Pubdate: Tue, 03 May 2005 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2005 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: David Ovalle REPORT: BLACKS EYED BUT NOT PROFILED No evidence exists that Miami-Dade police engage in racial profiling when pulling over motorists -- but blacks are heavily scrutinized once pulled over, a long-awaited study released Monday says. Miami-Dade County police officers usually do not consider race when making traffic stops, although black motorists often face more scrutiny than others once they are pulled over, according to a long-awaited study released on Monday. The study -- ordered by the County Commission in 2000 and hailed Monday as the most comprehensive look at racial profiling nationwide - -- found ''no consistent, systematic or patterned'' targeting of minorities for traffic stops. ''In 70 percent of the time, officers, when they turn their lights on, they do not know the color of the driver,'' said Geoffrey Alpert, a sociologist from the University of South Carolina who headed the study. ''Race profiling is not a problem with Miami-Dade Police Department,'' Miami-Dade Police Director Robert Parker said at a press conference announcing the report's findings. Some Complaints But skeptics complained that the study was made public six months after it was turned over to police, a delay that prompted charges that the department was trying to downplay the report. ''It allowed the Miami-Dade County Police Department to basically present its version of the report,'' said Terry Coble, the president of the Greater Miami chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. Public Record? Parker said officials first had to deem whether the report was a public record and said the delay also stemmed from scheduling conflicts among police, politicians and community activists. The study also analyzed what happens to motorists after they are pulled over. The results were varied. Blacks were less likely to be charged with possession of illegal items - - - such as drugs or weapons -- than Hispanics or whites and were more likely to receive a verbal warning. On the other hand, they had their cars towed more often than other two groups, as well as subjected to pat-down searches and computerized background screenings, the study found. While the majority of traffic stops didn't result in searches, black drivers were subjected to extra scrutiny 4.1 percent of the time, compared to 2.7 percent for whites and 2.6 percent for Hispanics. The result: Blacks get arrested more, the study said. `Racial Disparities' ''Research has shown that some racial disparities in officer decision- making are derived from general cultural values and unconscious attitudes,'' the study said. ``These concerns are not limited to police, but shared by many people in the general population.'' The study was conducted by Alpert's firm and analyzed traffic data for more than 66,000 traffic stops in unincorporated Miami-Dade, information filed by officers and ride-alongs by observers from the University of Miami. ''As a member of the black community, I do have a problem with these findings,'' said County Commissioner Barbara Jordan. The findings were unveiled at a press conference at Miami-Dade police headquarters in Doral. However, the study was turned over to Miami-Dade police nearly six months ago. At the press conference, members of the ACLU grilled Parker, the police director. They said police stalled the study's release and did not give a county board created to oversee the study time to analyze the data. The study was commissioned by the county five years ago amid rising complaints from the black community about racial profiling. The report also spawned the racial profiling advisory board, which included a seat for the ACLU. Last month, the Miami New Times reported the study's existence and filed a public-records request to obtain the study. Legal Action The ACLU on Monday said it had been preparing to take legal action against the department on the weekly newspaper's behalf. Coble said the ACLU did not receive a copy of the report until Friday afternoon. The ACLU, however, did support the study's recommendations: better training and maintaining in-depth records of traffic stops. Said Commissioner Jordan: ``I look forward to working with director Parker in making sure those recommendations are implemented.'' - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFLorida)