Black cops say discrimination, nepotism behind U.S. police race gap
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[July 03, 2020]
By Andrea Shalal and Jonathan Landay
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Thomas Boone has
spent 22 years as a police officer in Prince George's County, Maryland,
a predominantly Black suburb of Washington, proudly wearing his uniform
and driving his patrol car to coach kids' football and basketball teams.
Some of those athletes are now 18 to 20 years old, including his own
son. They might have pursued careers in law enforcement, Boone believes,
but the death of George Floyd has made that less likely due to the anger
directed at police, particularly in Black communities
"When we go to the grocery store in town, we have to get stopped to be
asked, 'Why do you all do this to us?'", said Boone, a lieutenant.
Floyd's killing by a white policeman in May has triggered fresh scrutiny
of police brutality against African Americans. Black men are more than
twice as likely to die in an interaction with U.S. police than white
ones, a 2018 study showed.
Some policing experts believe one way to address the crisis is to
attract more Black Americans to law enforcement, and promote them to the
top ranks. U.S. police forces remain generally whiter than the community
that surrounds them, despite decades of attempts to reform.
Whites accounted for 71.5% of the 701,000 sworn local police officers in
the United States in 2016, Bureau of Justice Statistics data show,
compared to an estimated 60% of the population. African Americans
account for 11.4% of local police forces, compared to around 13% of the
population, a drop from 11.9% in 2013.
The nationwide averages mask much bigger gaps in big cities, which are
both less white and have more police per capita than many rural areas,
suburbs, and small towns.
Reuters spoke to more than a dozen former and current law enforcement
officers, as well as criminal justice experts and families of police
officers. Black representation in U.S. police forces has long been
hampered by discrimination in hiring and promotion, they say, and some
warn it could shrink further.
"George Floyd is such a ground-breaking situation. It is definitely
going to affect the recruitment of minorities for a long time," said
Sergeant Anthony Russell, a former recruitment supervisor who heads a
Black officers’ advocacy group in Baltimore County, Maryland.
He and other Black officers said there are several reasons why the
numbers of African Americans in the blue uniform are low, including
application tests skewed against Black candidates, straightforward
nepotism in the senior ranks and a lingering reluctance by Blacks to be
part of a group that enforced segregation in the South decades ago.
FEDERAL EFFORTS
The race gap in U.S. policing remains pronounced in big cities and
districts, and among top ranks, despite years-long attempts to rectify
it.
Department of Justice (DOJ) data shows that 90% of the police chiefs in
local departments and 81% of supervisors above sergeant were white in
2016 - compared to 4% and 9% African American, respectively
In New York City, 47.7% of uniformed officers are white and 15% Black,
compared to 42.7% and 24.3% of the population. Some 80% of officers are
white in Baltimore County, compared to 57% of the population.
U.S. law enforcement agencies stepped up efforts to recruit Black
officers after Michael Brown, an unarmed Black man, was fatally shot by
a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014.
A task force set up by former President Barack Obama recommended reforms
to rebuild trust, including improved diversity. The Trump administration
shelved those efforts, and limited oversight of local police departments
in 2017.
A DOJ spokesman said the Trump administration changes had no impact on
pressure on police forces to hire more minorities.
In 2019, the DOJ filed a lawsuit against Baltimore County's police
department, alleging race discrimination in entry-level hiring. It said
the county had engaged in unintended employment discrimination by basing
hiring decisions on exams that were not job-related and that
disproportionately excluded African-American applicants.
Baltimore County and its police force plan a comprehensive review of
police hiring and recruitment and “county leadership strongly believes
the police department must look like the communities it serves,” said
Sean Naron, a spokesman for the county.
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Former Prince George's County, Maryland police Corporal Michael
Brown holds a training session on the use of force for special
police recruits at his "Reality-Based Training Group" in
Hyattsville, Maryland, U.S., June 22, 2020. REUTERS/Michael A. McCoy
Across the country, Black recruits face nepotism, more problems
during background checks, greater barriers to promotion and higher
discipline rates once hired, according to Sonia Pruitt, head of the
National Black Police Association and other police experts.
"We do not have a lack of qualified black and brown and female
candidates, but they are vetted out during the background process,
or at the academy, or during the field training program," Pruitt
said.
She said Black recruits are routinely weeded out for reasons that do
not hold up white candidates.
But Roberto Villasenor, a Latino former police chief of Tucson and a
member of the Obama-era task force on policing, said his department
had struggled to find enough minority candidates and that he was not
aware of any problems with disparate treatment during hiring by his
force.
White officers sometimes feel minority candidates received
preferential treatment, he added. All the same, problems in hiring
and retaining Black and brown officers remain and police departments
need to become more diverse, he said.
"This has got to be one of the driving calls to come out of this and
say, 'Okay, let's change the face of policing. Not just
figuratively, but literally.'"
For Black officers, it can be a discouraging environment for a
challenging job where complaints about discrimination can trigger
retaliation, officers say.
Boone, in Maryland, says he was moved to another job after
collecting data on disproportionate rejections of minority
candidates. "I noticed that people who were Black or brown were
getting disqualified," he said. "I had the numbers, but they didn't
want to listen."
Boone and 11 other minority officers filed a lawsuit in 2018
alleging systemic racism in his force. In June, the police chief
named in the ongoing suit resigned.
Boone says he is encouraged by the increased attention to the
problems he encountered on the force, but has counseled his own
19-year-old son to pursue a different career.
"Like any parent, would I like my son to follow my footsteps? Yes, I
would. Would I like him to do better than me? Yes. I'm not
completely sure this is the place for that reason."
"I DON'T WANT TO BE PART OF THIS"
Regina Holman worked for the Las Vegas police for 28 years,
including four years as a recruiter.
After Floyd's death, Holman's 18-year-old grandson, whose stepfather
is also a police officer, told her a career in law enforcement was
not in his future.
"He told me he will never be a cop. He has lost respect for the
police because of the things that have happened," said Holman,
president of the Nevada Black Police Association.
Michael Brown, a former Prince George's County officer who now
trains police and security guards, said Floyd's death and later
videos on social media of white police officers mocking the incident
so shocked his students that some quit.
"We actually shed some tears in here that very next day," Brown said
of his classroom of about 10 students. "I've had officers walk out
and say, 'You know what, I don't want to be part of this.'"
Brown was fired from his force in 2016 for conduct unbecoming an
officer, which he denies. He said he teaches his students that
policing is a "noble profession" that allows officers to help their
communities. But he also shares his own negative experiences on the
police force and is part of the lawsuit against Prince George's
County.
Despite everything, he says, he hopes to rejoin the force someday.
"I'm telling you right now, my best time in my life was being a
Prince George's County police officer to deal with my community.'"
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal and Jonathan Landay; Editing by Heather
Timmons and Alistair Bell)
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