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“The New Jim Crow” and Racial Profiling
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Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
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Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
LEGAL STANDARDS Fourth Amendment: The right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures Thirteenth Amendment: Outlawed slavery and the badges and incidences of servitude. Fourteenth Amendment: the right to Due Process and Fairness. 42 USC 1983: Allows citizens to sue police officers who violate Constitutional rights and use Excessive force in the process. California Civil Code Section 51.7 and 52.1 give citizens the right to sue for excessive force due and racial discrimination Which do you feel is violated the most? Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
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Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
JIM CROW The Jim Crow laws were state and local laws in the United States enacted between 1876 and Mandated Separate But Equal status for African Americans. De jure segregation written into law in Southern States. De Facto segregation due to behavior patterns in Northern regions School segregation declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1954 Brown v. Board of Education. Jim Crow laws generally overruled by the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. In my practice we fall back on the legacy of these legal principles to fight the vestiges of those laws Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
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Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
INCARCERATION RATES Number of black men incarcerated in federal state or local prisons in 2006: 837,000 For every 100,000 black males, an estimated 4,777 are held in federal or state prison or a local jail. By contrast, for every 100,000 white men, only 727 are estimated to be incarcerated. Keep in mind that it cost approximately $40,000 annually to incarcerate an individual. Bureau of Justice Statistics 2008 Whites: 66% of population 34% incarcerated Blacks: 12% of population 40% incarcerated Latinos: 15% of population 20% incarcerated Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
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RACIAL PROFILING DEFINED
The Department of Justice defines racial profiling as any police-initiated action that relies on the race, ethnicity, or national origin rather than the behavior. The ACLU defines "Racial Profiling" as the discriminatory practice by law enforcement officials of targeting individuals for suspicion of crime based on the individual's race, ethnicity, religion or national origin. African- American Definition: Walking While Black, Driving While Black, Being Black in the wrong place at the wrong time. Racial Profiling Stereotypes: Race, Skin Color, Clothes, Neighborhood, Time of Day, Type of Auto, Attitude Sources: Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
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OAKLAND POLICE DEPARTMENT- THE RIDERS
The Riders: The OPD has been under court monitoring since 2003, following the settlement of a civil suit against the city regarding four police officers known as the “Riders,” who were accused of planting evidence and making false arrests. As a result, the department entered into a consent decree (NSA) and agreed to implement a series of 51 reforms meant to improve its accountability. One of the most significant features of the NSA was the collection of data regarding racial profiling. Sources Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
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OPD RACIAL PROFILING STATISTICS
The Oakland Police Department’s (OPD) data collection program found that as of 2008, African Americans were 3.3 times as likely to be searched during traffic stops as whites. Whites comprise 31.3% of Oakland’s population, yet they account for only 16% of vehicle stops, and 6.7% of motorists searched. African Americans, by contrast, comprise 35.7% of Oakland’s population, yet account for 48% of vehicle stops, and 65.8% of motorists searched Searches of AA yield less criminal activity than a similar amount of searches for whites. Sources Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
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SFPD RACIAL PROFILING STATISTICS
San Francisco made an effort to keep accurate data between 2001 and 2005. The statistics bore out that police arrested black people at a rate of 3.3 times that of whites. SF stopped reporting. Sources bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/03/07/MNGG9OGQFC1.DTL&ao=all Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
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Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
NEW YORK A Federal District Court for Eastern District of New York granted class action status to a lawsuit accusing the Police Department of using race as the basis for stopping and frisking New Yorkers in summer 2012. The class action was based on a 2008 lawsuit alleging NYPD purposefully engaged in a widespread practice of concentrating its stop-and-frisk activity on black and Hispanic neighborhoods rather than legitimate non-racial factors. The lawsuit said officers are pressured to meet quotas as part of the program and they are punished if they do not. Data revealed that over 80 percent of NYPD initiated stops are of Blacks and Latinos while Whites comprised only 20 percent. Nearly 90 percent of all stops uncovered no weapons, contraband or evidence of criminal activity. Blacks and Latinos are more likely to be frisked after a NYPD-initiated stop than Whites. Blacks and Latinos are more likely to have physical force used against them during a NYPD-initiated stop than Whites. Sources Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
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Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
OBSERVATIONS Racial profiling should not be viewed as a minor intrusion. Keep in mind that each wrongful stop has the potential for disastrous outcome particularly for the person of color. Racial profiling creates real psychological harm such as fear, hurt, rage, and sense of second-class citizenship Blueford and Rayford Copyright Law Offices of John Burris
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