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LAPD report: 320 racial profiling cases and none had merit

Posted by Pam Spaulding, Pandagon at 3:26 PM on May 3, 2008.


Racial profiling claims prove hard to verify.

Uh huh. Here’s yet another reason why there is distrust out there about law enforcement “protecting and serving” everyone equally.

Los Angeles Police Department officials announced Tuesday that they investigated more than 300 complaints of racial profiling against officers last year and found that none had merit — a conclusion that left members of the department’s oversight commission incredulous.

It is at least the sixth consecutive year that all allegations of racial profiling against LAPD officers have been dismissed, according to department documents reviewed by The Times.

I’m sure the vast majority are claims that cannot be proven since you have to prove the officer’s intent to say, pull over a black driver more often than a white one. But the LAPD has a sorry history, and that makes it difficult for some to believe the outcome of the report.

In February, the inspector general released a report that concluded investigators frequently failed to fully investigate citizen complaints against allegedly abusive officers, often omitting or altering crucial information.

The report, and extensive media attention, sparked calls by commissioners for a review of the complaint investigation process. The issue of racial profiling reaches back into one of the department’s darkest periods. Since 2000, the department has been working to implement scores of reforms included in a federal consent decree that stems from the Rampart corruption scandal. As part of the decree, the department is required to gather and analyze racial data involving vehicle and pedestrian stops.

But conclusive figures that might indicate whether systemic racial profiling is a problem in the LAPD have remained elusive. Department and city officials early on acknowledged that the raw data collected by officers when they make a stop are unhelpful because they do not include factors such as the race of the officer, the predominant race of the neighborhood in which the stop was made, and whether the stop resulted in an arrest and conviction.

Of course it’s hard to prove, but none of the cases had any merit? Come on, let’s be real. The problem here is that the profiling is less about race in some instances, but a focus on a particular demographic (dressed in hip-hop wear, in the “wrong” neighborhood, etc.), and in that case, you will end up with young minority youth getting pulled over or searched more often. When does a law enforcement officer’s “hunch” cross the line into straight-out bias — remember, as Francis Holland pointed out in an earlier post, you can be a black police officer and be color-aroused. Check out the comments in the LAT article’s thread — they run the gamut.

The question here is about the effort to curtail the bias. Collecting all the data about the officer and the suspect/victim doesn’t

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320 cases w/o merit
Posted by: hurricane hugo on May 4, 2008 11:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think the author (or at least the headline writer) left off a couple of zeros.

jdfu!

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Every Major City
Posted by: desidid on May 4, 2008 12:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
should have a civilian review board that is cross cultural in terms of income, race, gender, age, and sexual orientation. But I can assure you that every police department would fight that idea as they have in NY.

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Same old story
Posted by: frank69 on May 5, 2008 7:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most police officers are NEVER guilty of ANYTHING! Not murder, not assault, not racial discrimination, not racial profiling. Nada, nate, nothing! How many angels (police offiecers) can stand on the head of pin? Thousands!

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» RE: Same old story Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: Same old story Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
mick3
Posted by: mick3 on May 5, 2008 9:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I grew up in L.A., and I always said that if I were black I'd have to kill someone in a uniform. L.A. cops have always been corrupt and bigoted. I had a friend who worked as an Officer of the Court for a living and was otherwise a hippie living in Venice. Cops used to regularly accost her, throw her in a patrol car, and grope her while threatening her. My son, a carpenter's apprentice who wore a natural and drove a junker, was stopped almost every single day and spread-eagled on his car. Then he bought a BMW and was NEVER stopped again.

And we are white. Blacks would consider that heaven, compared what happens to them under L.A. cops. There should be psychological testing to weed out the bigots and power-crazies that infest law enforcement end to end across this benighted nation. Instead, they are hired, given unlimited power and military-style arms, and let loose on the populace....and then illegally defended for their predations on the citizenry.

Even under a black mayor, L.A. was hell for blacks. How will it all end? Let's hope with massive reform, but I am neither religious nor deluded in any other way. There will be no massive reform in my lifetime (now running out).

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» RE: mick3 Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
If you turn the sound way up
Posted by: willymack on May 5, 2008 11:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And listen very carefully to the videotape, you may hear the cops who were beating the daylights out of Rodney King saying: "WE ain't profiling; we ain't profiling".

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SO
Posted by: mindtrvlr on May 7, 2008 7:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pretty soon, the police won't even be able to act even if they see a mexican, or black person killing some one, because they will be accused of racial profiling. Obviously, not many here have ever been in law enforcement.

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