Pubdate: Mon, 28 May 2001
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2001 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Solomon Moore, Times Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues)

RACE PROFILING SUIT CHALLENGES CHP'S TACTICS

Motorists: Class Action Targets Officers Who Are Cracking Down On Drugs In 
Central California

A federal class action lawsuit that charges that the California Highway 
Patrol uses racially biased patrolling standards is challenging fundamental 
drug war tactics in California.

The lawsuit alleges that vehicles driven by black or Latino motorists are 
up to three times as likely as those driven by whites to be searched by 
state drug interdiction officers. The suit also charges that these officers 
routinely use intimidation, ruses and drivers' ignorance of their civil 
rights to obtain consent to search.

The suit takes aim at officers who are trying to crack down on drugs in 
Central California, particularly the burgeoning methamphetamine trade. It 
asks that they cease the use of consent searches and "pretext stops," in 
which officers use minor traffic infractions to conduct more extensive 
searches.

A confluence of factors has driven the use of these patrol tactics: federal 
law enforcement training programs introduced in the 1980s; the splintering 
of Colombian drug cartels, which led to the rise of Mexican meth 
traffickers; and a series of Supreme Court decisions affirming the tactics.

CHP Commissioner D.O. "Spike" Helmick has repeatedly denied that his 
department engages in racial profiling. But last month, he ordered a 
six-month moratorium on consent searches. Some law enforcement officials 
say that move has hindered drug enforcement.

The lawsuit, filed in 1998 on behalf of three plaintiffs by the American 
Civil Liberties Union, was certified as a class action suit earlier this 
month by U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel in San Jose. Trial is not 
expected until next year.

The suit relies in part on traffic-stop data the CHP began collecting in 
1999 after the department realized that the data it had previously 
collected "could not disprove claims of racial profiling," according to a 
CHP report issued last year. Gov. Gray Davis has vetoed bills that would 
have mandated collection of racial data on all traffic stops.

According to ACLU calculations of CHP data obtained through the legal 
process known as discovery, Latinos driving along coastal and Central 
California highways are twice as likely to be stopped as whites and more 
than three times as likely to have their vehicles searched by specially 
trained drug interdiction officers. In the Coastal Division, blacks were 
twice as likely as whites to be searched by drug interdiction officers.

Helmick refused to discuss the statistics, saying the ACLU's findings were 
based on incomplete information under court seal.

Jon Streeter, an attorney representing the plaintiffs, blamed the imbalance 
on "an official policy, a collection of techniques that are carried out on 
the highways and disproportionately affects minorities. These practices are 
being taught to officers statewide."

CHP training manuals, copiously annotated with recent Supreme Court 
rulings, outline several techniques to stop motorists and then search their 
vehicles without probable cause.

"There are many ways to legally stretch your contact time with the 
suspect," reads one document. It details how officers can extend a 
detention by examining a motorist's driver's license, rechecking driver 
information through different databases unnecessarily, and inspecting the 
federal certification sticker and any auto parts etched with the vehicle 
identification number.

The documents also explain how officers can request consent searches even 
after the motorist is released from a traffic stop: "Wish the motorist a 
safe trip, [tell him] 'Don't forget to buckle up!!' Give instructions about 
how to safely reenter the freeway and just as they turn to retreat to their 
vehicle, pop your questions . . . work your magic. [The] degree of criminal 
activity required to justify a consensual encounter is zero."

Since the 1970s, the Supreme Court has affirmed the use of such tactics. 
Most recently, two 1996 rulings, one affirming the use of pretext traffic 
stops and the other allowing police to ask for consent even after motorists 
are released from detention, further expanded police powers.

Perhaps the most sweeping decision came in March, when the high court ruled 
5 to 4 that it was constitutional for officers to arrest traffic violators, 
rather than simply citing them. Opponents said that practice abandons the 
standard of probable cause.

Civil rights advocates trace the CHP's increased reliance on consent 
searches and pretext stops to the Drug Enforcement Administration's 
Operation Pipeline, a federal drug interdiction program that spread 
throughout the country during the mid-1980s.

That program was scrutinized during a recent lawsuit against the New Jersey 
State Police, which resulted in a $13-million settlement. In that case, 
training documents used by New Jersey authorities from the mid-1980s to the 
mid-1990s, and entered into evidence, listed "Hispanic men" and "black men" 
as two of several "identifiers for a possible drug courier."

Racial profiling has existed, in one form or another, at least since the 
early 20th century. But only recently have courts and legislatures 
addressed the issue.

Perhaps the most public airing of the problem came last year during a 
presidential primary debate at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, when Vice 
President Al Gore accused his opponent, former Sen. Bill Bradley of New 
Jersey, of being soft on the issue. Racial profiling lawsuits have been 
filed in several states, including Maryland, Florida, New York and 
Washington, and legislation aimed at enhancing traffic stop data has been 
proposed in more than a dozen other states.

No law enforcement official interviewed for this article admitted using 
racial profiles, but some said it is hard to overlook the rising presence 
of drug traffickers in the Central Valley who are Mexican citizens.

The vacuum left by the fall of several large Colombian cartels, authorities 
say, opened the way for Mexican money launderers and drug distributors to 
take over drug production. To minimize competition and risk, many Mexican 
organizations are increasingly investing in methamphetamine, a domestic 
drug that requires far less time, manpower and space to produce, these 
experts say.

"Up to 70% of meth is produced in the Central Valley. The remainder is 
produced in California in general," said William Ruzzamenti, a DEA agent 
and the director of the Central Valley High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area 
program. "We are the Colombia of the meth biz."

The Central Valley, long a hide-out for marijuana growers and cocaine 
smugglers, is now dotted with meth "super labs" outfitted with specially 
made 22-liter flasks capable of cooking industrial-sized quantities of the 
powdery stimulant, drug enforcement officials say.

Robert Pennal, special supervisor of the California Bureau of Narcotics 
Enforcement and commander of Fresno's Methamphetamine Task Force, says he 
has found production sites in barns and abandoned farmhouses, in old silos 
and beneath orange groves.

In addition to physical cover, agents say, the valley provides meth dealers 
with demographic cover in farming communities.

DEA official Ruzzamenti said: "The couriers live in these agricultural 
communities. A lot of them are Michoacan families. We have a tremendous 
population of people from [the Mexican state of] Michoacan in California. 
Usually they try to get couriers who don't have problems, and they're more 
likely to speak English, so if immigration or someone stops them, they 
won't be suspect."

To avoid detection, they drive old cars, Ruzzamenti said, to "blend in with 
the rest of the traffic."

And that, said David Harris, a law professor and author at the University 
of Toledo, is racial profiling.

"Let's assume it is true--and in certain situations, [the fact] that many 
of these folks are from Mexico is going to be helpful information. What 
doesn't make sense is that therefore anyone who looks like they might be a 
Mexican national gets treated as a suspected meth trafficker," Harris said.

"If you rely on physical characteristics, a beater car and 'the guy's 
Mexican,' you're going to sweep in many more people that have nothing to do 
with drug trafficking," he said.

ACLU lawyers said they are seeking damages for their three named plaintiffs 
but are more interested in forcing the state to collect more data on race 
and ethnicity and abandon consent searches and pretext stops.

CHP Commissioner Helmick said he is keeping an open mind and is awaiting 
further statistics that will show whether current CHP tactics "are worth 
all this trouble."

"When I was a young officer . . . we had to build probable cause, and you 
had to be able to articulate to a judge why you conducted a search," he 
said. "But right, wrong or indifferent, the courts have ruled that the 
whole idea of consent searches are legal. If the courts or Congress don't 
want this to be used, they should outlaw it."
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