In
a rare situation, both United States
President George W. Bush and the
American Civil Liberties Union agreed
on legislation designed to prohibit
racial profiling in the states.
Bush
said racial profiling, when police or other
law enforcement officials target specific races
or ethnicities when questioning possible suspects, "is
wrong."
"We are in full agreement with President
Bush on this one," said Rachel King,
an ACLU Legislative Counsel. "It is
time that Congress rectify this national
disgrace and rid the nation of racial profiling."
A Senate
panel held a hearing on August 2 to discuss
the "End Racial Profiling
Act of 2001," which the ACLU said
is the most thorough way in ending racially
and ethnically motivated law enforcement
encounters.
The End Racial Profiling Bill of 2001
would define and prohibit racial profiling
on local, state, and federal levels, and
provide limited legal recourse for victims.
Unlike previous legislation, the ACLU said
the bill would be particularly effective
by linking prohibition and data collection
to receipt of federal funds and by providing
incentive grants to finance anti-racial
profiling tools and activities.
"The outcry against racial profiling
is starting to swell and diversify," King
said. "For the first time since this
issue has entered the public spotlight,
members of the law enforcement community
are beginning to join the opposition side
of the debate. Their message is clear:
racial profiling is unjust, unnecessary,
un-American and just plain bad policy."
"Racial profiling has been decried
by the Administration, many in Congress
and the general public as a particularly
insidious form of police abuse," King
said. "The average person must be
able to trust the police to prosecute their
jobs without regard for the color of his
or her skin."
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