ACLU Report On DEAs
"Operation Pipeline" Documents
History Of Racial Inequity In Traffic Stops
See
Black Army Veteran
Files Lawsuit After Race Profiling Stop in Oklahoma;
12-Year-Old Son Was Terrorized by Police Dog -- Oklahoma ACLU
and links(Marijuananews note: This is one of
prohibitionisms greatest points of vulnerability.)
June 2, 1999
From The Associated Press
By Donna De La Cruz, Associated Press Writer
ACLU: DRUG WAR BASED ON RACE
NEW YORK (AP) The war on drugs has significantly increased the number of traffic stops
based on race throughout the country, the American Civil Liberties Union said in a report
released Wednesday.
"Skin color has become a substitute for evidence in a way that really resembles
Jim Crow justice on the nations highways," ACLU Executive Director Ira Glasser
said.
The Drug Enforcement Administrations "Operation
Pipeline" has trained at least 27,000 law enforcement officials on how to spot drug
couriers on highways and has unfairly created a perception that blacks, Hispanics and
other minorities are more likely to possess drugs, Glasser said.
The ACLU said the practice is so common that minority communities have given it the
derisive term "driving while black or brown." The ACLU has filed lawsuits in
Maryland, Illinois, New Jersey and Oklahoma challenging racial profiling.
DEA officials in Washington did not immediately return calls for
comment.
The ACLUs 43-page report is largely a collection of case studies from 23 states
rather than a statistical analysis.
It was released to rebut police denials that racial profiling exists, said David
Harris, a law professor at the University of Toledo in Ohio and an author of the report.
"By laying out the facts in such detail in this report, we hope that we can now
get beyond Is there really a problem? to What are we as a nation going
to do about it?" Harris said. "We dont suggest that this will be
easy, only that it is necessary if we are to call ourselves a democratic nation."
The ACLU is calling on police departments to voluntarily begin documenting incidents of
racial profiling. Some already have, such as the departments in San Diego and San Jose,
Calif.
In April, North Carolina became the first state to pass a law requiring data collection
on all traffic stops. Similar bills have been introduced in Congress and in Arkansas,
California, Connecticut, Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island, Texas and Virginia.