Black, Latino and Female Officers Use Force Less Often Than Whites: Study

By Stacy M. Brown

African American police officers made more than 15 fewer stops, about two fewer arrests on average than their white counterparts, Science News found in a new study.

The study found that throughout 100 shifts, African American officers used force 0.1 fewer times.

The numbers correspond to a 29 percent reduction in stops, 21 percent reduction in arrests, and 32 percent reduction in force among Black officers than the average enforcement rates among their white peers.

“When I got the paper, I literally at one point said, ‘hot damn,’” says Phillip Goff, a behavioral scientist at Yale University who wrote a commentary on the study published in the same issue. “I was a skeptic about demographic reform previously, and now I am a convert.… Demographics re-form in policing actually has the potential to dramatically change behavior.”

The study arrives as police traffic stops, and shootings continue to grab headlines.

It also comes less than a week after a jury convicted former Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin of three counts of murder in the death of George Floyd.

“George Floyd was approached by the police for the allegation of a $20 alleged fraudulent counterfeit bill, which is a misdemeanor,” civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who represents the Floyd family, said in a statement. “They could have given him a ticket. But when it is marginalized minorities, especially Black people, the police have the tendency to always do the most and engage in the most excessive use of force. And so, George Floyd literally was tortured to death for nine minutes and 29 seconds for what would have amounted to a minor misdemeanor.”

The Science News report concluded that Black and Hispanic officers tend to stop, arrest and use force against civilians less often than white officers.

According to a Chicago Police Department study, female officers of all races use less force than their male colleagues.

Bocar Ba, an economist at the University of California, Irvine, told Science News that diversifying law enforcement is one of the oldest, most frequently proposed police reforms.

“Over three years, Ba and colleagues peppered various city and state agencies with open-records requests and appeals to collect data on officers in the Chicago Police Department,” the outlet reported.

Those data included officers’ race, gender, and daily patrol assignments, as well as timestamped and location-tagged records of when those officers stopped, arrested, or used force on civilians, they reported.

About Carma Henry 24690 Articles
Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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