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Impact on the Community. The cost associated with race-related abuses are significant, and include psychological trauma, humiliation and degradation, and a decline in the legitimacy of the criminal justice system"Institute on Race
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1. Bias-Based Policing
2. Impact on the Community
The cost associated with race-related abuses are significant, and include psychological trauma, humiliation and degradation, and a decline in the legitimacy of the criminal justice system
Institute on Race & Poverty, University of Minnesota
3. The Impact on Law Enforcement Police brutality lawsuits and institutional racism cost taxpayers tens of millions of dollars.
addressing racial profiling can reduce disparities in incarceration rates and reduce a source of tension between law enforcement and communities of color.
Institute of Race & Poverty
4. 60/60 Dichotomy Approximately 60% of police chiefs surveyed by PERF did not believe racial profiling exists in their agency.
Approximately 60% of the community surveyed by the Washington Post believe it does exists.
5. Police-Community Relationships Miscommunication
Misunderstanding
Mistakes
Misinformed
Misconduct
Mismanagement
Mistrust
6. What is Racial Profiling? The answer to this question must be defined before we can eliminate it.
How you answer this question determines whether racial profiling exists, and if it does exist, to what extent.
Varying definitions and perspectives have resulted in confusion.
7. Law Enforcement Definition Racial Profiling
The use of race or ethnicity as the sole basis for vehicle stops, detentions, investigations or to determine the scope of police actions.
8. Under This Definition
Racial Profiling is racist behavior
It is not widespread
A few bad apples
Race can be used as long as it is not the sole basis
Race can be linked to crime
9. Fallacy Theory If the majority of crime is committed by minorities than the majority of minorities commit crime.
It is therefore makes sense that more minorities are stopped and arrested.
10. Racial Profiling Perspective Racial profiling is acceptable in high-crime areas.
Aberrant behavior
It is not why you stop someone, it is how you treat them.
Disparate stops are based on the fact that minorities commit more crime; therefore more minorities should be arrested.
11. Community Definition Racial Profiling
The police use of race or ethnicity to determine who should be stopped or searched.
Guilt by Race
12. Under This Definition
Racial profiling is a common practice
Supported by training and management
Committed by all officers (black/white)
Based on the stereotype that minorities are more likely to commit crime or carry narcotics/contraband.
13. Community Theory The majority of crime in any city is committed by a small percentage of the community regardless of race.
This small segment of the community should be known to the police they are in many cases known to the public.
14. What is Racial Profiling? any police action that relies on the race, ethnicity or national origin of an individual rather than the behavior of an individual or information that leads the police to a particular individual who has been identified as being, or having been, engaged in criminal activity.
Professor Deborah Rameriz
15. Under This Definition Officers must focus on behavior
Race cannot be used based on the fact or perception that the majority of crime is committed by a certain race.
Officers must have information that leads them to particular individual who has been identified as being engaged in criminal behavior.
16. The act (intentional or unintentional) of applying or incorporating personal, societal, or organizational biases and/or stereotypes in decision-making, police actions, or the administration of justice.
Captain Ronald Davis
17. Bias-Based Policing Perspective Racial profiling is a symptom of bias-based policing
It is in most cases the unintentional application of bias
It is widespread since we all have biases
Racial profiling is not necessarily about racism it is about race
Committed by all officers (black/white)
Based on the stereotype that minorities are more likely to commit crime or carry narcotics/contraband. (Fallacy Theory)
18. Justice is not blind - it is Blindfolded What is the symbol of justice?
Woman holding scales of justice wearing a blindfold.
What does the symbol represent?
A woman has biases. She is not perfect.
Blindfold serves to prevent bias
How do we create Blindfolds?
19. Mission-Vision-Values
Recruitment & Hiring
Training
Assignments
Promotion
Discipline/Accountability
Community Relations
Leadership Creating Blindfolds
21.
order achieved through a democratic policing is concerned not only with the ends of crime control, but also with the means used to achieve those ends.
Professor Jerome H. Skolnick The ends never justify the means
22. Recommendations to Attorney General National Task Force on Racial Profiling Define Racial Profiling
Identify its Causes and Impacts
Develop Standardized Data Collection Models
Develop Standardized Data Analysis Models
Conduct National Traffic Stop Study Develop Model Racial Profiling Policies
Develop Racial Profiling Training
Develop Strategies to Eliminate Profiling
Enhance Mediation & Facilitation Programs
Publish Self Assessment Guide
24. Mission The Mission Statement should answer three questions:
Who are our customers?
What services do we provide?
How do we provide it?
25. Vision What will the organization look like in 3 years, 5 years, 10 years.
Provide clear goals for the future - Everyone knows where we are heading - How will we get there?
Strategic Plan
Lessons of the past
Challenges of today
Project/forecast the future
26. VALUES
. Share principles.
Tell employees what is expected.
Tell the community what they should expect.
Serve as organizational bill of rights, which can never be violated.
Provides parameters for officer behavior.
27. Recruitment & Hiring Hire people to achieve the mission
Marketing must reinforce the mission-vision-values
Avoid candidates with:
clear warning signals
no experience in diversity
The diversity of an officer does not make for a better officer - however, the diversity of an organization can make it better.
28. Training Train officers to achieve mission
Training sends message of how to do a job
Focus on primary role of the job
service
community
conflict resolution
reinforce mission-vision-values
29. Assignments Rotate to the extent possible.
Do not leave officers in high-risk assignments for extended periods of time.
Strategically use assignments to broaden the knowledge, skills and abilities of staff.
Use assignments to ensure positive contacts with the community.
30. Promotion Based on demonstrated ability to accomplish mission within organizational values
Responsibility can not be passed to consultant or assessor(s)
Chiefs must ensure personal involvement in process
Promotions are not rewards; they are responsibilities
31. Discipline & Accountability Two levels of organization accountable:
chief of police
officer who committed offense
The systems must hold every level accountable.
You must have authority to have accountability.
Empower supervisors and manager.
Establish effective tracking systems.
Hold Staff Accountable!!
32. Early Warning Systems Complaints
Use of Force
Resisting Arrest
Cases not charged
Driving
Report Writing
Sick Leave
Attitude
33. Leadership Courageous
Customer-Based
Principle-Driven
We cannot fear change - we must change fear.
We cannot get so focused on keeping our jobs that we forget to do our jobs.
34. Community Sir Robert Peel, 1829 - Principles of Law Enforcement:
The police are the public and the public are the police.
Safe Streets & Civil Liberties
Community partnerships
Reinforce mission-vision-values to community
35. What can I do? Know the mission-vision
Embrace the values
Value diversity
Manage diversity
Support Comm. Policing
Use problem-solving
Make decisions on facts, not bias
Focus on service
Work with community
Be a leader
Intervene, Report violations
Be Courageous BREAK THE CODE OF SILENCE
36. Summary Revamp operating systems to create blindfolds.
8 - categories
Establish effective racial profiling policy to reinforce blindfolds.
Take personal responsibility to make or support changes.
37. Racial Profiling Policy Define Racial Profiling
Describe what values it violates
Prohibit racial profiling and any activity that results in racial profiling
Develop Citizen Complaint Process
Outline audit and inspection processes
Outline administrative actions and/or punitive measures
Must be enforced relentlessly
38. RecommendationsRacial Profiling Legislation Declare racial profiling illegal
Prescribe criminal, civil and administrative sanctions against violators
Mandate racial profiling policies - all agencies
Mandate data collection for agencies receiving federal funds
Mandate racial profiling training
Conduct a National Traffic Statistic Study
Mandate a National Task Force on Racial Profiling
39. The Negative Impact of Racial Profiling Legislation Decrease in officer pro-activity
Increases in crime
Increases in complaints and lawsuits
Low Morale
40. 1: moral principles, teachings, or conduct
2 a: the mental and emotional condition (as of enthusiasm, confidence, or loyalty) of an individual or group with regard to the function or tasks at hand b: a sense of common purpose with respect to a group: ESPRIT DE CORPS
3: the level of individual psychological well-being based on such factors as a sense of purpose and confidence in the future
42. Traffic Stop Data Collection Over 400 agencies are collecting data.
All federal law enforcement agencies collect data.
Eleven states have enacted racial profiling legislation - not all mandate data collection.
Thirteen states have introduced racial profiling legislation.
43. What Data? Race/Ethnicity
Gender
Age
Time of Stop
Duration of Stop
Location of Stop
Type of Stop Purpose of Stop
Disposition of Stop
Search
Search Results
Name?
44. Data Collection- Benchmarking 1990 - 2000 Census
Driving Age Population
Day-Time Population
Major Thoroughfares
Violator Population
Area/Precinct Demographics
Population Density
Staff Deployment
Special Projects/Assignments
Probation & Parole
Repeat Offenders