About the Campaign Against Racial Profiling
The Racial Justice Program's Campaign Against Racial Profiling fights law enforcement
and private security practices that disproportionately target people of color
and Muslims for investigation and enforcement. We represent individuals who have been
victims of racial profiling by airlines, police, and government agencies, and
our present work also encompasses major initiatives in public education,
including the creation of a film,
bustcard,
“Know Your
Rights”brochure, and fact sheets on Hip Hop
Surveillance/Racial Profiling,
Consent Search Bans, and Highlights in
the Fight Against Racial Profiling. Our advocacy also includes
lobbying for the passage of data collection and anti-profiling legislation and litigation
of egregious airline and highway profiling cases.
What Is Racial
Profiling?
Racial Profiling is any police or private security practice in
which a person is treated as a suspect because of his or her race, ethnicity,
nationality or religion. This occurs when police investigate, stop, frisk,
search or use force against a person based on such characteristics instead of
evidence of a person's criminal behavior. It often involves the stopping and
searching of people of color for traffic violations, known as "DWB" or "driving
while black or brown." Although normally associated with African Americans and
Latinos, racial profiling and "DWB" have also become shorthand phrases for
police stops of Asians, Native Americans, and, increasingly after 9/11, Arabs, Muslims and South
Asians.
Racial profiling can also involve pedestrian stops, "gang"
databases, bicycle stops, use of police attack dogs, suspicion at stores and
malls, immigration worksite raids, and in the 2000 presidential election in
Florida, harassment on the way to polls, "voting while black or brown". Customs
and other airport officials also engage in racial profiling of passengers. Read
more about different kinds of racial profiling.
Is Racial Profiling
Real?
Most Americans think so. A July 2001 Gallup poll reported that
55 percent of whites and 83 percent of blacks believe racial profiling is
widespread. And the reports of thousands of racial and ethnic group members
across the country add credibility to the perception that racial profiling is
real. These are stories from all walks of life, not just hardworking everyday
people, but celebrities, professional athletes, and members of the military.
Also, reports of racial profiling come from respected members of communities of
color such as police commanders, prosecutors, judges, state legislators,
lawyers, dentists and even representatives in Congress, who have been
victims.
Racial profiling is a new term for an old practice known by other
names – institutional racism and discrimination – and owes its existence to
prejudice that has existed in this country since slavery.
Tens of thousands of innocent drivers, pedestrians, and shoppers
across the country are victims of racial profiling. And these discriminatory
police stops and searches have reached epidemic proportions in recent years,
fueled by the "War on Drugs" and the "War on Terror" that have given police a
pretext to target people they think fit a "drug courier," "gang member," or
"terrorist" profile. In fact, racial profiling is the first step in a long road
that leads to the heavily disproportionate incarceration of people of color,
especially young men, for drug-related crimes, and of Arabs, Muslims and South
Asians for suspicion of terrorism. Racial profiling continues to occur even
though people of color are no more likely than whites to use or sell drugs, and
Arabs Muslims and South Asians are no more likely than whites to be
terrorists.
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