Pubdate: Tue, 20 Mar 2001 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company Contact: 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036 Fax: (212) 556-3622 Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://forums.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Laura Mansnerus OFFICIALS HAD PROFILING DATA BEFORE SHOOTING, TROOPER SAYS TRENTON, March 19 -- Almost three years after the New Jersey Turnpike shooting that helped turn racial profiling into a national issue, high-stakes hearings began here today with testimony by state police officials who said the attorney general's office knew for years before the shooting that racial profiling was a common practice in traffic stops and searches. Testifying in a crisp, military manner, Sgt. Thomas Gilbert of the New Jersey State Police, the trooper assigned since 1996 to gather data on arrests by race, told of regularly relaying the information, which he called "explosive," to the attorney general's office. He also said that many months before the shooting, he attended two meetings with top state officials, including former Attorney General Peter G. Verniero, where the still-unreleased numbers were discussed. Mr. Verniero, who became a State Supreme Court justice by a single vote in the State Senate amid fierce debate over the profiling issue and his role in addressing it, is scheduled to be the final witness before the Senate Judiciary Committee next week. At issue is not just when, how and why New Jersey came to single out black and Hispanic drivers in what has exploded into a major civil rights issue nationally. The focus is also on whether Mr. Verniero testified truthfully when he said at his confirmation hearings that he did not learn about the policy until after the shooting, in which troopers fired on four unarmed men, wounding three, in a Dodge Caravan that was stopped on April 23, 1998. Another question is whether Mr. Verniero, over the objections of aides, made a politically motivated decision just weeks before his confirmation hearings to speed the indictments to deflect criticism that the Whitman administration was not addressing the profiling problems. Although they will not testify, New Jersey's past and present governors will also have much on the line. For former Gov. Christie Whitman, the hearings will help determine how forcefully her administration reacted to an issue that may help to define her tenure. And Acting Gov. Donald T. DiFrancesco, who lobbied hard for Mr. Verniero's confirmation and has recently distanced himself from him, has inherited an issue that continues to be closely identified with his state. Mr. DiFrancesco is already in a rough fight for the Republican nomination for governor next fall. The state police bore much of the blame when it was disclosed that troopers stopped a disproportionate number of black and Hispanic drivers and then searched their cars far more often than they did with white drivers. But today police officials lined up with an odd collection of New Jerseyans -- including Democratic legislators, civil rights leaders and the defense lawyers for the indicted troopers -- who have shifted the focus to Mr. Verniero. When the committee's special counsel, Michael Chertoff, asked about the attorney general's statement that the state police had withheld information, David Blaker, now retired as a captain, said: "This is shocking. The state police doesn't operate this way. Nobody in the state police operates this way." The Judiciary Committee members were sometimes acerbic in their questioning today as they referred to the absent main character in the hearings, which are scheduled to continue tomorrow and Tuesday and Wednesday next week. One senator, for example, referred to Mr. Verniero's testimony at a 1999 legislative hearing on racial profiling that he had only recently received data on searches conducted after traffic stops and "began having these issues crystallize in my mind." This morning, after Sergeant Gilbert testified about a meeting in May 1997 where, he said, the potentially damaging figures were discussed, Senator Raymond J. Zane, a Republican, asked, "Do you think it had crystallized by then?" In the account of Sergeant Gilbert and other state police officials who testified today, that meeting was one of many occasions before the Turnpike shooting when statistical analyses of stops and searches were relayed to Mr. Verniero or to aides who reported directly to him. By the time of the May meeting, officials in the attorney general's office and the state police, which the attorney general oversees, were responding to an inquiry by the United States Department of Justice into racial profiling in New Jersey. Sergeant Gilbert and Mr. Blaker said that even though the numbers to be submitted to the Justice Department showed that an inordinately high percentage of minority motorists were subject to searches, Mr. Verniero said he would never negotiate a settlement with the department. In earlier accounts, Mr. Verniero was quoted as having said "They'd have to tie me to a train and drag me along the tracks." Sergeant Gilbert was assigned to compile statistics in 1996, shortly after a trial court judge in Gloucester County found a pattern of racial profiling on the southern part of the Turnpike, based on a "stark" disparity in which black drivers were 4.85 times as likely as white drivers to be pulled over. Mr. Verniero became attorney general just months later, and as prosecutors decided whether to pursue an appeal of the Gloucester County ruling, they asked the state police for more data. By the end of 1996, Sergeant Gilbert was using a better measure of racial disparities: the percentage of each racial group who, after being stopped, were asked to consent to a search. Those data showed even greater disparities. "At this point," Sergeant Gilbert wrote to a superior, "we're in a very bad spot." In December 1996, Mr. Verniero and aides went to Washington to meet with Justice Department officials, a meeting Mr. Gilbert learned about when he was quickly summoned to a meeting in Trenton on Christmas Eve. As he continued gathering statistics on searches, Sergeant Gilbert said, the data continued to show serious problems. Police officials testified that their findings were given -- although not always in writing -- to a deputy attorney general, George Rover, and to others in the chain of command at the attorney general's office. Although everyone charged with handling the profiling issue agonized over the process of extracting data and explaining it, the police officials made clear today under sometimes dismayed questioning by the legislators that in their meetings the principals never discussed the wider implications of racial profiling or ways of curing the problem. Senator John A. Lynch, the senior Democrat on the panel, appeared exasperated when Sergeant Gilbert told him that only 25 percent to 30 percent of searches yielded any contraband, and the senator asked whether anyone had suggested abandoning the "consent to search" requests altogether. "How do you account for the fact that 80, 90 percent land on minorities?" Senator Lynch asked. "I can't account for that, sir," Sergeant Gilbert replied. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens