Race a Factor in Texas Stops - Study Finds Police More Likely to Pull Over Blacks, Latinos
/A study commissioned by minority
advocacy groups released Thursday found that police throughout Texas
stop and search black and Latino drivers at higher rates than whites
but that officers are more likely to find drugs, guns and other
contraband on whites. The study, called "Don't Mind If I Take a Look,
Do Ya?," examined 2003 statistics provided by 1,060 law enforcement
agencies on consensual searches of vehicles during traffic stops and
how often contraband was found. It said that 3 of 5 law enforcement
agencies reported conducting searches of minority drivers at higher
rates than whites. In addition, of the agencies that searched blacks
and Latinos at higher rates, 51 percent found contraband on whites at a
higher rate than on blacks, while 58 percent found contraband in the
possession of whites at higher rates than in the possession of Latinos.
Although sponsors of the study admitted that discrepancies exist in how
the local police agencies analyzed and reported their data, they said
that overall, the statistics show a pattern of racial profiling.
"You're wasting a lot of resources that obviously can be used to fight
crime elsewhere, and you're subjecting a lot of people to unnecessary
searches," said Scott Henson, director of the police accountability
project for the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas. The report
said the overwhelming majority of law enforcement agencies "provided no
mitigating information or insight to explain disparate search rates
between Anglos and minorities." [more]