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REBECCA FARMER
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"Without data collection, it is impossible to identify, track, prove or prevent racial discrimination by the police," said Michelle Alexander, Director of the ACLU-NC Racial Justice Project. "We are gratified that the Racial Justice Coalition's organizing efforts have paid off. This bill was pulled after legislators recognized that it did not have the teeth to address the problem of racial profiling."
Marcos Contreras, Immediate Past President of the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) in California, said, "We have marched, rallied, organized and spoken out about the need to document race-based police stops. We are encouraged that the legislators saw that a bill without data collection is worse than no bill at all. The groundswell of opposition by state and local civil rights leaders cannot be ignored."
The groundswell that Contreras referred to included packed town hall meetings throughout California and a major demonstration in Sacramento on April 27 sponsored by the Racial Justice Coalition, as well as statements from key Black Congressional leaders and national civil rights leaders. In a press statement last week, Congresswoman Maxine Waters stated that the recent overwhelming evidence of the practice of racial profiling around the country shows that "Data collection is critical to any meaningful effort to address the serious problem of racial profiling that has plagued communities of color for decades."
Congressman John Conyers, former leader of the Congressional Black Caucus and Ranking Member of the Judiciary Committee, stated, "Nothing is more important to developing a solution to this problem than the gathering of meaningful data. Civil rights organizations and news organizations have spent considerable resources documenting patterns of abuse whereby African American motorist are randomly stopped as much as ten times more frequently than are white motorists."
In a full-page ad in the New York Times, published during the Democratic Convention, Reverend Jesse Jackson, Martin Luther King III, Reverend Al Sharpton, as well as the national directors of League of United Latin American Citizens, the Japanese American Citizens League, and the National Conference on Civil Rights, and a score of other national civil rights organizations asked Governor Davis to "support efforts to enact a racial profiling bill that includes data collection."
"I'm glad to see that the legislators came to understand that Latinos and others who are racially profiled would still have no way of documenting the problem. We will continue to work toward enacting a meaningful racial profiling bill that includes data collection," said Elizabeth Guillen of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund.
Eight other states (Connecticut, Kansas, Missouri, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Tennessee and Washington) have passed racial profiling bills that include data collection. All of those bills have been signed by the Governors - both Republican and Democrat.
Eva Paterson,
Executive Director of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights said, "The civil
rights community is pleased that this bill has been pulled. We're looking
forward to working with the Governor to create a meaningful solution to the
racial profiling problem."

Download the Fall 2011 ACLU of Northern California Newsletter and read about our latest events and initiatives.

| • | A New Frontier of Reproductive Freedom for U.S. Women |
| • | Oakland Gang Injunction is a False Solution |
| • | As Death Penalty Cases Fade, L.A. County Pays to Buck the Trend |
