Pubdate: Mon 05/31 1999 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 1999, The Tribune Co. Contact: http://www.tampatrib.com/ Forum: http://tampabayonline.net/interact/welcome.htm Author: MARK JOHNSON of Media General News Service 39 BLACK U.S. ATTORNEYS DESCRIBE WARNING SONS ABOUT RACIAL PROFILING (Atlanta) - Passing down a fear like an heirloom, black fathers give their sons a warning. In what is often a rite of passage for some black fathers and their teenage sons, Richard Deane sat down with Jonathan Deane, 15, earlier this year and explained that he may be stopped by police simply because he is a young, black male. Three years ago, when Deane's older son, Ricky, also was about to claim his driver's license, the two had a series of the same kind of grave, if awkward, chats. The father's words hung heavy with the lessons of life, and the son often responded with single words: ``OK.'' This father-son snapshot might serve as just another reminder of the sometimes frayed trust between police and the minority community, except that Deane is a U.S. attorney, the chief federal law enforcement officer in Atlanta and the northern portion of Georgia. He warned his sons about the dangers of the system, yet he is the system. He remembered telling Ricky: ``You need to be aware that there's at least a likelihood that you'll be stopped by the police.'' Deane is not the only black U.S. attorney issuing this warning to his son. Saul Green, the U.S. attorney in Detroit, cautioned about racial profiling - when police stop someone based on their race instead of their actions - in a conversation last year with his son, Tarik. A competitive swimmer and National Honor Society member, Tarik has passed his 6-foot-1- inch father in height. ``I just had to explain to him that as he drove around and moved from Detroit and into the suburbs to be particularly careful, because as a young black man there would be circumstances where he would catch the attention of law enforcement because he was a young black man,'' Green said. ``Part of what struck me in having the conversation was the unfortunate need to, in very stark terms, tell him that racism exists and he might very well be subject to it.'' Neither man spoke about these conversations outside the family. Then, in December, they recounted them to law-enforcement professionals and academicians from across the country at a Washington meeting. The Justice Department had gathered the group to talk about the problem, whether perceived or real, of race-based traffic stops. Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., had proposed legislation that would require police to record the race of every motorist they stop. As each participant was asked to speak for two to three minutes, the police chiefs sounded understandably defensive. ```Our officers don't do this. They don't profile on race,''' said Green, repeating some of the comments. ``So when it got to me it seemed it was important to strike the balance. Here I am a member of law enforcement, a person who truly is part of the system, believes in the system ... and yet I had to have this discussion with my son because as a father I felt it was important that he have all the warnings for his safety and well-being.'' Afterward, several police chiefs thanked Green and Deane for the personal testimony, ``the kind of thing that brings it home,'' Deane said. Attorney General Janet Reno mentioned the exchange, though not the names, in an address last month at the National Press Club. ``When even a U.S. attorney who is African American feels he has to instruct his son to be cautious of the police when he drives, we have a problem,'' Reno said. Charles Wilson, the U.S. attorney in Tampa, attended the December meeting and credited Deane's and Green's comments with influencing Reno to speak. ``One of the advantages of having black Americans in these positions of leadership is that we have input into decision-making, and we have a voice in setting law-enforcement policy,'' Wilson said. Law-enforcement officials and leaders in the black community agree they face a widespread difficulty but differ over the cause. Civil rights groups brandish statistics showing that police dis proportionately stop or search minority drivers. The New Jersey Attorney General's Office studied two state police posts and reported last month that, while officers stopped twice as many white drivers as they did blacks, blacks were twice as likely to be searched. Police leaders acknowledge that some black motorists think they're being stopped because of their race, but they contend that officers are not doing a good enough job of explaining to drivers the reason for stopping them. Chief Ron Deziel in the virtually all-white Detroit suburb of Dearborn, Mich., said racist officers exist and must be weeded out. Officers, however, sometimes have to consider race. ``If a high percentage of the drug trafficking in a particular area is being conducted by minorities, an officer can't ignore that,'' he said. Deane, a soft-spoken man with a beard and receding hairline, knew that as each of his sons reached the age of car keys that he would lose some control over their lives. So Deane tried to tread the thin fatherly line and parcel out the benefits of his own experience without being overbearing. ``You have to prepare your children to live with and live in the greater community in a fashion in which they'll be safe and treated with respect,'' Deane said. Parents, regardless of race, can't ``stick your head in the sand about the possibility of [their children] having encounters with the police.'' With both sons, Deane advised them to be calm and cooperate. If something seems unfair, live with it until your parents can deal with it. In the course of giving that counsel, he raised the possibility of racism. ``I think he was not particularly surprised to hear me say that,'' Deane said, recalling a conversation with Ricky, now a horticulture student at Georgia Southern University. ``It was not some moment of profound exchange.'' Teenagers don't reveal a lot in such situations, agreed Green. ``It was, `OK, Dad. I understand,' '' he recalled. Both Deane and Green remembered, as college students, unpleasant encounters with police during the late '60s and early '70s. In his sophomore year of college, Deane and a friend were stopped - ``rousted'' without cause, he said - by police in his hometown of Macon, Ga. One of the officers had Deane's friend up against the car and was uttering ``a lot of profanity, a lot of use of the `N- word.' '' The two men, however, also can claim long-standing ties to their community and law enforcement. Deane was an assistant U.S. attorney in Atlanta for 14 years and a federal magistrate for four. They have spoken little about their personal experiences in public because they are interested in enlightening the law enforcement community, not antagonizing them. (Both men declined a reporter's requests to interview their sons.) ``We're not looking to be confrontational about this,'' Deane said. ``Our interest is in educating people that this is a core issue. [Racial profiling] is a tool that ought not be used.'' Deane has a full-time staffer whose sole job is to work with Georgia and Atlanta area law-enforcement agencies. She consistently reinforces the message of not using race as a proxy for legitimate suspicion. Green and Deziel are organizing a law-enforcement summit with community leaders to ensure that the state's new mandatory seat belt law is not used as an excuse to stop minority motorists, as civil rights groups fear. Racial profiling ``is an unfortunate part of life. But it doesn't prevent me from having good solid, strong relationships with law enforcement,'' Green said. It has become an unfortunate legacy that both of these federal prosecutors can remember their fathers warning them about encounters with police. Now they have done the same. Their hope is that this tradition will end with their generation. - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto