ONTD Political

Long time coming: Trayvon’s law

12:57 pm - 04/19/2012
Long time coming: Trayvon’s law
For the first time in a decade, Congress holds a hearing on anti-profiling legislation

The name of Trayvon Martin was invoked early and often at a Capitol Hill hearing on federal anti-profiling laws Tuesday as supporters hope the furor over the shooting of the Florida teenage will prompt Congress to take up a legislation that has languished since 2001.

“The senseless death of this innocent young man should be a wake-up call,” said Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, a co-sponsor of legislation that would expand current federal law enforcement guidelines against profiling and mandate training on racial profiling at all federal law enforcement agencies.


“He was profiled, followed, chased and murdered,” said Frederica Wilson, the cowboy hat-wearing congresswoman from Miami where Trayvon lived with his father. “This case has captured international attention and will go down in history as a textbook example of racial profiling.”

More than 225 organizations submitted testimony for the hearing, which included testimony by five congressmen, civil liberties advocates and two police officials. Five senators attended, including Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina. Most of the speakers favored the legislation, sponsored by Maryland Democrat Ben Cardin, which would also forbid law enforcement officers from using race, ethnicity or religion as a factor in routine policing decisions.

The profiling issue exploded into national consciousness earlier this year with intense media coverage of the story of the boy who came home from a convenience store with a snack for his brother only be shot dead by a volunteer neighborhood security guard. Last week, Florida investigators concluded that George Zimmerman had “profiled” Martin as he passed through a residential neighborhood in Sanford, Fla., on Feb. 26, resulting in an altercation in which Zimmerman shot Martin. Zimmerman has been charged with second-degree murder.

The standing-room-only crowd in the Dirksen Senate Office Building demonstrated how the social media campaign to demanding “Justice for Trayvon” had revived the profiling issue in Washington. The last time Congress held hearings on anti-profiling legislation was the summer of 2001, when revelations about the profiling practices of the New Jersey and Maryland state troopers had prompted a broad-based sentiment that using race and ethnicity to make traffic stops was fundamentally wrong and unfair. Profiling is “wrong and we will end it in America,” said President George W. Bush in February 2001.

Then came Sept. 11. Profiling gained legitimacy as a national security tool.
The Bush administration explicitly used racial profiling to contact non-citizens from Muslim countries under the program National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEERS) set up by Kris Kobach, then an attorney in the Bush Justice Department, now an immigration advis0r to Mitt Romney. More than 82,000 people from 25 countries (24 of them predominantly Muslim) were contacted, fingerprinted and interrogated. More than 12,000 were deported. The Bush Justice Department did issue a ban on racial profiling in 2003 but the DOJ guidelines allowed the use of religion and national origin as a law enforcement criteria.

After the failure of Bush and Congress to enact comprehensive immigration reform in 2007, profiling Mexicans and Central Americans became more common. With the federal government unable to control the flow of people into the country, Arizona, Alabama and Georgia passed laws requiring police to check the status of anyone for whom there is a “reasonable suspicion” of being undocumented. “There is no way to enforce the laws ‘show me your papers’ provisions without engaging in stereotypes based on race and ethnicity,” Anthony Romero of the ACLU told the hearing.

Yet as profiling has become entrenched in drug enforcement, counterterrorism and immigration control, said criminologist David Harris, research shows it is an ineffective law enforcement tool. “In many contexts, in many types of police agencies, the results all fall in the same direction: when racial or ethnic profiling is used, police are less likely, not more likely, to catch bad guys,” Harris said.

Ron Davis, police chief in East Palo Alto, Calif., said his experience as a cop on the streets confirmed that finding. Admitting that he himself had engaged in profiling, he called profiling “an ineffective tactic that wastes scarce law enforcement resources and it harms our relations with communities whose cooperation we need.”

Davis said passage of S. 1670 would help police nationwide.

“Without the legislation and updated Department of Justice guidance we will continue business as usual and only respond to this issue when it surfaces through high-profile tragedies such as Oscar Grant case in Oakland, Calif., and the Trayvon Martin case in Sanford, Fla.,” he said.

But the remarks of Frank Gale, a 23-year veteran of the Denver police force and the vice president of the Fraternal Order of Police, illustrated one of the biggest obstacles facing supporters of a profiling ban: police unions.

Calling the bill “highly offensive,” Gale voiced the FOP’s “strong opposition” to S. 1670. The measure, he said, “provides a ‘solution’ to a problem that does not exist, unless one believes that the problem to be solved is that our nation’s law enforcement officers are racist.”


“We can and must restore the bonds of trust between law enforcement and minorities,” Gale said, but argued a profiling ban would only generate more mistrust, “because it is written with the presumption that racist tactics are common tool of our nation’s police departments.”

The clashing views of Davis and Gale, two veteran African-American cops, “reflects the complexity of the issue,” Davis told me. For Davis, the profiling ban is simply the implementation of best practices while for Gale it is the institutionalization of second-guessing officers on the street who have to make difficult and dangerous decisions. “We don’t have to be afraid of being held accountable,” Davis said.

Yet the Obama administration seems reluctant to act. Two years ago Attorney General Eric Holder told profiling critics he would review the 2003 DOJ guidelines, and reconsider the use of religion and national origin in national security and immigration enforcement. Holder has yet to act.

Republican support for legislation supported by Muslim-Americans and opposed by police unions seems unlikely, especially in an election year. Lindsey Graham, the only Republican in attendance, voiced general support for the bill while expressing the belief that profiling Muslims might still be necessary in national security investigations. He said he hoped for “something more bipartisan.” (Cardin’s bill currently has 12 co-sponsors, all Democrats. A companion House bill has 52 co-sponsors, all Democrats.)

A true end to profiling will require cultural, as well as political, change. The resonance of the Trayvon Martin story is a sign of cultural change that enhances the legislation’s prospects. But these things can take a long time in Washington. The murders of Matthew Shepard, a gay teenager in Wyoming, and James Byrd, a black man in Texas, in 1998 galvanized a movement to establish a federal hate crime law. But the Shepard-Byrd Hate Crimes Prevention Act wasn’t enacted until President Obama signed it in 2009.

The time may come for Trayvon’s Law but it probably won’t be this year.
lickety_split OP19th-Apr-2012 07:51 am (UTC)
TIPPING MY HAT TO THE FIERCENESS AND BOLDNESS OF THE ARTICLE AND THE OP TBH
homasse Re: OP19th-Apr-2012 07:53 am (UTC)
:p It was a goof, but hey. >XD

My work computer is weird and doesn't show bolding, so I can't tell if something is wrong until I see it on my smartphone.
lickety_split Re: OP19th-Apr-2012 07:56 am (UTC)
No worries bb =P

LJ's been weird with previews lately. My shit will look just fine in a preview but once it's posted..... EPIC HTML FAILURE ON DISPLAY FOR ALL TO SEE.
mskye Re: OP19th-Apr-2012 09:46 am (UTC)
uh oh

I just spent like... and hour formatting an article to post here. Finally made it look fine in the preview. Now I'm scared.
hinoema Re: OP19th-Apr-2012 11:10 am (UTC)
LJ is trolling us.
crossfire 19th-Apr-2012 05:18 pm (UTC)
Tags on my posts are getting messed up too. As if I don't have enough problems with that. >.>
riath 19th-Apr-2012 08:12 am (UTC)
Calling the bill “highly offensive,” Gale voiced the FOP’s “strong opposition” to S. 1670. The measure, he said, “provides a ‘solution’ to a problem that does not exist, unless one believes that the problem to be solved is that our nation’s law enforcement officers are racist.”

A lot of police officers are racists, just ask Kenneth Chamberlain Sr's family. And racial profiling very much exists, where does he think terms like Driving While Black, Flying While Brown and Walking While Black come from? I've even heard EWB (Existing While Black) a few times. Profiling is wrong, full stop and it should be stopped.

On a slightly related note, Sen Feinstein put the brakes on a bill that would have allowed people like George Zimmerman to carry their concealed weapons across state lines, even if it violates the laws of the state they are travelling in: http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2012/04/18/466884/sen-feinstein-places-hold-on-nra-concealed-carry-bill/
angelofdeath275 19th-Apr-2012 04:43 pm (UTC)
I've even heard EWB (Existing While Black) a few times.



I use this one because its really what DWB is about.
qable 19th-Apr-2012 08:19 am (UTC)
Lindsey Graham, the only Republican in attendance, voiced general support for the bill while expressing the belief that profiling Muslims might still be necessary in national security investigations.

I almost approved of something this man did, and then he kept talking. Thank you for reminding me why I got out of South Carolina.

It's very telling that the police union is more worried about potentially looking racist than about curbing racism within the police force.
babysinclair 19th-Apr-2012 08:30 am (UTC)
It's gonna be a shitshow watching this unfold.
homasse 19th-Apr-2012 08:39 am (UTC)
Come, come, we all know being accused of being racist is far worse than actually being racist.
abee 19th-Apr-2012 09:34 am (UTC)
While I'm glad they are investigating in racial profiling, I'm still disgusted that it took one boy (and countless others)'s murder to make them realize now 'Oh, it exists? Lol, ok, time to fix it!'. >:|
hinoema 19th-Apr-2012 11:10 am (UTC)
“We can and must restore the bonds of trust between law enforcement and minorities,” Gale said, but argued a profiling ban would only generate more mistrust, “because it is written with the presumption that racist tactics are common tool of our nation’s police departments.”

Well, far too many are. Please to remove head from sand.

And well done, about time to this law.
world_dancer 19th-Apr-2012 01:16 pm (UTC)
But this has nothing to do with Trayvon Martin's case.

Zimmerman seems likely to have profiled him, sure. But Zimmerman is a private citizen, not a member of law enforcement. So it does nothing to prevent similar issues in the future.

The real culprits here were Zimmerman's over-zealousness & racism plus the "Stand Your Ground Law" providing him with a way to argue out of murder charges.

I am annoyed at people trying to wrap themselves in glory with the body of an innocent teen while doing nothing real to fix the actual problem, which are the bad state laws and continued cultural problems that were getting slightly better until the recession hit and the fallout was unequal, thus reinforcing the old stereotype.
teacoat 19th-Apr-2012 02:01 pm (UTC)
The real culprits here were Zimmerman's over-zealousness & racism plus the "Stand Your Ground Law" providing him with a way to argue out of murder charges.

Do you honestly think they would've let Zimmerman go if it was a white kid he shot?
world_dancer 19th-Apr-2012 07:31 pm (UTC)
In no way, shape, or form did I say any such thing. Considering that the police commissioner for the area was only a recent addition meant to counteract the racism problems the police district was having, doesn't seem likely that it would have been the same if Trayvon were white.

But that has no relevance to the particular law described here. It does not (and really cannot) address how police prioritize cases. That's a management issue within the force. And possibly an employee issue depending on the specifics of any given scenario. A racist can hide motives behind other justifications. In this case, it is the Stand Your Ground that aided any racist motives, since it gives you leave to shoot people on public streets and then plead that you had to.
mirhanda 19th-Apr-2012 02:51 pm (UTC)
Agreed. I won't do anything to stop private citizens from "profiling" to their hearts content.
chaya Confused by article details.19th-Apr-2012 01:59 pm (UTC)
the cowboy hat-wearing congresswoman from Miami where Trayvon lived with his father.

I thought he was visiting his father, who... lived outside of Miami?

the boy who came home from a convenience store with a snack for his brother only be shot dead by a volunteer neighborhood security guard

He never came home.

But aside from that:

“provides a ‘solution’ to a problem that does not exist, unless one believes that the problem to be solved is that our nation’s law enforcement officers are racist.”

Our *nation* is racist. Why would our law enforcement officers be exempt?
rufinia 19th-Apr-2012 02:25 pm (UTC)
I am generally against naming laws after dead kids- they tend to be over-reactive, not well thought out, and passed in a huge rush, and we end up with a huge pile of unintended consequences that cause more problems.

This article doesn't seem to say exactly what is in the bill... I mean it's great that people are talking about the issue (And Gale, really, you don't think the cops are racist? Really?), but what steps, exactly, is the bill taking to solve this problem?
angelus7988 19th-Apr-2012 10:16 pm (UTC)
Every group of racists needs an Uncle Ruckus.
bnmc2005 19th-Apr-2012 05:00 pm (UTC)
Does this legislation have anything to with or would it effect the "stand your ground" law?
illusivevenstar 19th-Apr-2012 05:07 pm (UTC)
End Stand Your Ground or at least make this law apply to it.
wonderpup 19th-Apr-2012 09:14 pm (UTC)
Source?
tabaqui 19th-Apr-2012 09:51 pm (UTC)
It's nice to hear a police officer stating that not only does profiling occur, but it's ineffective. It's infuriating to hear another one say that the notion that police can and do have racist views and allow those views to pollute their policing is 'offensive'.

I don't know how much a law like this would actually do. I don't imagine racist asshats on the police force will care one way or another. But if it gives victims of their bigotry more protection and support and tools to get justice, then i'm for it.
nesmith 19th-Apr-2012 11:55 pm (UTC)
unless one believes that the problem to be solved is that our nation’s law enforcement officers are racist.”

That's because THEY FUCKING ARE. INCLUDING my cousin, the Saint of the Police Force (according to his wife). He has said some NOXIOUS shit resulting in me not speaking to him in over a decade.
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