Sent to you by Tee via Google Reader: ACLU: SoCal officers targeted
black barbershops via Black Politics on the Web by The Admin on 4/9/09
A civil rights group has accused authorities in Riverside County of
unfairly targeting black-owned barbershops with raids in which officers
burst into businesses with guns and bulletproof vests and questioned
clients without warrants.

The federal lawsuit filed Wednesday alleges the Moreno Valley Police
Department, the Sheriff’s Department and a state inspection board
conducted searches under the false pretext that they were part of a
health inspection.

“There was no evidence of criminal activity at these locations and no
reason that these once-thriving businesses were singled out other than
racial profiling,” said Peter Bibring, a staff attorney for the
American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, which filed the
lawsuit. “These raids were a blatant violation of these business
owners’ civil rights.”

The lawsuit cites raids from last April in which Moreno Valley police,
city code officers and inspectors from the California Board of
Barbering and Cosmetology raided five barbershops that were owned and
patronized by blacks.

At Fades Unlimited, officers ran criminal warrant checks on barbers and
customers, the lawsuit claims. The ACLU said a barber who objected was
handcuffed and detained in a police car for 10 minutes.

It was not immediately clear if any arrests or citations resulted from
the raids.

Spokesmen for the police and the sheriff’s office—which contracts with
the city—refused to comment.

A spokesman with the state barbering board would not comment because he
had not seen the lawsuit.

Kevon Gordon, whose Hair Shack barbershop was also raided, said the
officers treated his employees and customers like criminals because
they were black.

“It was sickening,” Gordon said in a news release from the ALCU. “I
have lost good customers and had my reputation called into question in
a community where I’ve been working for 20 years. I wouldn’t wish this
on anyone.”

The lawsuit asks that the defendants adopt policies to protect against
racial profiling and limit the role of law enforcement in regulatory
inspections. It also seeks compensatory damages.

AP

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