Pubdate: Tue, 08 Apr 2003 Source: Item, The (SC) Copyright: 2000 The Item Contact: http://www.theitem.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1105 Author: Braden Bunch NAACP AIRS CONCERNS WITH LAW ENFORCEMENT The Sumter branch of the NAACP is concerned about how law enforcement officers treat minorities, members said Monday during a forum with Sumter Police Chief Patty Patterson and Sheriff Tommy Mims. Moderators touched on a series of issues that have long been a concern of minorities. The discussion at the North HOPE Center, moderated by James Williams, the first vice chairman of the local branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, visited racial profiling, selective enforcement, hiring practices and a seemingly disproportionate number of minority drug arrests. Both department heads said they make strong efforts to prevent racial profiling. Patterson said the city force, as an accredited agency, has to have a written policy in place to prevent such actions. Mims said his office does not have a written policy but it stays on top of the issue by manual reviews of arrest records. Joined by Chief Deputy Anthony Dennis, Mims said they had discussed starting a specific program, but that it would not be cost-effective. "I don't see us implementing one anytime in the future," Mims said. Dennis agreed, saying, "I think we're doing a pretty good job now." During the public questioning portion of the dialogue, NAACP member Eugene Baten told the officers local statistics make it apparent that minorities are being arrested for illegal drugs at a disproportionate rate. Baten said his research shows 83 percent of all people incarcerated in Sumter County on drug arrests are black. "I know from experience that white people are involved in drugs as much as black people, if not more," said Baten, who works with the state's Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse. Patterson said a possible reason is that often minorities are more blatant in using drugs in public, while whites might have a tendency to use drugs "behind closed doors." "I don't see it as a black and white issue," Mims said. "I see it as a people problem. It's a drug problem." On the issue of selective enforcement -- situations where apparently several people have partaken in a crime but only a few are prosecuted -- Patterson said all law enforcement can do is turn over information to the solicitor's office and allow that department to determine who will be prosecuted. Police Maj. Perry Herod agreed. "We have to go with the information we get." Williams began the discussion by asking for each department's statistics on its hiring practices of minorities. Neither department could say what percentage of applicants were black, but Patterson said about half the people hired during her tenure have been minorities. Minorities make up 37 percent of Mims' staff and 35 percent of Patterson's. Patterson and Mims also discussed relations between the city and county departments, with both Patterson and Mims saying the city and the county work well together when compared to other locales. "A lot of places in this state you wouldn't see the sheriff and the chief sitting this close to one another," Mims said, "let alone working in the same building." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth