Pubdate: Sun, 25 Jun 2000 Source: Akron Beacon-Journal (OH) Copyright: 2000 by the Beacon Journal Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.ohio.com/bj/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?abeacon RACIAL PROFILING BRIDGES GENDER GAP IN COLUMBUS, RETIRED OFFICERS SAY Watchdog Group Says Young Black Women Are Often Subject To Arrests COLUMBUS: (AP) The Columbus Police Department and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency are guilty of racial profiling because they improperly target young black women for arrest more than anyone else at the city's airport, former Columbus police officers say. James Moss, a former police sergeant who is now president of the watchdog group Police Officers for Equal Rights, said black women often are stopped because they fit the description of a "drug courier," a profile officers use to catch traffickers at airports. He said a young black woman was recently detained and searched because she wore dreadlocks and carried her own luggage through the Port Columbus International Airport terminal. "Racial profiling is alive and well in Columbus," he said. Two recently retired Columbus police narcotics officers make similar claims. Officers Stanley Lisska and Stephen Stonich had worked with the DEA Task Force at Port Columbus for about four years. Police supervisors deny their claims of racial profiling and say the men are upset because they were asked to leave the task force for personal reasons. But Sgt. Benjamin Casuccio, the officers' former supervisor, said airport police routinely stop suspects using information from informants. "We absolutely do profiling," he said. "Do we target a specific ethnic or cultural group? Absolutely not." Observations such as flight times or nervous twitches are used to identify drug couriers, Casuccio said. A suspect's color is only one of numerous characteristics used to compile a profile, he said. Racial profiling occurs when police target people for arrest based solely on their race. Courts have held that racial profiling is illegal under the search-and-seizure protections of the Fourth Amendment. Last year, 70 percent (56 of 79) of people arrested at Port Columbus were black. The latest census figures estimate that 24.7 percent of the city's population is black. The officers' allegations come as the U.S. Department of Justice is considering adding new charges of racial profiling in its civil-rights lawsuit against Columbus police. The Justice Department is considering allegations that police use racial profiling in issuing traffic tickets. The lawsuit already alleges that officers routinely violated people's civil rights through illegal searches, false arrests and excessive force. The police union and the city say abusive officers are the rare exception. Lisska and Stonich, who declined to comment to the newspaper, were singled out for transfer from the task force after warning their supervisors of racial-profiling practices they didn't like, said Russ Carnahan, an attorney representing the officers through Capital City Lodge No. 9 of the Fraternal Order of Police. Lisska, 54, a 32-year police veteran, and Stonich, 52, a 27-year veteran, were ordered to leave the narcotics unit during an internal inquiry, but instead chose to retire June 10. Deputy Chief John Rockwell, who is overseeing an internal-affairs investigation of the officers' accusations, said Stonich and Lisska were productive officers until their attitude changed when they joined the task force. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk