(APN)
Georgia
Bill
Would
Ban
Racial
Profiling,
Require
Data
Collection
By
Jonathan
Springston,
Senior
Staff
Writer,
The
Atlanta
Progressive
News
(January
26,
2010)
http://atlantaprogressivenews.com/news/0589.html
(APN)
ATLANTA
– A
group
of
Democratic
State
lawmakers
and
advocates
banded
together
Tuesday,
January
26,
2010,
to
announce
the
introduction
of
legislation
to
prevent
law
enforcement
officers
from
engaging
in
racial
profiling.

"We
know
that
if
your
skin
color
is
different
or
you're
a
religion
other
than
Christian,
you
will
be
singled
out,"
the
Rev.
Tracy
Blagec,
Vice
President
of
Communications
for
Atlantans
Building
Leadership
for
Empowerment
(ABLE),
said
during
a
rally
at
the
State
Capitol.
The
bills,
which
will
be
identical
in
the
State
House
and
Senate,
would
prevent
all
law
enforcement
agencies
from
profiling
and
require
annual
training.
Also,
the
bills
would
require
officers
to
track
the
race,
ethnicity,
gender,
and
age
of
every
person
subject
to a
routine
traffic
stop
and
require
the
Attorney
General
to
publish
annual
public
reports
and
establish
procedures
to
investigate
complaints.
"This
legislation
would
give
law
enforcement
agencies
and
policymakers
all
the
tools
they
need
to
address
racial
profiling
in
this
state,"
State
Sen.
Gloria
Butler
(D-Stone
Mountain),
chief
sponsor
of
the
Senate
version,
said.

"It
is
my
sworn
duty
to
ensure
the
rights
of
every
Georgian
are
protected,"
State
Rep.
Pedro
Marin
(D-Duluth),
co-sponsor
of
the
House
bill,
said.
"It
is
common
sense
public
policy
to
finally
address
this
wrong."
A
2004
report
from
Amnesty
International
USA
found
approximately
32
million
Americans
had
experienced
racial
profiling
and
87
million
are
considered
to
be
at
"a
high
risk"
of
experiencing
profiling
at
some
point
in
the
future.
"People
of
color
are
more
likely
to
be
stopped
and
searched
by
police
even
though
they
are
less
likely
to
have
contraband,"
Butler
said.
Accounting
for
the
number
of
racial
profiling
incidents
is
often
difficult
and
expensive,
but
Butler
said
Tuesday
establishing
data
collection
methods
as
outlined
in
the
proposed
legislation
would
not
add
costs
to
the
state
budget.
"The
data
collection
methods
that
are
already
used
can
be
modified
to
include
and
track
racial
profiling
data,"
she
said.
25
US
states
already
have
some
type
of
racial
profiling
legislation
in
place,
including
several
in
the
US
South,
according
to a
2009
ACLU
report.
"States
with
racial
profiling-related
legislation
include
Arkansas,
California,
Colorado,
Connecticut,
Florida,
Illinois,
Kansas,
Kentucky,
Louisiana,
Maryland,
Massachusetts,
Minnesota,
Missouri,
Montana,
Nebraska,
Nevada,
New
Jersey,
New
Mexico,
Oklahoma,
Rhode
Island,
Tennessee,
Texas,
Utah,
Washington
and
West
Virginia,"
the
report
says.
"The
most
common
provisions
in
state
racial
profiling
legislation
are
vague
calls
for
law
enforcement
and
other
state
agencies
to
establish
policies
prohibiting
or
combating
racial
profiling.
Twenty-one
of
the
twenty-five
states
that
have
enacted
legislation
have
included
such
provision,
although
Tennessee’s
statute
only
'strongly
encourages'
law
enforcement
agencies
to
establish
such
a
policy
by
2010,"
the
report
states.
"Another
twelve
states
have
written
express
prohibitions
of
racial
profiling
into
their
state
codes,
even
though
the
practice
is
clearly
already
prohibited
by
the
US
Constitution,"
the
report
states.
The
Georgia
General
Assembly
has
considered
similar
bills
over
the
previous
decade,
but
they
have
all
hit
roadblocks
during
various
points
of
the
legislative
process.
Marin’s
2004
bill
received
plenty
of
bipartisan
support,
picking
up
117
votes
in
the
House
before
dying
in a
conference
committee.
Butler
said
Tuesday
she
is
optimistic
about
success
in
2010
because
more
groups
are
involved
in
the
issue.
As
previously
reported
in
detail
by
Atlanta
Progressive
News,
the
American
Civil
Liberties
Union
(ACLU)
of
Georgia
and
ABLE
held
two
forums
in
Gwinnett
County
and
another
in
Cobb
last
year
that
allowed
many
citizens
to
come
forward
and
share
racial
profiling
horror
stories.
Azadeh
Shahshahani,
Director
of
the
ACLU
of
Georgia’s
National
Security/Immigrants'
Rights
Project,
said
the
forums
allowed
the
two
groups
to
collect
key
data
that
did
not
previously
exist
and
that
could
supplement
proponents'
arguments
as
the
debate
moves
forward.
"Using
race,
ethnicity,
or
national
origin
as a
proxy
for
criminal
suspicion
violates
the
Constitutional
requirement
that
police
and
other
government
officials
accord
to
all
citizens
the
equal
protection
of
the
law,"
Shahshahani
said.
"It
is
time
for
Georgia
to
join
the
ranks
of
other
states
that
have
recognized
the
problem
of
racial
profiling."
(END/2010)
About
the
author:
Jonathan
Springston
is a
Senior
Staff
Writer
for
Atlanta
Progressive
News
and
is
reachable
at
jonathan@atlantaprogressivenews.com.