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Profiling

Profiling. Policing a Diverse Society. Which Man Looks Guilty?. If you picked the one on the right, you’re wrong! If you picked the one on the left, you’re wrong too! Look again. They are pictures of the same man.

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Profiling

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  1. Profiling Policing a Diverse Society

  2. Which Man Looks Guilty?

  3. If you picked the one on the right, you’re wrong! • If you picked the one on the left, you’re wrong too! • Look again. They are pictures of the same man. • Police stop drivers based on their skin color rather than the way they are driving. In Florida, for example, 80% of those stopped and searched are Black or Hispanic although these racial groups comprise only 5% of the state’s population.

  4. In a post 9/11 world, we see opportunities for other types of profiling…

  5. “Racial profiling . . . is one of the most ineffective strategies, and I call it nothing less than lazy, sloppy police work. It's basically saying you don't want to learn about your community, you don't want to learn about people's behavior, you don't want to do your job, and don't want to investigate, you just want to stop a lot of people and see if you can come up with some statistical number at the end of the evening. . .” —Testimony of Capt. Ron Davis, Oakland Police Department, National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE), Oakland, CA, Sept. 9, 2003

  6. Profiling – Racial or Otherwise • One could argue that Reich’s article is an early precursor of the current debate over racial profiling in law enforcement. • Are minorities “profiled”? Evidence (anecdotal or systematic) suggests profiling related to neighborhood/geographic location/ context? Downtown, Five Points, Federal Heights, Airport, Boulder • Who constitutes a minority? Black, Hispanic, Native American, Asian, Middle Eastern, Poor, College students, … • Are different groups treated differently by differently associated officers, e.g., do white and black police officers treat minorities the same way? • What do you think about roadblocks for drunk drivers? That is, if Boulder sets up a Friday night roadblock and tests everyone who drives by, is this profiling? What if they test just students? Is this a form of profiling? Is it fair? Is it a reasonable or an unreasonable search in a democratic society? • What do you think about profiling in airports? For general national security purposes?

  7. The Police Services Study – Phase II

  8. The Police Services Study – Phase II

  9. The Police Services Study – Phase II

  10. The Police Services Study – Phase II

  11. Protecting the Public: Racial Profiling Bans that Protect Motorists and Pedestrians

  12. Denver PD(June 1, 2001 -- May 31, 2002)

  13. Denver PD(June 1, 2001 -- May 31, 2002)

  14. Denver PD(June 1, 2001 -- May 31, 2002)

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