Pubdate: Mon, 10 Apr 2000 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2000 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611-4066 Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Forum: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/boards/ Author: Mike Dorning BLACK WOMEN MOST LIKELY TARGETS OF AIRPORT SEARCHES WASHINGTON -- African-American women returning from abroad are much more likely than other airline passengers to be picked out by customs inspectors for strip searches and X-rays, according to a U.S. General Accounting Office investigation to be released Monday. The disproportionate treatment of black women was "not consistent" with the rates at which the searches turned up illegal drugs or other smuggled contraband, the GAO concluded after an analysis of records covering all U.S. Customs searches of airline passengers during a two-year period. Passengers stopped for a search typically are simply given a quick pat down, but African-American women were by far the demographic group most likely to be subjected to the more intrusive strip searches. In 1998, 11 percent of black women passengers who were chosen for searches were strip-searched versus 6 percent of all U.S. citizens for which information on race and gender were available. Strip searches of African-American women did turn up smuggled goods more often than they did for passengers overall, with 28 percent of the searches yielding contraband, versus 22 percent among all U.S. citizens. But the strip searches of black women were not as likely to uncover contraband as were strip searches of passengers in other demographic groups, who were ordered to undergo the searches less often, the GAO reported. Among U.S. citizens, searches of black men, Hispanic men and Hispanic women all were more likely to uncover smuggled goods. But each of those demographic groups were strip-searched much less often than were black women. An examination of the small fraction of returning citizens, less than 200 per year, taken into custody for X-ray exams to check for items concealed within their digestive systems showed a more pronounced disparity. A statistical analysis by the GAO found black women were much more likely than white women to be required to undergo the procedure, but X-rays on white women found contraband twice as often as when the tests were performed on black women. The findings by Congress' investigative arm follow complaints from groups of African-American women in several major cities that they are unfairly singled out for intensive searches. Those complaints have spurred at least a dozen lawsuits, including a suit on behalf of 100 black women who claim inspectors at Chicago's O'Hare Airport were biased in ordering them strip-searched. "There was a discriminatory policy taking place. And this GAO report documents it," said Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), who requested the study. "The fact is women of color were the first to be strip-searched. ... And it can't be justified." Dennis Murphy, a spokesman for the U.S. Customs Service, did not dispute the GAO's statistical findings, which covered searches conducted in 1997 and 1998. But he said the Customs Service never had a policy of deliberate discrimination and that the agency's supervisory procedures since have been tightened to guard against bias in selecting passengers for searches. Since last May, the Customs Service has required a supervisor to approve all searches of airline passengers, except immediate pat-downs when an inspector suspects the passenger is carrying a weapon. "I'm not going to draw any conclusion on what may have been in the minds of an individual inspector," Murphy said. But, he added, "One of the biggest problems is it was left up to the individual inspector to make the decision. And management wasn't involved in the decision to search." In addition to addressing specific complaints about customs inspections, the GAO report provides an early glimpse at the kind of results that could come from data now being gathered to address longstanding complaints that law-enforcement officers rely on racial and gender stereotypes. President Clinton last summer ordered all federal law-enforcement agencies to begin documenting the race and gender of people they arrest or detain, so the data can be analyzed to check whether certain groups are being targeted. Legislation pending in Congress and the Illinois legislature also would encourage police departments to gather data on disparities in traffic stops. The issue of "racial profiling" is receiving renewed attention in the wake of a settlement of a lawsuit alleging New Jersey state troopers targeted black and Hispanic motorists for traffic stops. Similar allegations have been made locally in lawsuits against the Illinois State Police, Mt. Prospect police and Highland Park police. The GAO investigation of the U.S. Customs Service examined records of the 102,000 airline passengers selected for searches. The examination checked only for disparities in the way passengers were treated once they were stopped. The GAO acknowledged that a weakness in its analysis is that the records did not include all data relevant to an inspector's decision to search a passenger. Its study also turned up other peculiar disparities. For minority passengers, customs inspectors were about three times more likely to order women strip-searched as they were men of the same race, according to analysis that controlled for other factors reported on search records. In fact, men in every minority group were less likely to be subjected to body searches than white passengers. By contrast, among whites, women and men were strip-searched at the same rate. U.S. Customs Service policies require that body searches of passengers be conducted by inspectors of the same sex, Murphy said. Also, when Asian-Americans were stopped for a search, Customs inspectors rarely asked them to undergo strip searches or X-rays. Only 1 percent of Asian-American men were strip-searched and 3 percent of Asian-American women. Among U.S. citizens, blacks and Hispanics of both sexes were much more likely to be ordered to undergo an X-ray exam, according to the GAO. One percent of whites were ordered to undergo the tests versus 4 percent of blacks and 2 percent of Hispanics Durbin said he intends to introduce legislation that would prohibit customs inspectors from considering race, religion, gender, national origin or sexual orientation as factors in evaluating passengers for searches or detention. Customs inspectors also would be required to document their reasons for searching or detaining a passenger. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck