Across the state, stopped individuals who were perceived to be Black had the highest rate of being searched (20.7%), detained on the curb or in a patrol car (17.4%), handcuffed (15.3%), and removed from a vehicle by order (7.3%), the report found.
Officers took these actions, the report states, "toward more Black individuals than white individuals despite stopping nearly double the number of white individuals than Black individuals."
These numbers are virtually identical to the data submitted in the prior year, which showed that 20.5% of individuals perceived to be Black were searched, 17.8% were detained, 14.1% were handcuffed and 7.7% were removed from a vehicle by order.
The RIPA Board has identified several factors that drive this disparity. Cities with changing demographics may, for example, increase police presence in Black and Hispanic neighborhoods, which, in turn, increases the likelihood that officers have more contacts with people in those neighborhoods.
There is also a greater likelihood of Black individuals across the state being subject to "bias by proxy," when an individual calls the police and makes "false or ill-informed claims about persons they dislike or are biased against."
"We know that these issues are not new, but they are representative of a deeper and more persistent problem that requires education, reform and training for the public, law enforcement, and dispatchers," the board's 2021 report states.
But the report also highlights police bias — both explicit and implicit — as a key factor. Despite laws and policies that strictly prohibit bias-based policing, "there are officers who display explicit biases against individuals of certain racial or identify groups," the report states.
"And as a result, these individuals may act on their biases in deciding who to stop and how to interact with the individuals they stop."
This story contains 384 words.
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