Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Earl Ofari Hutchinson

Earl Ofari Hutchinson

Posted: March 15, 2010 06:37 PM

Torrance California Police Stop Once Again Casts Ugly Glare on Racial Profiling

What's Your Reaction:

The throng of angry whites jeered, catcalled, and spat out borderline racial insults at the small group of mostly black protestors. This wasn't a march against Jim Crow in Montgomery, Birmingham, Jackson, Mississippi, or Cicero, The year wasn't 1963. The charged racial confrontation happened on March 14, 2010 in the All-American, mostly white Los Angeles suburban bedroom city of Torrance, California. The march was called to protest the unwarranted stop, search and harassment of Robert Taylor, a prominent Los Angeles African-American minister and civic leader by two white Torrance police officers on March 4. Hundreds of outraged letters, many filled with vile, crude, and profane racist pot shots at blacks, were sent to local newspapers blasting Taylor and civil rights supporters.

The Taylor stop fit the all too familiar pattern of most unwarranted stops of black and Latino motorists. Torrance police officials claimed that he and the car he drove allegedly fit the description of a suspect and car involved in a robbery and assault a day earlier. The problem is Taylor is not even remotely close in appearance to the description of the suspect. The picture circulated was of a short, stocky dark complexioned 30ish black male. Taylor is tall, in his 60s, and has light skin.

Predictably, as in most racial profiling allegations, Torrance police and city officials hotly denied the profiling charge. They justified it with the stock story that crime is on the rise in the city, but offered no compelling stats to back up that claim. Taylor's stop would have likely ignited the usual finger pointing, charge swapping, and then faded fast except for one thing. Torrance has been slapped with a Justice Department lawsuit, civil rights lawsuits, court settlements, and hundreds of verbal complaints over the years by black and Latino motorists, shoppers, African-American mail carriers some in full uniform that work at postal stations in Torrance, and residents such as Taylor who allege they were racially profiled.

Torrance is hardly unique. In the past decade, Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Miami and other big and small cities have repeatedly been called on the carpet for alleged racial profiling. In an address to a joint session of Congress in 2001, then President Bush blasted racial profiling, "It's wrong and we will end it in America." It hasn't ended.

The refusal to admit that racial profiling exists by many public officials and many in law enforcement has done much to torpedo nearly every effort by local and national civil rights and civil liberties groups to get law enforcement and federal agencies not only to admit that racial profiling happens but to do something about it. The throng of white protestors that harangued the blacks and other supporters who protested the Taylor stop in Torrance was ample proof of that.

A perennial federal bill served up by House Democrat John Conyers to get federal agencies to collect stats and do reports on racial profiling hasn't gotten to first base. A similar racial profiling bill met a similar fate in California in 1999. The bill passed by the state legislature mandated that law enforcement agencies compile racial stats on traffic stops. It was promptly vetoed by then Democratic governor Gray Davis.

Despite Davis's veto, nearly 60 California city and county police departments, the California Highway Patrol, and University of California police agencies, either through mandatory federal consent decrees or voluntarily, collect date on unwarranted traffic stops of motorist and contacts civilian to determine if there is a racial bent to the stops. Torrance is not one of those cities.

Nationally, 46 states collect data either voluntarily or compelled by state law on unwarranted pedestrian contacts and traffic stops. Most police officials, as in Torrance, vehemently contend that good police work is about the business of catching criminals and reducing crime, not about profiling blacks and Latinos. And if more black and Latino men are stopped it's not because they're black or Latino but because they commit more crimes. The other even more problematic tactic used to debunk racial profiling is the few statistics that have been compiled on unwarranted stops. In this case not by police agencies but based on citizen responses. In two surveys, the Federal Bureau of Justice Statistics took a hard, long quantified look at racial profiling using information that it got from citizens. Both times, the agency found that while whites are stopped, searched and arrested far less than blacks or Latinos, there was no hard proof that the stops had anything to do with race.

This has done even more to damp down a public outcry to get police agencies and legislators to admit that racial profiling is a fact on many city streets and highways and then to take firm action to eliminate it.

The arrest last July of Harvard University Professor Henry Louis Gates touched off a brief furor over racial profiling. Taylor's stop and search has done the same in a bedroom Southern California city. It has again cast the ugly glare on the always troubling problem of racial profiling.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His nationally heard public issues talk show is on KTYM-AM 1460 AM Los Angeles Friday 9:30 AM and KPFK Pacifica Radio 90.7 Los Angeles Saturday Noon PST.

 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 9
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
08:46 AM on 03/17/2010
This just goes to prove that gays and blacks share civil rights issue for freedom from discrimination and fight for equality. Where I last lived. I was repeatedly stopped because they knew I was gay. That city had a record for harassing gays. I finally moved to another more gay-friendly city and state to escape the treatment. No one is free unless we are all free.
06:19 PM on 03/16/2010
Is it possible to FOIA their dashboard camera's? Lets just see who they are stopping, who they are writting tickets to and who they are letting go.
05:15 PM on 03/16/2010
The Torrance profiling complaints do not surprise me. I've been a Torrance resident almost 10 years along with three bi-racial grandsons. I cannot count how many times these boys have been profiled.

Each one has been stopped numerous times, in broad daylight, while walking to the local party store with a friend or just walking down the street. They are questioned, frisked, then let go.

On several occasions, the oldest grandson was stopped and frisked while riding a bike home from his after school job.

On another occasion, I looked out our front window and my grandson was sitting on the curb with two policemen standing over him. They explained to me they didn't know he lived in the neighborhood.

In the past I've instructed my grandsons to get a badge number or a name but they don't want to make things worse for themselves. They tell me: " Grandma, we have to live here."

What message are the policemen conveying to these adolescents?

Plus, over the years I've observed many motorists being pulled over by a cop on 190th Street. I'd estimate that ninety percent of the time the driver is a person of color
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
minerva117
This space for rent. Cheap!
10:31 AM on 03/17/2010
My late husband was black, and just a couple of summers ago, his cousins came to visit us in MN from CO. On their way back, as they neared Denver, They were stopped by the police and held for hours as the police brought in dogs to search the car and argued with them over whether their rental papers were in order. When it was finally clear to them that they weren't able to charge them with anything, the let them go saying something like "Nothing personal, have a nice day"
01:17 AM on 03/16/2010
Its not just Torrance that has a problem with racial profiling I live in Dublin California and i was pulled over by police on 11/18/09 for being Latino. At around 12am I was on my way to get gas for my car and then to the bank to withdraw some money. Along the way I saw two police officers parked side by side talking. As I passed by the police I noticed one of the police cars pull out and following me . I then pulled into a gas station to fill my car with gas while I was filling my car with gas the police officer parked his car in the gas station parking lot and waited for me to fill my gas tank . As soon as i left the gas station the police car resumed his pursuit of me down the street. At this point I decided to pull my car into the mall parking lot and walk over to the ATM just down the street. After I parked my car and started walking throw the parking lot the Dublin Police Officer speed up and detained me in the parking lot.The officer then asked me where i was going and i told him that i was going to the bank he then asked me for my drivers license and told me to return to my vehicle.
01:17 AM on 03/16/2010
As i returned to my vehicle i noticed that the officer had called for back up and the same police officer he was hanging out with before he stated pursuing me arrived on the scene. I then asked the officer why he felt the need to detain me he then told me that my actions of driving through the parking lot parking my car and walking away from it was suspicious. If i had nothing to hide then why was i trying to avoid him. I then asked the officer why he was targeting me for pursuit i told him that i had not broken any laws. I told him that it was not illegal for me to make a left hand turn, it was not illegal for me to drive down the street , It was not illegal for me to get gas, It was not illegal for me to pull my car into a parking lot nor was it illegal for me to park and walk away from my vehicle. I then asked him why did he detain me if there was no violation of law. At this point the police told me that the reason i was detained is because I look suspicious. I then told them that because there was no violation of law they had no right to pursue or detain me. The officer then ran my licence plate and when it came up clean he let me go.
08:57 PM on 03/15/2010
I lived in torrance for 30 years and have black friends that get harrassed all the time in this city. It's a dirty little secret in Torrance. And everybody who lives there knows it.
09:19 PM on 03/15/2010
Thank you for your honesty on this matter.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dubois651
06:05 PM on 03/16/2010
It is a dirty little secret in the United States. Minorities have been racially profiled since the founding of the republic. The hands of power hasn't changed color at all. Ironically, President Obama is being racially profiled everyday by the same types that will harass a minority on any metropolitan street. Racism has come out of the closet.