
in Ferguson on August 9, 2014, the Department of Justice recruited in
September a team of criminal justice researchers to study racial bias in
law enforcement in five cities and to subsequently devise strategic
recommendations.
In its March 2015 report on the Ferguson Police Department, the
Department of Justice found that although only 67% of the population of
Ferguson was black, 85% of people pulled over by police in Ferguson were
black, as were 93 percent of those arrested and 90 percent of those
given citations by the police.
A 2020 study in the journal Nature that analyzed 100 million
traffic stops found that "black drivers were less likely to be stopped
after sunset, when a ‘veil of darkness’ masks one’s race, suggesting
bias in stop decisions", "the bar for searching black and Hispanic
drivers was lower than that for searching white drivers", and
"legalization of recreational marijuana reduced the number of searches
of white, black and Hispanic drivers—but the bar for searching black and
Hispanic drivers was still lower than that for white drivers
post-legalization". The authors concluded that "police stops and search
decisions suffer from persistent racial bias and point to the value of
policy interventions to mitigate these disparities".
Racial profiling in retail
Shopping
forms one major avenue for racial profiling. General discrimination
devalues the experience of shopping, arguably raising the costs and
reducing the rewards derived from consumption for the individual. When a
store's sales staff appears hesitant to serve black shoppers or
suspects that they are prospective shoplifters, the act of shopping no
longer becomes a form of leisure.
Racial profiling in retail was prominent enough in 2001 that
psychology researchers such as Jerome D. Williams coined the term
"shopping while black", which describes the experience of being denied
service or given poor service because one is black. Commonly, "shopping
while black" involves, but is not limited to, a black or non-white
customer being followed around and/or closely monitored by a clerk or
guard who suspects he or she may steal, based on the color of their
skin. It can also involve being denied store access, being refused
service, use of ethnic slurs, being searched, being asked for extra
forms of identification, having purchases limited, being required to
have a higher credit limit than other customers, being charged a higher
price, or being asked more or more rigorous questions on applications.These
negative shopping experiences can directly contribute to the decline of
shopping in stores as individuals will come to prefer to shop online,
avoiding interactions that are deemed degrading, embarrassing, and
highly offensive.
Public opinion
Perceptions of race and safety
In
a particular study, Higgins, Gabbidon, and Vito studied the
relationship between public opinion on racial profiling in conjunction
with their viewpoint of race relations and their perceived awareness of
safety. It was found that race relations had a statistical correlation
with the legitimacy of racial profiling. Specifically, results showed
that those who believed that racial profiling was widespread and that
racial tension would never be fixed were more likely to be opposed to
racial profiling than those who did not believe racial profiling was as
widespread or that racial tensions would be fixed eventually. On the
other hand, in reference to the perception of safety, the research
concluded that one's perception of safety had no influence on public
opinion of racial profiling. Higgins, Gabbidon, and Vito acknowledge
that this may not have been the case immediately after 9/11, but state
that any support of racial profiling based on safety was "short-lived".
Influence of religious affiliation
One
particular study focused on individuals who self-identified as
religiously affiliated and their relationship with racial profiling. By
using national survey data from October 2001, researcher Phillip H. Kim
studied which individuals were more likely to support racial profiling.
The research concludes that individuals that identified themselves as
either Jewish, Catholic, or Protestant showed higher statistical numbers
that illustrated support for racial profiling in comparison to
individuals who identified themselves as non-religious.
Contexts of terrorism and crime
After
the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States,
according to Johnson, a new debate concerning the appropriateness of
racial profiling in the context of terrorism took place. According to
Johnson, prior to the September 11, 2001 attacks the debate on racial
profiling within the public targeted primarily African-Americans and
Latino Americans with enforced policing on crime and drugs. The attacks
on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon changed the focus of the
racial profiling debate from street crime to terrorism. According to a
June 4–5, 2002 FOX News/Opinion Dynamics Poll, 54% of Americans approved
of using "racial profiling to screen Arab male airline passengers." A
2002 survey by Public Agenda tracked the attitudes toward the racial
profiling of Blacks and people of Middle Eastern descent. In this
survey, 52% of Americans said there was "no excuse" for law enforcement
to look at African Americans with greater suspicion and scrutiny because
they believe they are more likely to commit crimes, but only 21% said
there was "no excuse" for extra scrutiny of Middle Eastern people.
However, using data from an internet survey based experiment
performed in 2006 on a random sample of 574 adult university students, a
study was conducted that examined public approval for the use of racial
profiling to prevent crime and terrorism. It was found that
approximately one third of students approved the use of racial profiling
in general. Furthermore, it was found that students were equally likely
to approve of the use of racial profiling to prevent crime as to
prevent terrorism-33% and 35.8% respectively. The survey also asked
respondents whether they would approve of racial profiling across
different investigative contexts.
The data showed that 23.8% of people approved of law enforcement
using racial profiling as a means to stop and question someone in a
terrorism context while 29.9% of people approved of racial profiling in a
crime context for the same situation. It was found that 25.3% of people
approved of law enforcement using racial profiling as a means to search
someone's bags or packages in a terrorism context while 33.5% of people
approved of racial profiling in a crime context for the same situation.
It was also found that 16.3% of people approved of law enforcement wire
tapping a person's phone based upon racial profiling in the context of
terrorism while 21.4% of people approved of racial profiling in a crime
context for the same situation. It was also found that 14.6% of people
approved of law enforcement searching someone's home based upon racial
profiling in a terrorism context while 18.2% of people approved of
racial profiling in a crime context for the same situation.
The study also found that white students were more likely to
approve of racial profiling to prevent terrorism than nonwhite students.
However, it was found that white students and nonwhite students held
the same views about racial profiling in the context of crime. It was
also found that foreign born students were less likely to approve of
racial profiling to prevent terrorism than non-foreign born students
while both groups shared similar views on racial profiling in the
context of crime.