The Role Of Racial Profiling In Law Enforcement

Words: 742
Pages: 3

Have you ever walked around your neighborhood and caught the sight of a colored man? Did you get scared for no reason? Racial Profiling at its finest. Racial Profiling refers the discriminatory practice law enforcement officials of targeting individuals for suspicion of crime based on the individual’s race, ethnicity, religion, or national origin but is it necessary? The answer is no. The concern about racial profiling is erupting throughout the nation. Many cities and states have decided to study racial profiling, or how race and ethnicity may play a part in stops by law enforcement in their jurisdictions. In reality law enforcement discriminates every human of a different skin color. The outcomes of discrimination are evident, the relations …show more content…
Story of Willie Mcgee is a great example of racial profiling. Willie Mcgee was a black man that was in love with a white woman, Wallette Hawkins. One month after the rape accusation, McGee went to court. Mrs. Hawkins testified about the assault, but did not identify him as her attacker. McGee’s confession and his supposed presence in the neighborhood was the only evidence the court had. By this time, McGee had become mute, which made his accusers believe was a sham. After a one-day of trial, an all white jury conversed for no longer than three minutes before pledging him guilty. Although no whites in Mississippi convicted of raping blacks were sentenced to death, blacks were routinely given the death penalty when their victims were white. McGee was sentenced to be electrocuted on January 7, 1946. …show more content…
It happens in towns and cities across the nation. When police and private security target people of a different skin tone. Black are interrogated by laws enforcements twice as much as any other race. Racial profiling affects many communities of color. More than 240 years of slavery and 90 years of legalized racial segregation have led to systemic profiling of blacks in traffic and pedestrian stops. Since September 11, 2001, members of Muslim, Arab, and South Asian communities have been profiled by airline personnel, federal law enforcement, and local police.(ACLU) African drivers across the nation are more likely to get pulled over and arrested for possession of drugs or any other minor violation being violated during a traffic stop. Some evidence confirms the existence of racial profiling in America. At the national level, the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that for the year 2005, the most recent data available, "[p]olice actions taken during a traffic stop were not uniform across racial and ethnic categories." "Black drivers (4.5%) were twice as likely as White drivers (2.1%) to be arrested during a traffic stop, while Hispanic drivers (65%) were more likely than White (56.2%) or Black (55.8%) drivers to receive a ticket. In addition, Whites (9.7%) were more likely than Hispanics (5.9%) to receive a written warning, while Whites (18.6%) were more likely than Blacks (13.7%)