State Report: Racial Profiling, Master Lever Ban + 38 Studios

Anthony Faccenda, GoLocalProv Contributor

State Report: Racial Profiling, Master Lever Ban + 38 Studios

This week’s State Report centers on a bill introduced by Sen. Harold Metts, which looks to address racial profiling in the Ocean State. Additionally, we’ll look at legislation addressing a variety of issues including the master lever, taxation of for-profit hospitals, and business streamlining. We’ll also look at a House Oversight Committee request asking for testimony from key figures in the 38 Studios debacle.

Addressing Racial Disparity in Traffic Stops

In an attempt to address  the issue of racial profiling by police, Sen. Harold M. Metts introduced legislation this week, the “Comprehensive Community – Police Relationship Act of 2014,” to require all police departments to submit to the Department of Transportation’s Office of Highway Safety an annual report indicating what action has been taken to address any racial disparities in traffic stops and/or searches documented in previous reports.

“More than a decade after collection of traffic stops first began, it is obvious that minorities are still being stopped more often, and searched unreasonably more often, than whites. Even though all reasonable people would acknowledge that driving black is not a crime, statistics show that profiling continues to be the norm around our state,” said Metts. “It is alarming and it needs to be corrected.”

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“If our over-arching goal is to foster and develop more and better relations between the community and law enforcement, there needs to be a concerted effort to document what is going on and to see clear evidence that police agencies around the state are attempting to address the problem,” he said. “We can’t wait another 10 years to find things haven’t changed. We need to make changes now.”

The Metts’ legislation, which has been referred to the Senate Committee on Judicairy, makes a number of changes to bills introduced last year but retains the basic provisions of that earlier legislation. The 2014 legislation is the result of an ad hoc group of law enforcement officials and community representatives that met bi-weekly from September, 2013, through March, 2014. The group’s goal was to identify language for a compromise bill which would balance the concerns of the community in respect to stops and searches and those of law enforcement in respect to officer safety and crime-solving.

Creating a balance 

Among those provisions, the legislation requires that each search conducted by a law enforcement officer be documented in a computer-aided dispatch (CAD) entry or other police-generated report and should include the date, time and location of the stop/search, along with the reasonable suspicion or probable cause leading to the search.

The bill prohibits police from requesting of any driver stopped solely for a traffic violation any documentation or identification other than a driver’s license, vehicle registration and proof of insurance. In any stop, the driver must be notified of the reason for the stop.

The bill requires that in all motor vehicle stops conducted by police vehicles using video and audio equipment, those recordings must begin no later than when the officer first signals the vehicle to stop.

The bill requires that the driver of a motor vehicle, or passenger of the vehicle, which has been recorded with video/audio equipment, and his or her attorney, will have the right to view the recording provided that the viewing does not compromise an active investigation. The legislation also sets a policy that addresses the period of retention of such recordings.

The continued collection of data by police departments would begin in July, 2014, and reports on each stop would be required to include the race and ethnicity of the driver, based on the officer’s perception. The Office of Highway Safety would be required to issue annual reports on the collected data, as well as a quarterly summary report of the monthly data provided by each police department.

Finally, the bill establishes a specific procedure and protocol for searches of juveniles without a warrant. Under the legislation, no juvenile will be requested to consent to a search by law enforcement unless there exists reasonable suspicion or probable cause of criminal activity. In those instances where a warrant would otherwise be required, a law enforcement officer must advise the juvenile that he or she may refuse to consent to, or limit the scope of, any requested search.

“As if traffic stops based on race were not bad enough, no youngster should be taken advantage of by police simply because they are young, and probably afraid, and not sure of their rights,” said Senator Metts. “If the police really wish to form better relationships with the community, and especially the youngsters in the community, they need to find less threatening ways to do that. Youngsters need to see police as people who can help them, not people from whom they should run away.”

“The police have a difficult job, and I respect all they do to serve and protect their community,” said Senator Metts. “But they shouldn’t be treating people differently because of the color of their skin.”

Senator Metts said that, though it has taken years to arrive at this point, “I was encouraged to see the parties work together on such a sensitive issue. The system does work when reasonable minds are open and focused.”

Racial profiling study

Released earlier this year, a study by Northeastern University’s Institute on Race and Justice found that police are more likely to pull over people of color than white drivers in a majority of Rhode Island communities, but less likely to give them a ticket.

The study, which reviewed more than 150,000 traffic stops made by 39 police agencies during a nine-month period last year, found similar statewide patterns as those reported in a 2004-05 study. Among those findings is that minorities were pulled over at a disproportionate rate when comparing the driver’s race to the racial makeup of the city or town where the stop was made.

 

For more legislative news from the past week, check out the slideshow below. 


RI State Report: More News of the Week - 5/3/14

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