Fill in circles completely
By
The Omaha Police Department's anti-profiling initiative, replete with goofy ACT style fill-in-the-circles-completely computer sheets, begins the second we ring in the New Year at midnight, 2002.
I’ve got plenty of my own views and opinions on sundry law enforcement topics (just ask me!), but the following article is too good not to give a glowing endorsement of.
"Counting Noses" by LAPD officer 'Jack Dunphy' is one of the best editorial pieces I've read on the whole issue of racial profiling, the manner in which Los Angeles police (and OPD personnel as well) will be collecting race data on stops, and what the net result will likely be.
Pay particular attention to what 'Dunphy' (a pen name) says officers will do to ensure they have a demographically diverse pattern of citizen contacts. Very acute observations.
I believe what he predicts will be mirrored in the streets of Omaha... and elsewhere.
--
Counting Noses
How the campaign against
profiling leads to higher crime.
Mr. Dunphy is an officer of the Los Angeles Police Department
All
but lost in the hunt for foreign-born terrorists since September 11 has been the
unpleasant fact that we still have plenty of the homegrown variety walking among
the streets among us. According to the FBI, there were 15,517 criminal
homicides, 90,186 forcible rapes, and 407,842 robberies in the United States in
the year 2000. Occurring as they did in isolated incidents spread out over the
entire country, the great majority of these crimes received little or no news
coverage, especially here in Los Angeles where only a celebrity angle can move a
crime story off the back pages of the Los Angeles Times. Though the FBI compiles these
statistics, it has little to do with the apprehension of those responsible for
these and the other, less serious crimes that impact the country. That task
remains with the local cop on the street. Unfortunately, there are those who
would let the inflamed passions of the professionally and perennially aggrieved
stand in the way of effective law enforcement. I refer of course to the hysteria
over "racial profiling," the predictable effect of which has been a reluctance
among police officers to take preemptive action against criminals in the areas
most plagued by them. Under the terms of a federal
consent decree, we in the LAPD have been collecting, since November 1,
demographic data on nearly every person we contact in the course of our workday.
Each officer is required to turn in a "data capture report" on every person with
whom he initiates an encounter, whether that encounter leads to an arrest, a
citation, a verbal warning, or what have you. The forms are completed by filling
in little circles on the page, similar to marking answers on a multiple-choice
exam. If we don't know the exact ethnicity or age of the person, we're
instructed to guess. No one has told us what will be done with this information
or who might have access to it when it is compiled, but we cops, tending as we
do towards cynicism, fear the worst. If I show a pattern of filling in too many
of the wrong circles there may be dire consequences awaiting me, no matter how
benign my contacts may have been. Those who insist on this sort
of data collection are numb to the nettlesome fact that is in areas heavily
populated by certain minorities that crime is most rampant. The residents of
these areas are the ones most in need of proactive police officers for security
against those who would prey on them. Instead, the opposite is happening. I
recently came across some interesting information from one of the LAPD's 18
patrol divisions. On paper, the area is a picture of ethnic diversity: Whites
form the largest racial group, though they are less than a third of the overall
population. There are significant numbers of Hispanics, blacks, and Asians, as
well as a large number of what LAPD record keepers label as "others." But while
the population is diverse, the crime statistics are not. In a recent one-month
period there were over a hundred robberies, all but a handful of which were
committed by Hispanics and blacks, and the majority of which were committed
against Hispanics and blacks. Prudence would seem to dictate that if a
police officer in this division were interested in reducing the number of
robberies he would focus his efforts on those areas where they occur and on
people matching the descriptions of reported suspects. But wait! What about all
those circles to be filled in? Yes, in order to produce a more demographically
diverse pattern of citizen contacts, officers are spending more time outside of
the areas where the robberies are occurring in order to seek out lawbreakers —
usually minor traffic violators — who will help them bring their little circles
into a more acceptable line. The net result is fewer hurt feelings but more
crime in the areas these officers have abandoned. News accounts and e-mails from
fellow police officers tell me this is happening all over the country. The first responsibility of
government is the protection of its citizens. Violent crime in Los Angeles has
increased 16 percent over the past two years, while arrests for violent crime
have decreased 17 percent. Perhaps one day someone will realize there is a
correlation between these numbers and do something to reverse the trend. -- Note: No use or
reproduction w/o express permission of author and only then with full credit
given in reprint. E-mail Sgt. Baker at
opdsgt@yahoo.com
December 21, 2001 8:55 a.m
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