Pubdate: Thu, 14 Mar 2002 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2002 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Section: New York Region Author: Al Baker COMMISSIONER BANS PROFILING USING RACE BY THE POLICE Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly has issued a strongly worded order to his top commanders against the use of racial profiling as a tool for arrests, car stops or any other law enforcement actions. Although the Police Department has never acknowledged that it engages in racial profiling — the use of race, ethnicity or national origin as clues to criminality — Mr. Kelly said he put out the order to make the department's position clear among officers and the public. Police officials said the order, the first of its kind issued by the department, takes admonitions from its existing guidelines, as well as from legal rulings on the issue, and puts them in one policy statement so that no one will be confused about the department's stance. "I think this has been the policy all along, but it is important to state it in written form," Mr. Kelly said. "This has been an area of concern to members of minority communities in the past. There is at least the perception, in some people's minds, that racial profiling goes on, and we want to have a clear statement of what the policy of this department is as far as racial profiling is concerned." As the United States customs commissioner in the Clinton administration, Mr. Kelly gained a reputation for taking action to curb racial profiling. At the time, critics said the Customs Service unfairly singled out black and Hispanic people for searches at airports and other ports of entry. But Mr. Kelly studied the issue in 1999, and was widely credited with finding more efficient ways to intercept contraband at border crossings than using racial profiling, a practice President Clinton called "morally indefensible." Mr. Kelly developed objective criteria for customs agents to identify odd behavior among people crossing the border, with an eye toward stopping drug smuggling. Mr. Kelly, who said he was close to naming someone to direct and possibly revamp the way the Police Department trains officers, noted yesterday, "Obviously, the issue of racial profiling is something that has to be addressed in the training environment." He repeatedly stressed that the order, which was made public yesterday and will be read at precinct station house roll calls and pinned to bulletin boards, was not based on any failures he had noticed in departmental procedure or practice. But it became apparent after the fatal shooting of Amadou Diallo in 1999 that many black and Hispanic New Yorkers believed that the department engaged in racial profiling, with many suggesting that it was Mr. Diallo's race that led the police to approach him. And the state attorney general's office found that year that blacks and Hispanics were much more likely than whites to be stopped and frisked. Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, hailed the new policy as "an important and long overdue step forward" for an agency that, she charged, had previously refused to take a clear stand against racial profiling even while controversies over the issue have roiled. "Racial profiling has always been illegal, because it violates the U.S. and State Constitution," Ms. Lieberman said. "But this policy lays the basis for disciplinary proceedings against officers who engage in the practice, so it adds an additional layer for enforcement." The one-page statement orders commanding officers of precincts to establish a self-inspection system. And it directs the department's quality-assurance division to see that officers comply with the order. Compstat, the computer-based crime-tracking system, will be also used to measure compliance. David A. Harris, a professor of law and values at the University of Toledo College of Law and the author of "Profiles in Injustice: Why Racial Profiling Cannot Work" (The New Press, 2002), said a number of other cities and states had put policies against racial profiling into writing in the past two years. "In itself, the New York policy is not unusual," Professor Harris said. "What is important here is that the N.Y.P.D. is a force that, for years, has refused even in the face of very clear evidence to acknowledge the existence of racial profiling. This policy shows them facing the issue head on, and Ray Kelly is the man who can do it." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart