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NEWS RELEASE STATISTICS ON TRAFFIC STOP RACIAL PROFILING SHOW BACKSLIDING, ACLU REPORT FINDS
In a 15-page report released today, the ACLU of Rhode Island said that a review of the latest statistics on police department traffic stops in the state shows an increase in searches of racial minorities even as white drivers are more likely to be found with contraband when searches are conducted. The statistics cover January through March 2005, the second quarter of a year-long study mandated by state law. That collection of data follows up a similar, comprehensive study of traffic stop data for 2001-2002.
The ACLU issued an earlier report in May that examined data for the first quarter of this latest study, covering October-November 2004. The major findings contained in today’s report generally echo those of the earlier report, as well as the 2001-2002 study: minority drivers remained more than twice as likely as whites to be searched by police, but white drivers were still more likely than racial minorities to be found with contraband when searched. In several respects, however, the ACLU said its latest analysis showed backsliding by a number of departments since the first quarter’s analysis.
Among the major findings contained in the ACLU’s report:
In short, minority drivers remain the disproportionate targets of discretionary searches of police, despite the fact that minority searches are even less likely to reveal contraband than are searches of white drivers (which are themselves unproductive.) “While this trend has been evident since 2001, when the collection of traffic stops data was initiated,” states the report, “the large and growing body of data now available makes it both more apparent and less dismissible.”
The ACLU reiterated the need for implementation of a series of detailed recommendations contained in its May report. The ACLU emphasized one in particular: to require all police departments to prepare reports on a monthly basis confirming that the traffic stop cards have been reviewed for disparities, and indicating whether that review has found any patterns relating to officers, locations, or practices that may be responsible for the disparity. “This type of review is,” according to the report, “the only sure way to get to the bottom of any disparity issues. Unless and until that occurs, these disproportionate figures are almost inevitably bound to persist.”
RI ACLU executive director Steven Brown said today: “The statistics for this latest quarter are very discouraging. While, individually, some police departments are showing improvement in their practices, the data as a whole show that racial disparities across the state have increased since the first three months of this latest study. It is more critical than ever that police departments take concrete steps to address the issue – by, among other things, carefully reviewing the traffic stop cards themselves and by requiring officers to document the grounds for any searches conducted.”
The full report can be viewed here (pdf file). |