Sun. Dec 1st, 2024

By: Eddie SantoPrieto

 

The law is meant to be my servant and not my master, still less my torturer and my murderer.
– James Baldwin, The Nation, 7/11/66

More than 40 years later, I can still remember the incident as if it happened yesterday. It was my first real interaction with a NYC police officer. A few of us were headed home after being let out of school, waiting for the “M” train on the elevated Wyckoff & Myrtle platform. It was a rainy, drizzly early spring day. My friends and I were all “A” students — the “talented tenth” — at the (even then) notorious Bushwick High School. We were just standing around cracking jokes on one another, talking about girls — the usual fare of masculine adolescence. We weren’t being loud, weren’t breaking any laws. We were, well, breathing while Latino (we were all of Puerto Rican descent).

As we stood there bonding, a police officer approached us and demanded to know what we were doing. He was tall — over six feet — and towered over my then 5 feet five-inch, 125-lb frame. I had never had any bad experiences with the police; maybe it was because I looked white. My friends would always tease me that I often got a free pass because of how I looked, and they were right. This time, however, everyone immediately became quiet and the tension was palpable.

I informed the officer that were all going home, that we had just left school. I wasn’t being confrontational, just merely stating a fact as I would if I had commented on the weather. He then asked for ID, or our “program cards.” What I remember most was that he unnecessarily was rude and abrupt.

We all showed him our school IDs and then he looked at me and said, “Get the fuck off this platform.”

We were all taken aback since we had to be on the platform in order to catch our train home. When we didn’t react, he looked straight at me but said to everyone, “Didn’t you hear what I said you little spics. Get the fuck off this platform.” Now, at the time I felt the “spic” part was uncalled. In as nice a way as possible, I informed the officer that we were all headed home and we had to take the train. Up to that point, I wasn’t arguing with him, I was trying to reason, even though he had used profanity and a racial slur. We were standing by the stairs leading down to the street.

“If you don’t get the fuck off of this platform now you little prick, I will kick your spic ass down those stairs.”

And that’s when I became argumentative and things took a turn for the worse. I stated that we all had a right to stand on the platform and that we hadn’t done anything wrong to provoke him. I asked him by what authority could he speak to us in that manner and violate our basic rights.

I’ll never forget his response. He said, in a low, threatening growl, “If you don’t get off this station by the time I count to three, I will kick you down those stairs.”

I stood there, staring at him defiantly, determined not to move. By then, my friends, all of whom were intimidated, advised me, “C’mon, Eddie, let’s go, don’t get into any trouble,” “C’mon, man, it’s not worth it.” I said I wasn’t moving.

The police officer counted:

One…

Two…

Perhaps it was the look of pure hatred on the man’s face, but I decided it was wiser to move and right before he counted to three, I turned around and started walking down the steps. That’s when his foot slammed into my back. I don’t know how I did it, maybe it was instinct, but somehow, as my body began its propulsion head first down the metal-and-cement stairs, I reached out and grabbed on to the only thing available — the officer’s foot.

And in that way we tumbled down those long, cement-and-metal stairs, tangled in a ball, for I was holding on to dear life. After what seemed like an eternity, we landed and I immediately noted the unnatural position of the officer’s leg and his banshee howls of pain. I remember two elderly white ladies shouting and a crowd gathering. At that very moment, taking in everything, I realized I was fucked… and I ran.

After, my friends told me that the police officer rounded them up and tried to get them to tell him who I was. To their credit, no one ever ratted on me. For over two years, I was unable to take the train to school; I had to walk to school (a 45-minute walk each way) rain, cold, snow, or shine.

I was a 14-year-old honors student who never did anything wrong and my life could’ve have easily been destroyed by that one chance encounter.

The problem is that these chance encounters have destroyed and continue to destroy lives and the fabric of mostly communities of color. Growing up, my experience wasn’t outside the norm. A close friend, Michael, had his penis almost shot off by a police officer. It was a Saturday night, one of our acquaintances was running from the police, passed by us, and when we heard gunshots, we all ran. For us, “the police” weren’t there to protect us; they were like an occupying force — something you ran from. My companion, Michael, who was not the target, was shot and the bullet passed through his thigh and through his penis. When we picked him up, we saw the blood flowing from his groin area. He was lucky, the main “dick vein” (as Michael explained it) wasn’t destroyed, and the doctors were able to stitch it all back together again. He did have the ugliest penis I ever saw. Accustomed to experiencing trauma, we used the time-worn urban coping skill of the macabre wit to kid him and called his penis Frankenstein Dick.

My friend Shadow, one of the blackest Puerto Ricans I ever met (hence the nickname), was a Golden Gloves champion with a promising boxing career. He was going to box for the Air Force after high school. He was “accidentally” shot dead in the flower of his youth by a stray police bullet. Another stray police bullet left a another friend paralyzed at 17 — for life. Both incidents were termed as “mistaken shootings” or something like that. And those were only the most egregious infractions. I can’t even begin to enumerate all the little infractions, the almost daily “minor” humiliations and indignities, at the hands of the police. I can’t begin to recount the countless times parents, grandmothers even, were rounded up like common criminals during drug “sweeps” — periodic lockdowns of whole city blocks in which the police ran roughshod, with total disregard for all basic human rights.

This is not to say all police are brutal or even corrupt. I am, however, trying to offer the insight that the relationship between communities of color and the police are strained at best. Oftentimes, structural racism is expressed through the vehicle of law enforcement. It isn’t that there are a few bad apples; the true issue is that the barrel itself is rotten.

Today, when I hold workshops teaching children how to protect themselves from those who are supposed to protect us, I hear the same stories. Stories of young people of color being thrown against a wall, or with a boot on their neck. I continue to hear stories of young men literally being undressed in broad daylight. I still hear about the humiliations and of a police force that resembles more of an occupying force than a beneficent social institution. So, whenever I hear justifications for racial profiling, such as the ones in use in major urban areas such as New York and Los Angeles, I am not surprised, for I know the drill. However, it doesn’t mean that I am not outraged.

You should be too.

You would think that almost half a century later, things would be more evolved, but, in fact, they have gotten worse. Keeping mind that studies show that drug use and drug sales are the same for all demographics, consider the following:

  •      82% of the people arrested in NYC in 2010 were black or Latino.
  • 91% of all juvenile arrests in NYC in 2010 involved black or Latino youth.
  • 87% of the 50,000 people NYPD arrested for misdemeanor marijuana possession in 2010 were black or Latin@.
  • Combining arrest and summons cases, the NYC Criminal Court handled over 970,000 cases in 2010.
  • The NYPD handed out over 600,000 summonses for violations in 2009, amounting to an average of over 1,600 per day (87% of which involved black or Latin@ individuals).
  • 50% of all summons filed in Court by the NYPD in recent years are dismissed.
  • NYC spends $4.3 billion per year on the NYPD budget, which is almost 4 times the amount that both Chicago and Los Angeles allocate.
  •      Force was used during stop and frisks for 1 out of every 4 black men. And 93% of the cases where force was used during stop and frisk involved black and Latino individuals.

Racial profiling leads to very real and harmful consequences, one of which includes police brutality and the curtailing of basic American freedoms. Yet, you will hear high-level officials defend it in the same manner one acquaintance put it to me:

Police deployment these days is determined almost strictly by rates of relative violence/crime in each police district. The rate of violence is not some subjective quotient created by a racist cop, but is determined by counting citizens reporting that they were shot, stabbed, beat up and otherwise assaulted, this is combined with citizen reports of burglary, robbery, theft, etc. You see, your racist conspiracy theory is illogical when you know that police resources are deployed based on crime as reported by citizens and not some racist plot to destroy minorities. That is logical.

The problem with this line of thinking, aside from its moral bankruptcy, is that it is not based on fact nor reason. Racial conservatives — both black and white — maintain that racial profiling isn’t racist. They argue, like the individual above, that racial profiling is justified since we all know blacks and Latin@s are criminally predisposed. As Heather MacDonald of the conservative think tank, the Manhattan Institute, puts it, “Judging by arrest rates, minorities are overly represented among drug traffickers” (MacDonald, 2001) . Black conservative, Randall Kennedy agrees. He goes so far as to say that arrest rates present a “sad reality” and justifies racial profiling on those grounds (Kennedy, 1999). Well, if this is true, scientific examinations of racial profiling should yield results that back up the claims of racial conservatives.

They don’t…

For example, a New York Attorney General’s study of stops and frisks in New York City, issued in 1999, recorded 175,000 encounters between officers and citizens over fifteen months. The study tracked hit rates by analyzing the percentage of stops and frisks that ended in an arrest. The data is damning. The study found that police arrested 12.6 percent of the whites they stopped, only 11.5 percent of the Latin@s, and only 10.5 percent of the blacks (Spitzer, 1999). This is exactly the opposite of what defenders of racial profiling would predict. When New York City police officers utilized racial profiling intensively, they found what they wanted less often on blacks and Latin@s than they did on whites.

There are more studies looking at the effectiveness of racial profiling with the same results: empirical studies show that, aside from being racist and morally reprehensible, racial profiling is ineffective and actually weakens crime prevention by allocating criminal justice resources on a lame practice.

From a personal perspective, I have a sneaking suspicion that those who champion racial profiling don’t do so because they actually believe it’s statistically “sound policing.” I submit they support such practices because they want to justify racist practices. They are comfortable with such practices because, for the most part, it doesn’t affect them. They are not the ones being dragged handcuffed from their homes, or suffering humiliation while driving or even walking down a city street. They think it’s acceptable to commit such acts on certain Americans because they just don’t give a good goddamn — until it happens to them…

There’s a price we all pay for racial profiling, the least of which it makes all of us less safe, as police are more determined to bust low-level black drug dealers in the streets while the big drug game is taking place somewhere in a sleepy suburban enclave or high roller penthouse loft.

My name is Eddie and I’m in recovery from civilization…

Addendum:

I’ve recently become involved in grassroots collaborative effort to combat racial profiling here in New York City. For those interested in learning more about this very important issue, or even getting involved, click here.

 

Recently, our local station NY1, aired a piece on our efforts (click here). If you look real close and don’t blink, you’ll see yours truly for a hot second around the 54-second mark LOL.

 

Resources:
Kennedy, R. (1999). Race, crime, and the law. New York: Pantheon Books.

 

Lamberth, J. (1998, August 16). Driving while black; A statistician proves that prejudice still rules the road Washington Post p. C01.
MacDonald, H. (2001). The myth of racial profiling. City Journal, 11(2).

 

Mauer, M., & Huling, T. (1995). Young black Americans and the criminal justice system: Five years later. Washington, DC: The Sentencing Project.

 

Spitzer, E. (1999). The New York City Police Department “stop and frisk” practices: A report to the people of New York. New York: Attorney General of the State of New York.

 

Stuntz, W. (1998). Race, class, and drugs. Columbia Law Review, 98, 1795, 1803.

 

Zingraff, M. T. (2000). Evaluating North Carolina State highway patrol data: Citations, warnings, and searches in 1998: North Carolina Department of Crime Control and Public Safety.

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4 thoughts on “Racial Profiling”
  1. Racism is a disease that should have been eradicated a long time ago. When my children were born; one looking completely Irish and the other Hispanic, i celebrated their genetic diversity. I honestly thought the time of color discrimination was fading and a time of equal respect and opportunity based on merits had begun. It saddens me to know i am wrong.

    Although my son keeps all his legal documents up to date; his license, auto inspections, insurance, and has never broken a law; he is far more likely to get pulled over than my daughter, who is younger and still hangs out with a more lackadaisical goth crowd. I have been in the automobile with him before when a police officer asked to see the identification of everyone in the vehicle; except mine. If my daughter goes out to the all night convenience store after midnight, it’s young people just having fun. If my son goes out at that same time, to a place where he’s not already known, it’s suspicious activity. Since he’s a burly guy, he doesn’t see the tough end of the stick any more than a Samoan, but it disturbs that a kid who has done absolutely nothing illegal, should constantly be under police radar because of his color.

  2. Karlsie: One of the things we’re doing is collecting stories from parents who actually FEAR for their children simply because of their race. It’s a tragedy of huge proportions.

  3. Excellent Post!

    I wish I could add to this but anger builds up when I talk about race as of late. I guess getting told to “quit whining” cause “everyone is discriminated against” can make a person pissed off a lot. Im starting to understand some of your responses to people in the past.

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