News (Media Awareness Project) - US NJ: Racial Profiling Dooms Drug Cases |
Title: | US NJ: Racial Profiling Dooms Drug Cases |
Published On: | 2000-11-29 |
Source: | Blade, The (OH) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-28 22:49:27 |
RACIAL PROFILING DOOMS DRUG CASES
TRENTON, N.J. -- After admitting the state's war on drugs unfairly
victimized minority drivers, New Jersey's attorney general may drop drug
charges against hundreds of motorists who claim they were pulled over
because of their race.
The state also could be forced to settle dozens of lawsuits filed by black
and Hispanic state troopers who allege they were forced to practice racial
profiling.
Attorney General John J. Farmer Jr., said his office will review pending
criminal cases in which bias allegedly tainted drug seizures. Criminal
charges could be dropped, he said.
Civil lawsuits also will be examined with an eye toward settlement.
On Monday, Mr. Farmer released nearly 100,000 pages of documents showing
that state troopers stopped overwhelmingly disproportionate numbers of
minorities in searches for drugs. New Jersey's top law enforcement
officials knew that since at least 1989 but didn't admit racial profiling
was widespread until an April, 1999, report.
"The constitutional violations are so egregious, and they've been sitting
on these documents for years," public defender Kevin Walker said.
Mr.Walker,who represents several defendants stopped on the New Jersey
Turnpike, said the state's only option is to dismiss the charges. His
office is considering a court motion to ask just that.
"If they're talking about settlement, if they're taking that approach with
the civil cases, it's certainly more important with the criminal ones
because of the constitutional violations," Mr. Walker said.
Attorneys predicted courts would be overwhelmed with pleas to overturn drug
convictions.
"I hope more people come forward. If the New Jersey justice system has any
moral strength and strength of character, it should be willing to reopen
cases where the convictions aren't sound," attorney William Buckman said.
Mr. Buckman led a legal challenge that ended in 1996 when a judge said
troopers on the turnpike targeted minorities more than whites. Despite
internal evidence to support that conclusion, the state continued to appeal
the ruling until 1999.
Included in the documents released Monday are many key reports state
officials denied existed Mr. Buckrnan said. Some of them were evidence he
requested as early as 1990 for criminal trials.
Controversy over possible racial profiling -- derided in the minority
community as DWB or "driving while black" -- was heightened in 1998 when
two troopers shot and wounded three minority men during a traffic stop.
In early 1999, Gov. Christie Whitman fired the State Police superintendent
after he said minorities were responsible for most of the state's cocaine
and marijuana traffic.
TRENTON, N.J. -- After admitting the state's war on drugs unfairly
victimized minority drivers, New Jersey's attorney general may drop drug
charges against hundreds of motorists who claim they were pulled over
because of their race.
The state also could be forced to settle dozens of lawsuits filed by black
and Hispanic state troopers who allege they were forced to practice racial
profiling.
Attorney General John J. Farmer Jr., said his office will review pending
criminal cases in which bias allegedly tainted drug seizures. Criminal
charges could be dropped, he said.
Civil lawsuits also will be examined with an eye toward settlement.
On Monday, Mr. Farmer released nearly 100,000 pages of documents showing
that state troopers stopped overwhelmingly disproportionate numbers of
minorities in searches for drugs. New Jersey's top law enforcement
officials knew that since at least 1989 but didn't admit racial profiling
was widespread until an April, 1999, report.
"The constitutional violations are so egregious, and they've been sitting
on these documents for years," public defender Kevin Walker said.
Mr.Walker,who represents several defendants stopped on the New Jersey
Turnpike, said the state's only option is to dismiss the charges. His
office is considering a court motion to ask just that.
"If they're talking about settlement, if they're taking that approach with
the civil cases, it's certainly more important with the criminal ones
because of the constitutional violations," Mr. Walker said.
Attorneys predicted courts would be overwhelmed with pleas to overturn drug
convictions.
"I hope more people come forward. If the New Jersey justice system has any
moral strength and strength of character, it should be willing to reopen
cases where the convictions aren't sound," attorney William Buckman said.
Mr. Buckman led a legal challenge that ended in 1996 when a judge said
troopers on the turnpike targeted minorities more than whites. Despite
internal evidence to support that conclusion, the state continued to appeal
the ruling until 1999.
Included in the documents released Monday are many key reports state
officials denied existed Mr. Buckrnan said. Some of them were evidence he
requested as early as 1990 for criminal trials.
Controversy over possible racial profiling -- derided in the minority
community as DWB or "driving while black" -- was heightened in 1998 when
two troopers shot and wounded three minority men during a traffic stop.
In early 1999, Gov. Christie Whitman fired the State Police superintendent
after he said minorities were responsible for most of the state's cocaine
and marijuana traffic.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...