Pubdate: April 30, 1999 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Editor NEW JERSEY'S TROOPER SCANDAL The racial profiling and drug interdiction offenses at the New Jersey State Police keep looking worse and worse. It was outrageous when state troopers were found to be stopping and searching a disproportionate number of black and Hispanic motorists on the New Jersey Turnpike in an effort to intercept illegal drugs. Now it turns out that the State Police have enlisted hotel workers along the turnpike to spy on guests and report behavior as common as speaking Spanish. This civil liberties nightmare has all the earmarks of a program that has spun out of control. a.. Thus it can only be welcome that the Federal Department of Justice has decided that there are grounds to file a civil suit against the State Police for racial discrimination, and that New Jersey's Attorney General, Peter G. Verniero, has agreed to negotiate a settlement. The two-year investigation by Justice initially focused on the practice of singling out motorists for stops and searches based on their skin color. Given the mounting evidence of improper State Police operations, it is imperative that Justice use this hammer to demand a thorough overhaul that will root out the institutional racism that seems to permeate the agency. For years, blacks and Hispanics have complained that they have been subject to illegal racial profiling by state troopers -- and for just as many years, New Jersey officials vehemently denied that such practices existed. Only last week did Mr. Verniero and Gov. Christine Todd Whitman finally acknowledge those patterns of discrimination after Mr. Verniero issued a report on highway stops and searches. This week The Times's David Kocieniewski reported on the little-known hotel-motel program operated by the State Police's drug bureau. The program, begun in the early 1990's, recruits motel workers, mostly along the New Jersey Turnpike, to inform on guests who might be drug traffickers. The program trains the workers to report to police on travelers with certain characteristics, such as having Florida license plates or paying with cash. The troopers would look through credit card receipts and guest registries without guest permission, and would even offer rewards for tips that lead to arrests. Although police officials deny that racial profiling is used, several hotel workers who have gone through the training say they were told to look upon Spanish-speakers with greater suspicion. Given the agency's proven use of race-based criteria in traffic stops, it is hard to believe that race would not be used in the hotel program as well. But whatever the case, the hotel operation offers a disturbing window into the police agency's philosophy. In the name of crime-fighting, the agency has created a vast surveillance network that engulfs large numbers of innocent hotel guests. Mr. Verniero's office says it is reviewing all drug interdiction programs. The fact that this program has been in place for nearly a decade without a review shows how much institutional reform is needed. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea