Pubdate: Mon, 18 Jul 2005 Source: Peoria Journal Star (IL) Copyright: 2005sPeoria Journal Star Contact: http://pjstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/338 Author: Ryan Keith, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) STUDY: POLICE TARGET MINORITIES SPRINGFIELD - Black and Hispanic drivers in large downstate cities are pulled over by police at a rate that far exceeds their share of the local population, according to an analysis of data from more than 2 million traffic stops last year. Springfield had the biggest gap: 42 percent of its traffic stops involved minorities even though its minority population is only 16 percent. It was followed by cities such as Peoria, Rockford and Joliet. An Associated Press analysis of the traffic study also found that after being pulled over, minorities were more likely to be ticketed than white drivers. And minority drivers were more likely to have their cars searched and to be found with drugs and weapons, the numbers show. Some police departments contend the data is flawed and doesn't paint an accurate picture of their work. But minority leaders say the results show police sometimes target minorities. "I really don't need statistics to tell me racial profiling is an issue or that it exists," said state Sen. Kwame Raoul, D-Chicago. "I think the statistics serve more than the purpose of identifying whether a problem exists. It helps hopefully to target the problem." The study was approved in 2003 at the urging of minority groups and lawmakers who complained that too many people were being pulled over simply for "driving while black" or Hispanic. For instance, state Sen. James Meeks, a black Chicago independent and pastor of a large church, said he was stopped by Chicago police for a trivial offense Wednesday night and ended up with an officer's gun pointed at him. Meeks said if he could be treated so poorly, "I know the average young black person on the street doesn't stand a chance." Police are investigating the incident. State lawmakers required every police department - about 1,000 agencies - to record the details of all 2004 traffic stops and submit them to the Illinois Department of Transportation. Almost 2.5 million stops later, the results released this month offer something for both sides of the debate. The governor and minority lawmakers are calling for further studies and new requirements for police handling traffic stops. Meanwhile, police argue the figures show aggressive work in high-crime areas, not a pattern of racial profiling. Statewide, 33 percent of people pulled over were minorities - slightly higher than the estimated 28 percent of Illinois drivers who are minorities, a category that mostly includes blacks and Hispanics but also any nonwhite drivers. Among departments stopping more than 10,000 drivers, the gap between the minority population and traffic stops was bigger in mid-sized cities such as Springfield, Peoria, Joliet and Rockford than in Chicago and its suburbs. Chicago-area police pulled over far more minorities overall, but the percentage came closer to matching the percentage of minorities in the local population. For instance, 72 percent of drivers stopped by Chicago police were minorities, and the city's minority population is 62 percent - still a gap, but much smaller than the ones seen downstate. But once a stop occurred, minority drivers seemed to fare better in big downstate cities than in the Chicago area. For example, in Springfield, Peoria and Joliet, minority drivers were no more likely - and in some cases less likely - to get a ticket than their white counterparts. Meanwhile, police in some Chicago suburbs gave tickets more often to minorities than to whites. In some cases, the imbalance was nearly 10 percentage points. Statewide, police ticketed nearly seven of every 10 minority drivers they stopped, but only six of every 10 white drivers. Problems with this category of data make exact percentages uncertain. Both whites and minorities usually were pulled over for moving violations such as speeding, but police stopped minorities for license and registration violations more frequently than whites. The numbers showed police infrequently searched the vehicles of people they stopped. Officers also rarely found drugs and weapons. But minorities were much more likely than whites to be searched and to be found with contraband. Only 5 percent of white drivers had their vehicles searched, while 14 percent of minority-driven vehicles were searched. Drugs and weapons were found in more than 20 percent of stops involving minorities, compared to about 5 percent for white drivers. But experts and police warn the results can be misleading. Police statewide say the high proportions of minority stops are not because of racial profiling, but the result of aggressive police work in high-crime areas, which consist of more minorities. "That can definitely skew the numbers one way or the other," said Laimutis "Limey" Nargelenas of the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police. "If you've got more police presence . . . of course, there's going to be more stops there." Both advocates and critics see problems with the study. Alexander Weiss, a Northwestern University professor who oversaw the study, said the data on drugs and weapons found during traffic stops was optional, so some agencies reported nothing. He also noted a computer glitch affected the reliability of data on tickets versus warnings. The AP analysis confirmed the disparity of minorities being ticketed more often than whites by looking at data from larger departments that was not affected by the glitch. Several agencies complained the U.S. Census data used to compute communities' minority populations was inaccurate. "How do you know when a car's coming at you and you clock them for speeding what's going to be in it?" said John Loy, chief deputy for the Effingham County Sheriff's Department. "It's going to throw an inappropriate wrench in the whole thing." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth