Pubdate: Thu, 10 Jun 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: Michael A. Fletcher, Washington Post PRESIDENTIAL ORDER ON POLICE STOPS Federal agencies must collect data on who they detain and why WASHINGTON -- President Clinton on Wednesday directed federal law enforcement agencies to collect information on the race, ethnicity and gender of the people they detain for questioning, a move aimed at developing data needed to determine whether they unfairly target minorities for scrutiny. Speaking at a Justice Department conference, Clinton said he had ordered the collection of detailed data on who federal law enforcement agencies are detaining and why. The department will then analyze the information to determine whether the agencies engage in racial profiling, the practice of targeting people for police examination based on their race or ethnicity. "Racial profiling is in fact the opposite of good police work, where actions are based on hard facts, not stereotypes," Clinton said. "It is wrong, it is destructive, and it must stop." The presidential order comes amid mounting criticism of aggressive police tactics by civil rights leaders, and a day after the conviction of a second New York City police officer in the brutal beating of Haitian immigrant Abner Louima. While crime is down nationwide, a national report released last week by the Justice Department showed that minorities still are significantly less satisfied with local law enforcement than whites. Clinton's directive marks the first time he has waded so decisively into the issue of racial profiling, the subject of sharp disagreement between civil rights leaders and law enforcement authorities. While civil rights leaders have long complained about racial profiling, citing a thick file of mostly anecdotal evidence, law enforcement officials dismiss the complaints as more perception than fact. Clinton said developing more detailed information about police stops can bridge that gap. "We all have an obligation to move beyond anecdotes to find out who is being stopped and why," said Clinton. The presidential order applies only to federal law enforcement agencies, which typically come into contact with the public far less frequently than do state and local police forces. Already, some federal agencies are collecting the kind of data that would be required by the presidential order. Last month, the U.S. Customs service began systematically collecting racial and ethnic data of the people searched by its agents, amid widespread allegations of racial profiling. The agency has about 12 lawsuits pending, most alleging that it unfairly targets minorities for searches. "We needed this information in order for us to get a handle on those complaints," said Customs Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly. In his remarks, Clinton also called on state and local police forces, which operate outside federal jurisdiction, to begin collecting information about who is being detained and why. Local law enforcement officials generally oppose such data collection, calling it a waste of police resources and a hindrance to fighting crime. "I don't know what purpose is going to be served by law enforcement officials recording your race, your sex, and your age," said Robert Scully, president of the National Association of Police Organizations. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck