-Caveat Lector-

~~for educational purposes only~~
[Title 17 U.S.C. section 107]

The Roots of Racial Profiling
Why are police targeting minorities for traffic stops?
By Gene Callahan and William Anderson

It is early in the morning, and the well-dressed young
African-American man driving his Ford Explorer on I-75
sees the blue lights of the Georgia State Patrol car
behind him. The officer pulls behind the sport utility
vehicle and the young man's heart begins to sink.

He is on his way to Atlanta for a job interview. The
stop, ostensibly for speeding, should not take long, he
reasons, as the highway patrol officer walks cautiously
toward the Explorer. But instead of simply asking for
a driver's license and writing a speeding ticket, the
trooper calls for backup. Another trooper soon arrives,
his blue lights flashing as well.

The young man is told to leave his vehicle, as the
troopers announce their intention to search it. "Hey,
where did you get the money for something like this?"
one trooper asks mockingly while he starts the process
of going through every inch of the Explorer. Soon, an
officer pulls off an inside door panel. More dismantling
of the vehicle follows. They say they are looking for
drugs, but in the end find nothing. After ticketing
the driver for speeding, the two officers casually drive
off. Sitting in his now-trashed SUV, the young man weeps
in his anger and humiliation.

Unmotivated searches like this are daily occurrences on
our nation's highways, and blacks and white liberals have
been decrying the situation for several years. Many
conservatives, on the other hand, dismiss such complaints
as the exaggerations of hypersensitive minorities. Or
they say that if traffic cops do in fact pull over and
search the vehicles of African Americans disproportionately,
then such "racial profiling" is an unfortunate but
necessary component of modern crime fighting.

The incident described above should give pause to those
who think that racial profiling is simply a bogus issue
cooked up by black leaders such as Al Sharpton and Jesse
Jackson to use as another publicity tool. One of us teaches
in an MBA program that enrolls a fairly large number of
African Americans, and the story comes from one of our
students. Indeed, during class discussions, all of the
black men and many of the black women told stories of
having their late-model cars pulled over and searched for
drugs.

While incidents of racial profiling are widely deplored
today, there is little said about the actual root cause
of the phenomenon. The standard explanations for racial
profiling focus on institutional racism, but that idea
runs contrary to the sea change in social attitudes that
has taken place over the last four decades. On the contrary,
the practice of racial profiling grows from a trio of very
tangible sources, all attributable to the War on Drugs,
that $37 billion annual effort on the part of local,
state, and federal lawmakers and cops to stop the sale
and use of "illicit" substances. The sources include the
difficulty in policing victimless crimes in general and
the resulting need for intrusive police techniques; the
greater relevancy of this difficulty given the
intensification of the drug war since the 1980s; and the
additional incentive that asset forfeiture laws give
police forces to seize money and property from suspects.
Since the notion of scaling back, let alone stopping,
the drug war is too controversial for most politicians
to handle, it's hardly surprising that its role in racial
profiling should go largely unacknowledged.



The Practice of Racial Profiling

Although there is no single, universally accepted definition
of "racial profiling," we're using the term to designate
the practice of stopping and inspecting people who are
passing through public places -- such as drivers on public
highways or pedestrians in airports or urban areas -- where
the reason for the stop is a statistical profile of the
detainee's race or ethnicity.

The practice of racial profiling has been a prominent topic
for the past several years. In his February address to
Congress, President George W. Bush reported that he'd asked
Attorney General John Ashcroft "to develop specific
recommendations to end racial profiling. It's wrong, and
we will end it in America." The nomination of former New
Jersey Gov. Christine Todd Whitman as head of the
Environmental Protection Agency was challenged on the basis
of her alleged complicity in racial profiling practices in
the Garden State. Whitman had pioneered her own unique form
of "minority outreach" when she was photographed frisking
a black crime suspect in 1996. Copies of the photo were
circulated to senators prior to her confirmation vote.
(By the same token, in February 1999, Whitman fired State
Police Superintendent Carl A. Williams after he gave a
newspaper interview in which he justified racial profiling
and linked minority groups to drug trafficking.) More
recently, Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia's
non-voting member of Congress, has tried to introduce
legislation that would withhold federal highway dollars
from states that have not explicitly banned racial
profiling.

Although some observers claim that racial profiling
doesn't exist, there is an abundance of stories and
statistics that document the practice. One case where law
enforcement officers were particularly bold in their
declaration of intent involved U.S. Forest Service
officers in California's Mendocino National Forest
last year. In an attempt to stop marijuana growing,
forest rangers were told to question all Hispanics
whose cars were stopped, regardless of whether pot was
actually found in their vehicles. Tim Crews, the
publisher of the Sacramento Valley Mirror, a biweekly
newspaper, published a memo he'd gotten from a federal
law enforcement officer. The memo told park rangers "to
develop probable cause for stop...if a vehicle stop is
conducted and no marijuana is located and the vehicle
has Hispanics inside, at a minimum we would like all
individuals FI'd [field interrogated]." A spokeswoman
for Mendocino National Forest called the directive an
"unfortunate use of words."

The statistics are equally telling. Consider Crises of
the Anti-Drug Effort, 1999, a report by Chad Thevenot of
the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation, a group that
monitors abuses of the American legal system. Thevenot
writes: "76 percent of the motorists stopped along a
50-mile stretch of I-95 by Maryland's Special Traffic
Interdiction Force (STIF) were black, according to an
Associated Press computer analysis of car searches from
January through September 1995....Blacks constitute 25
percent of Maryland's population, and 20 percent of
Marylanders with driver's licenses." As this story was
being written, New Jersey was holding hearings on racial
profiling, and one state police investigator testified
that 94 percent of the motorists stopped in one town
were minorities.

Minorities are not only more likely to be stopped than
whites, but they are also often pressured to allow searches
of their vehicles, and they are more likely to allow such
searches. In March, The New York Times reported that a
1997 investigation by New Jersey police of their own
practices found that "turnpike drivers who agreed to have
their cars searched by the state police were overwhelmingly
black and Hispanic." Some commentators, such as John
Derbyshire in National Review, have defended racial
profiling as nothing more than sensible police technique,
where police employ the laws of probability to make the
best use of their scarce resources in attacking crime.
As Derbyshire put it in his February 19 story, "In Defense
of Racial Profiling," the police engage in the practice for
reasons of simple efficiency: "A policeman who concentrates
a disproportionate amount of his limited time and resources
on young black men is going to uncover far more crimes -- and
therefore be far more successful in his career -- than one
who biases his attention toward, say, middle-aged Asian
women."

George Will, in an April 19 Washington Post column, contends
that the use of race as a criterion in traffic stops is fine,
as long as it is just "one factor among others in estimating
criminal suspiciousness." Similarly, Jackson Toby, a
professor of sociology at Rutgers, argued in a 1999 Wall
Street Journal op-ed that, "If drug traffickers are
disproportionately black or Hispanic, the police don't need
to be racist to stop many minority motorists; they simply
have to be efficient in targeting potential drug traffickers."

Clayton Searle, president of The International Narcotics
Interdiction Association, writes in a report, Profiling in
Law Enforcement, "Those who purport to be shocked that ethnic
groups are overrepresented in the population arrested for
drug courier activities must have been in a coma for the
last twenty years. The fact is that ethnic groups control
the majority of the drug trade in the United States. They
also tend to hire as their underlings and couriers others
of their same group." (Searle's report is
available at www.inia.org/whats-new.htm#Profiling.)

Case Probability vs. Class Probability

The stories and statistics that draw outrage tend to share
two common elements: They involve a search for drugs and
the prospect of asset forfeiture. These types of investigations
have led police from the solid ground of "case probability"
to the shifting sands of "class probability" in their quest
for probable cause. Once police are operating on the basis
of class probability, there is a strong claim that certain
groups of people are being denied equal protection under
the law.

Case probability describes situations where we comprehend
some factors relevant to a particular event, but not all
such factors. It is used when a doctor tells a patient,
"Given your lifestyle, you'll probably be dead in five
years." Class probability refers to situations where we
know enough about a class of events to describe it using
statistics, but nothing about a particular event other
than the fact that it belongs to the class in question.
Class probability is being used when an insurance company
estimates that a man who is 40 today will probably live to
be, on average, about 80. The insurance company is not
making any statement about the particular circumstances of
any particular man, but merely generalizing about the
class of 40-year-old men. This distinction helps us to
differentiate two ways of using information about race
or ethnicity in a police investigation. As an example of
the first type, employing case probability, consider a
mugging victim who has told the police that her mugger
was a young Asian man. Here, it is quite understandable
that the group of suspects investigated will not "look
like America." There is no sense in forcing the police to
drag in proportional numbers of whites, blacks, women,
and so on, proving that they have interrogated a
representative population sample of their city, before
they can arrest an Asian fellow. No, their investigation
should clearly focus on young Asian men.

It's not at all impossible that a prevalence of some
type of criminal activity in some ethnic group will lead
to many investigations that focus on members of that group.
As long as this is based on evidence gathered from particular
crimes, there is nothing untoward here. If it turns out, for
instance, that Bulgarians are especially numerous among
purse-snatchers in some city, then a summary of police
interrogations might discover evidence of "Bulgarian
profiling" in the investigation of purse-snatching. But
this may be a statistical mirage if it turns out that no
one in the police force set out to focus on Bulgarians as
potential purse-snatchers. The emergent result is an
unintended outcome of policemen following an entirely
valid principle of crime investigation: Concentrate on
suspects who fit the description you have of the suspect.

But when we turn our attention to the type of racial
profiling that occurred on the highways of Maryland and
New Jersey, or that is described in the Forest Service
memo, we find a very different phenomenon, one where
investigations proceeded on the basis of class probability.
Here, before having evidence of a particular crime, police
set out intending to investigate a high proportion of people
of some particular race, ethnic group, age group, or so on.
Their only justification is that by doing so, they
increase their chances of discovering some crimes.

Additionally, there is a fundamental difference between
the type of crime, such as the mugging example above, that
is usually investigated by gathering evidence about a
known crime, and narrowing the search based on such
evidence, and the type investigated by looking in as
many places as possible to see if one can find a crime.
The first type of crime generally has a victim, and the
police are aware of a specific crime that has been
committed. The crime is brought to the attention of the
police by a complainant, even if the complainant is a
corpse.

George Will, in his defense of current police practice,
points out: "Police have intelligence that in the Northeast
drug-shipping corridor many traffickers are Jamaicans
favoring Nissan Pathfinders." This is quite a different
situation than having intelligence that a particular
Jamaican robbed a store and escaped in a Pathfinder.
If you are a law-abiding Jamaican who by chance owns
a Pathfinder, you frequently will find yourself under
police surveillance, even though the police have no
evidence about any particular crime involving any
particular Jamaican in a Pathfinder.

We could not have any effective law enforcement without
allowing some scope for case probability. If your twin
brother robs a bank in your hometown, it does not seem
to be a civil rights issue if the police stop you on the
street for questioning. When the police discover their
mistake, they should apologize and make you whole for any
damages you have suffered. Such an event, while unfortunate,
is simply a byproduct of attempting to enforce laws in a
world of error-prone human beings possessing less-than-perfect
knowledge. It will be a rare event in law-abiding citizens'
lives, and it is highly unlikely that such people will come
to feel that they are being targeted.

However, the use of class probability in police
investigations is correctly regarded with extreme suspicion,
as it violates a basic principle of justice: The legal system
should treat all citizens equally, until there is specific,
credible evidence that they have committed a crime. In the
cases we've been discussing, we can say that the odds that
any particular young black or Hispanic man will be hassled
by the police are much higher than for a white man who, aside
from his race, is demographically indistinguishable from him.
These minority men, no matter how law-abiding they are,
know that they will be investigated by the police significantly
more often than other citizens who are not members of their
racial group. The social cost of the alienation produced by
this situation cannot, of course, be measured, but common
sense tells us that it must be great.

As important, in the majority of "crimes" that such stops
discover, there is no third party whose rights have been
violated, who can step forward and bring the crime to the
attention of the police. To discover victimless crimes,
investigators must become intrusive and simply poke around
wherever they can, trying to see if they can uncover such a
crime. When someone drives a few pounds of marijuana up I-95
from seller to buyer, who will come forward and complain?
It's not merely that, as in the cases of robbery or murder,
the perpetrator may try to hide his identity, but that the
"crime" has no victim.

Drug War Profiling Practices

Both statistical studies and anecdotal evidence support
the view that drug crimes are the almost exclusive focus
of investigation in racial profiling cases. Hence, The New
York Times reported in February that, "The New Jersey
State Police said last week that the number of drug arrests
on the Garden State Parkway and the New Jersey Turnpike
fell last year, after the department came under scrutiny
for racial profiling. The number of drug charges resulting
from stops on the turnpike were 370 last year, compared with
494 drug charges in 1999. There were 1,269 charges filed in
1998. On the parkway, troopers reported 350 drug charges
last year compared with 783 in 1999 and 1,279 in 1998."

The Record, a Bergen, New Jersey, newspaper, obtained
state police documents last fall. One document, used for
training, teaches troopers to zero in on minorities when
scanning state roadways for possible drug traffickers.
Titled "Occupant Identifiers for a Possible Drug Courier,"
the document instructs troopers to look out for "Colombian
males, Hispanic males, Hispanic and a black male together,
Hispanic male and female posing as a couple." (One's mind
boggles at how the police are able to detect that two
Hispanics are "posing" as a couple as they zip by at 60
miles per hour.) The undated document also teaches troopers
how to use supposed traffic violations, such as "speeding"
and "failure to drive within a single lane," as a pretext
to pull over suspected drug couriers.

If police have a goal of maximizing drug arrests, they may
indeed find that they can achieve this most easily by
focusing on minorities. Blacks on I-95 in Maryland, for
instance, had a significantly higher initial propensity
to carry drugs in the car than did whites. "Racial Bias
in Motor Vehicle Searches: Theory and Evidence," a 1999
study by University of Pennsylvania professors John Knowles,
Nicola Persico, and Petra Todd, shows that despite the fact
that blacks were stopped three-and-a-half times more than
whites, they were as likely to be carrying drugs. But this
doesn't mean their propensity to carry is the same. If we
assume that the high likelihood of being stopped reduces
some blacks' willingness to carry drugs, then if not for
the stops, they would have been carrying proportionally
much more than whites. The Penn professors conclude they
are displaying what they call "statistical discrimination"
(i.e., the police are operating on the basis of class
probability) rather than racial prejudice. Perhaps more
to the point, they conclude that the police are primarily
motivated by a desire to maximize drug arrests.

Some racial profiling defenders agree that the drug war
bears a large part of the blame for racial profiling.
"Many of the stop-and-search cases that brought this
matter into the headlines were part of the so-called war
on drugs," writes Derbyshire. "The police procedures
behind them were ratified by court decisions of the
1980s, themselves mostly responding to the rising tide
of illegal narcotics." But Derbyshire dismisses the
argument that racial profiling is chiefly a byproduct
of the drug war. He contends that even if drugs were
legalized tomorrow, the practice would continue.

He is confusing the two forms of police procedure we
have outlined above. The practice of laying out broad
dragnets to see what turns up would almost entirely
disappear but for the attempt to stamp out drug trafficking
and use. Derbyshire, to bolster his case, cites the fact
that in 1997, "Blacks, who are 13 percent of the U.S.
population, comprised 35 percent of those arrested for
embezzlement." This statistic would be useful if he were
defending the fact that 35 percent of those investigated
for embezzling that year were black. But does Derbyshire
believe that stopping random blacks on an interstate
highway is catching very many embezzlers? Or that,
absent the drug war, cops would start searching cars
they pull over for embezzled funds?


How Asset Forfeiture Fuels Profiling

In the 1980s, state legislatures and Congress were
frustrated with their inability to arrest and convict
"drug kingpins." So they passed laws that gave police
the power to seize the property of suspected dealers.
The dubious rationale: The "pushers'" property had been
purchased through ill-gotten gains and hence didn't
rightly belong to them. (Questions about establishing
actual guilt were brushed aside as counterproductive.)
The federal Comprehensive Crime Act of 1984 was the most
important of these measures, as it allowed local police
agencies that cooperated in a drug investigation to
keep the vast majority of the assets seized.

In addition, the Department of Justice decided that police
in states that did not allow their agencies to keep asset
forfeiture proceeds could have the feds "adopt" their
seizures. The Kansas City Star's Karen Dillon has done
extensive investigative reporting on asset forfeiture
over the past three years. She writes: "Wisconsin law
mandates that forfeiture money goes to public schools,
but only $16,906 went into Wisconsin's education fund
during the year ending in June 1999, according to the
state treasury department. During just six months of
the same period, local law enforcement gave the federal
government $1.5 million in seizures."

In a paper published in the September 2000 issue of the
economics journal Public Choice, "Entrepreneurial Police
and Drug Enforcement Policy," Brent D. Mast, Bruce
L. Benson, and David W. Rasmussen report that forfeiture
receipts roughly doubled every year for several years after
the passage of the Comprehensive Crime Act. According to the
Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics, the total value
of Drug Enforcement Administration seizures reached nearly
$1 billion in 1992. A large amount of that revenue flows
back from the federal government to state and local police
departments. Dillon notes: "In 1997 and 1998, the St. Louis
Metropolitan Police Department received back more than
$2.5 million. In 1998 alone, the Georgia Bureau
of Investigation took back $1.7 million."

A letter to the International Narcotics Interdiction
Association (INIA) from the Richmond Metro Interdiction
Unit, posted on INIA's Web site, is accompanied by a
photo of two cops in front of a pile of $298,440. The
letter says: "We took this money off a guy coming from NY
to Miami on Amtrak about two weeks after returning from
SKY NARC [an INIA training session] in Anaheim. It was a
great school and as you can see it paid off."

The U.S. Department of Justice reports: "Collectively,
local police departments received $490 million worth of
cash, goods, and property from drug asset forfeiture
programs during fiscal 1997. Sheriffs' departments had
total receipts of $158 million."

This kind of money adds a major incentive to police
efforts to discover drug crimes. The study by Mast, Benson,
and Rasmussen concludes: "The results for the impact of
asset seizure laws are robust....Police focus relatively
more effort on drug control when they can enhance their
budgets by retaining seized assets. Legislation permitting
police to keep a portion of seized assets raises drug
arrests as a portion of total arrests by about 20 percent
and drug arrest rates by about 18 percent."

Of course, if the police begin harassing all motorists
in a particular locale, support for their activities will
soon evaporate. However, if they can identify a minority
group that is somewhat more likely to commit a particular
drug crime -- and if they know that members of that group
are not politically powerful -- then the police can focus
on those people in order to enhance their departmental
revenue.

The usual supposition, that the accused is innocent until
proven guilty, has been explicitly reversed in asset
forfeiture cases. The authorities are not required to prove
that a crime, involving the goods in question, has been
committed. Instead, they must merely have "probable cause"
for the seizure; the burden of proof is on the defendant
trying to recover his property. The Schaffer Library of
Drug Policy (druglibrary.org/schaffer) has found that 80
percent of those who have had assets seized are never
charged with a crime, let alone convicted of one. Federal
law provides for up to five years in prison for attempting
to prevent one's own property from being grabbed.

It did not take long for those in law enforcement to conclude
that their best haul would come from seizing goods from
citizens who lack the resources to win them back. In one
highly publicized case that occurred in 1991, federal
authorities at the Nashville airport took more than $9,000
in cash from Willie Jones, a black landscaper who was
flying to Houston in order to purchase shrubs. According to
the police, that money could have been used to purchase drugs.
After spending thousands of dollars and two years on the case,
the landscaper was able to convince the courts to return most
of the seized cash.

Sam Thach, a Vietnamese immigrant, found himself in a similar
situation last year. He was relieved of $147,000 by the DEA
while traveling on Amtrak. Thach was investigated because the
details of his ticket purchase, which Amtrak shared with the
DEA, "fit the profile" of a drug courier. He was not charged
with any crime and is now fighting to retrieve his money in
federal court. (See "Railway Bandits," Citings, July.)

When the University of Pennsylvania study and the study by
Mast, Benson, and Rasmussen are considered in tandem, the
implication is clear. The possibility of rich pickings
through asset forfeiture, combined with the higher
propensity for black motorists to carry drugs, provides
police departments with a tremendous incentive to engage
in racial profiling. It is hardly surprising, then, that
police take the bait, even at the cost of racial bias
accusations and investigations.

Last year, in reaction to high-profile cases of abuse,
Congress passed legislation that changed the standard in
federal civil asset forfeiture cases. Rather than showing
"probable cause" that property was connected to a crime,
the feds must now demonstrate "by a preponderance of the
evidence" that the property was used in or is the product
of a crime, a significantly higher legal standard. The
revised law also awards legal fees to defendants who
successfully challenge property seizures and gives
judges more latitude to return seized property. Exactly
what effect the law will have on federal agents, or on
state and local cops, is not yet clear.


This Is Your Law Enforcement on Drugs

In the panic created by the drug war, our traditional
liberties have been eroded. Rather than regarding case
probability as a necessary component of probable cause
for searches or seizures, the American law enforcement
system has now come to accept class probability as
sufficient justification for many intrusions.

Unfortunately, the current protests against racial profiling
are not addressing the root causes of the practice. Politicians,
eager to please voters, have created potentially greater
problems by trying to suppress the symptoms. As John
Derbyshire points out, the laws rushed onto the books to
end racial profiling result in severe obstacles to police
officers attempting to investigate serious crimes. He notes,
"In Philadelphia, a federal court order now requires police
to fill out both sides of an 8-1/2-by-11 sheet on every
citizen contact." Unless our solution to this problem
addresses its cause, we will be faced with the choice of
either hindering important police work or treating
some of our citizens, based on characteristics (race, age,
and so on) completely beyond their control, in a manner that
is patently unfair.

If we really wish to end the scourge of racial profiling,
we must address its roots: drug laws that encourage police
to consider members of broad groups as probable criminals.
We must redirect law enforcement toward solving specific,
known crimes using the particular evidence available to
them about that crime. Whatever one's opinion on drug
legalization may be, it's easy to agree that the state of
seizure law in America is reprehensible, even given last
year's minor federal reforms. It should be obvious that
there's something nutty about a legal system that assumes
suspects in murder, robbery, and rape cases are innocent
until a trial proves otherwise, but assumes that a landscaper
carrying some cash is guilty of drug trafficking.

Drugs, prohibitionists commonly point out, can damage a
user's mind. They apparently can have the same effect on
the minds of law enforcement officials.

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