Pubdate: Thu, 11 Jan 2001 Source: Home News Tribune (NJ) Copyright: 2001 Home News Tribune Contact: 35 Kennedy Blvd. East Brunswick, NJ 08816 Website: http://www.thnt.com/hnt/ Author: Michael Symons, Gannett State Bureau MINORITY STOPS RISE ON TURNPIKE; OFFICIALS DEFEND ANTI-RACIAL-PROFILING EFFORTS TRENTON -- The percentage of New Jersey Turnpike traffic stops involving minority drivers has increased, but state officials say they are making progress toward instituting court-compelled plans to end racial profiling by the New Jersey State Police. According to data filed yesterday in U.S. District Court by the state Office of the Attorney General, minority drivers made up 41.4 percent of all state police traffic stops on the New Jersey Turnpike from May to October 2000, including nearly half of those south of Interchange 7A. Minorities accounted for 38.3 percent of the traffic stops on the Turnpike in the first four months of the year. A traffic census done by a Maryland institute for the state found 37.6 percent of turnpike drivers surveyed were minorities. The report and reforms are part of an agreement in which the state is implementing changes to avoid a federal lawsuit alleging troopers targeted minority drivers for traffic stops as part of a drug-interdiction program. State officials have acknowledged that racial profiles were used. Attorney General John Farmer Jr. said it is premature to say what the increase means, but he said reforms under way will allow officials to draw such conclusions in the future. "I can't tell you, based on numbers, whether there's a problem or whether there isn't," Farmer said. "These numbers clearly don't dispel prior concerns, I guess is the best way of putting it, but they don't cause me to draw an inference one way or the other." In a press conference, state officials repeatedly touted one reform scheduled to begin in April, when a new computer-management program will allow state police to quickly analyze raw data to compare stop, search and arrests patterns of individual troopers. "No other law-enforcement agency in the world is gathering this kind of data at this time," said Martin Cronin, director of the Office of State Police Affairs in the Attorney General's Office. "The world is looking to us for guidance in analyzing this data as it affects the state police and the public that it serves." Data were presented yesterday for more than 195,000 traffic stops and more than 10,000 criminal arrests by all state troopers. People who aren't white were pulled over in 28 percent of all traffic stops, and they accounted for 53 percent of all arrests. The Rev. Reginald Jackson, executive director of the Black Ministers' Council of New Jersey, said the council agreed more time was needed to analyze what the data means. "This is going to be a difficult process, a long process," Jackson said. "Rather than jumping to conclusions, we're willing to be patient, but we would like to see some signs of progress along the way." Moorestown-based civil-rights attorney William Buckman, who filed the first lawsuit in which a judge ruled that troopers used racial profiling to decide which drivers to pull over, said the state still refuses to seriously address the traffic-stop disparity. "To a great extent, they're still stressing spin-control over substance," Buckman said. "It's always been about the stop numbers -- what minorities are suffering and how minorities are treated on our highways." Buckman said one piece of important data is still missing from the state's reports: the percentage of searches involving minorities. Farmer said that data is now collected, and it will be included in future reports. The president of the State Troopers Fraternal Association, Edward Lennon, suggested the state perform a "speed monitoring" audit to measure the demographics of drivers who are violating the law. A traffic census done for the Office of the Public Defender in conjunction with the racial-profiling issue found nearly all drivers on the turnpike speed. "The report itself is very large, and I don't think anyone really knows how to interpret the numbers given. ... Anyone who believes troopers are stopping motorists by race (is) not thinking realisticly," Lennon said. The state reached a consent decree with the U.S. Justice Department in December 1999, following federal intervention after a shooting of unarmed black motorists by troopers in April 1998. Under the decree, the state promised to institute a number of policy and operational reforms in exchange for the federal government's agreement not to pursue a civil-rights lawsuit against the State Police. The state police must make 96 policy changes and 82 operational changes. An independent monitor, in a separate report filed yesterday in U.S. District Court in Trenton, found the state has met 92 percent of the policy requirements and 53 percent of the operational ones. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D