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Study: Racial Profiling a Growing Problem

By SIOBHAN McDONOUGH
Associated Press Writer
Published September 13, 2004, 11:08 PM CDT

WASHINGTON -- Authorities' targeting of people
because of their racial background or religious
affiliation is a deep-rooted problem in the
United States, with nearly 32 million people
reporting they've been racially profiled, a human
rights group said Monday. 

The report by Amnesty International USA also said
at least 87 million people -- one in three -- in
the United States are at high risk of being
victimized because they belong to a racial,
ethnic or religious group whose members are
commonly targeted by police for unlawful stops
and searches. 

Racial profiling is a growing problem as the
government has expanded its war on terror, the
report said. Police, immigration and airport
security procedures are the areas where the
problem has gotten worse since the Sept. 11,
2001, attacks, it said. 

Citizens and visitors of Middle Eastern and South
Asian descent, and others who appear to be from
these areas or members of the Muslim and Sikh
faiths, have become more frequent subjects of
racial profiling over the last three years, the
study said. 

Such racial profiling is a distraction to law
enforcement and therefore, undermines national
security efforts, the report said. As police
primarily focus on Arab, Muslim and South Asian
males, it said, they are more likely to overlook
terrorists who are white. 

For example, recent cases of American Taliban
John Walker Lindh and British shoe bomber Richard
Reid show that al-Qaida has an ability to recruit
a diverse range of sympathizers. These two would
not necessarily have been identified by policies
that focus on Arab, Muslim and South Asian males,
the report said. 

Aside from the ill-effects on victims --
depression and humiliation -- racial profiling
reinforces residential segregation, creates fear
and mistrust and engenders reluctance in
reporting crimes and cooperating with police
officers, Amnesty International USA said. 

"In these times of domestic insecurity, our
nation simply cannot afford to tolerate practices
and policies that build walls between individuals
or communities and those who are charged with the
duty of protecting all of us," it said. 

State laws continue to be insufficient in
addressing the problem, according to the report. 

Twenty-seven states do not ban racial profiling,
the report said. Also, 46 states don't ban
religious profiling, 35 continue to allow
pedestrian "stop and frisk" searches and only six
of the 15 that ban these searches use a
definition of racial profiling that can actually
be enforced, the report said. 

No jurisdiction in the United States has
addressed the problem in a way that is effective
and comprehensive, the report said. As of August,
bills dealing with racial profiling had been
introduced in 41 states and passed in 29 -- with
only 23 of these states actually banning the
practice outright, the report said. 

The group endorsed bills introduced in the House
by Reps. John Conyers Jr., D-Mich., and
Christopher Shays, R-Conn., and in the Senate by
Democrat Russell Feingold of Wisconsin that would
ban racial profiling at all levels of government.


Amnesty International USA came up with its
estimate of nearly 32 million profiling victims
by analyzing a collection of recent polls, census
figures and studies, including a 2002 examination
by George Washington University's sociology
department. The group heard from scores of
victims during a year of hearings around the
country. 

* __ 

On the Net: 

http://www.amnestyusa.org 
Copyright � 2004, The Associated Press 

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-racial-profiling,1,4854800.story?coll=chi-news-hed




                
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