Pubdate: Tue, 27 Mar 2001 Source: Arizona Republic (AZ) Copyright: 2001 The Arizona Republic Contact: http://www.arizonarepublic.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/24 Author: Mark Shaffer, The Arizona Republic Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) ARE TRAFFIC STOPS RACIAL PROFILING? Blacks Being Targeted, Defense Lawyer Claims FLAGSTAFF - Attorney Lee Brooke Phillips found it strange, mighty strange, the long list of African-American men who made their way to his office after drug arrests in northern Arizona. After all, Phillips said, it was rare to even see a Black person in Coconino County. Yet he represented dozens of them after Arizona Highway Patrol traffic stops on Interstate 40, considered by law enforcement officials to be the main drug-smuggling route between Los Angeles and the East Coast. Now, after two years of extensive research, monitoring traffic infractions and traffic stops on the highway, Phillips and the Coconino County Public Defender's Office feel they are sitting on a potential powder keg of information about racial profiling. The Arizona Department of Public Safety, which runs the Highway Patrol, says race plays no role traffic stops. But in January, Coconino County Judge Robert Van Wyck ordered the DPS to turn over an estimated 15,000 copies of tickets, warnings and other traffic stop data. The order covers events on I-40 within the county from June 1, 1999, to June 1, 2000. It's expected to be Arizona's first in-depth look at the racial mix of traffic stops on one of its highways. Phillips said that once the DPS documents are produced, the percentages of stops involving both African-Americans and Hispanics can be more thoroughly analyzed. On Thursday, the Coconino County Attorney's Office announced that all traffic stop records from June 1-Dec. 31, 1999, had been destroyed. Phillips said he was told that all identifying information about the motorists on the remaining documents could be redacted, including race. "This could get ugly," Phillips said. County Attorney Terence Hance said destroying old tickets is routine and his office filed a motion for clarification as to what DPS is expected to produce in the traffic stop records. "There's a problem here because the records of traffic stops aren't computerized, and there were 49,000 total in this district during that time period," Hance said. "There are also policies about redacting certain personal information, but I don't think race will be one of the problem areas." DPS officers rely on "race-neutral indicators" when making traffic stops, DPS Lt. Dan Wells said. "We look at probable cause and reasonable suspicion factors only. We don't tolerate racial profiling and investigate it thoroughly if it is reported." Mario Diaz, a spokesman for state Attorney General Janet Napolitano, said her office has conducted two conferences about preventing racial profiling. New policies and procedures concerning police stops will be sent to all state law-enforcement agencies in May, she said. "We're doing everything possible on this front," Diaz said. "The bottom line is that traffic stops have to be made for actual reasons rather than a hunch." Diaz said among the policies being adopted are ensuring proper conduct by officers at traffic stops, educating field supervisors about the warning signs of racial profiling, community outreach about who to call if racial profiling occurs and systems within police departments to evaluate, log and audit complaints. Phillips, who said he was ignored by the Attorney General's Office when he requested an investigation last summer, said the new policies are long overdue. "There's a lot of people being stopped because of the color of their skin and detained because of the color of their skin," Phillips said. To prove that, Phillips hired John Lamberth, a Temple University professor who has designed surveys to gauge racial profiling on the roads in high-profile cases won by plaintiffs against police in New Jersey, Maryland and California. At Lamberth's direction, two-person survey teams drove I-40 within Coconino County on 15 four-hour shifts from June 4-7 last year. They recorded what they determined to be traffic violations, determined the race or ethnicity of drivers and counted the number of vehicles stopped by police and the race or ethnicity of those stopped. The survey teams documented 348 vehicles violating the law in which the race or ethnicity could be determined. Of those, African-Americans drivers made up less than 3 percent of offenders. Of all people stopped by police, however, more than 43 percent were African-Americans, the survey teams noted. Lamberth said less than 20 percent of those stopped by DPS were Hispanics, while Hispanics accounted for 13 percent of those observed violating a law. In a report filed with Judge Van Wyck, Lamberth wrote, "All of the data available to me is consistent and strongly supports the contention that the Arizona Department of Public Safety is targeting African-American motorists on I-40 in Coconino County." Reached at his office in Philadelphia, Lamberth said he "wasn't in a position to say" conclusively that racial profiling was occurring without analyzing the 15,000 traffic stop records. "It appears to me there has been more resistance from DPS as far as analyzing data than any other state I've been involved in and one wonders what that is about," Lamberth said. The state has argued that the traffic survey was deficient because it had too small a sample size, no protocol and wasn't sufficiently random. Phillips said the widespread racial profiling problems along I-40 began a decade ago in the aftermath of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency's "Operation Pipeline." That operation trained police officers to stop more vehicles and "profile" the driver and passengers while attempting to get permission to search the vehicles for drugs, cash and weapons - without a warrant. "The most common method is for police to stop a vehicle for speeding or following too closely behind another vehicle," Phillips said. "One of my African-American clients driving a U-Haul was followed 20 miles by a DPS officer before a stop was made." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake