Police Profiling

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Police Profiling and Brutality in the United States If anybody does not think that there are too many racist and brutal police officers in this country, than they are wrong. Statistically speaking, about two black citizens are killed each week by a police officer, respectively a white one. It's becoming a bad problem. White Police officers from all reaches of the United States profile against all other races, mainly African Americans, and manage to keep from being incarcerated or fired from their position as an officer almost every single time, no matter what they do wrong or what crime they commit.
Racial profiling is a major problem across the country, in all states, but this problem has been around since the start of the nation, …show more content…

African Americans make up only 24.4% of the cities population, but 63.3% of all the civilians that were stopped were African Americans, showing that blacks are targeted more than any other race(ACLU) (“Black, Brown and Targeted”).
"The ACLU lawsuit, White v. Williams, involves minority motorists who were stopped on the New Jersey Turnpike based on racial profiling practices by the state police. ACLU clients include Dr. Elmo Randolph, a dentist who drives a luxury car and has been stopped by police approximately 100 times without ever receiving a ticket. Dr. Randolph was subjected to searches of his car and interrogations about his profession and how and where he bought his car on numerous occasions."
This article from the American Civil Liberties Union shows that no matter how nice of stuff African Americans have, they just get pulled over because they're black. The way that police use racial profiling as a tactic is very unfair to all the minorities(ACLU)(Court says ACLU New racial profiling case can Include Claims that Officials Acted with "Deliberate Indifference" to …show more content…

Ten years later, I can still find at least three cop cars in one square mile almost anywhere in my neighborhood -- high police presence. I've been pulled over, accused of drug possession, and violently harassed by a police officer in North County, St. Louis. These experiences fit into a much larger narrative of criminalization of Black people across the United States. We must have radical change if Black people are to survive and thrive in America.” This was written by Charlene A. Carruthers about her past. Just because she is an African American lady, she was accused of possessing drugs and doing many illegal activities(Black Future Month: End the Anti-Black Police State)(Charlene A.

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