Ferguson, Mo., is a third white, but the crime statistics compiled in the city over the past two years seemed to suggest that only black people were breaking the law. They accounted for 85 percent of traffic stops, 90 percent of tickets and 93 percent of arrests. In cases like jaywalking, which often hinge on police discretion, blacks accounted for 95 percent of all arrests.I'm not sure what a final resolution to this should be, but as a start, I would suggest that all fines and court costs in the municipality be placed under the control of a special master and not allowed to accrue to the town treasury.
The racial disparity in those statistics was so stark that the Justice Department has concluded in a report scheduled for release on Wednesday that there was only one explanation: The Ferguson Police Department was routinely violating the constitutional rights of its black residents.
The report, based on a six-month investigation, provides a glimpse into the roots of the racial tensions that boiled over in Ferguson last summer after a black teenager, Michael Brown, was fatally shot by a white police officer, making it a worldwide flash point in the debate over race and policing in America. It describes a city where the police used force almost exclusively on blacks and regularly stopped people without probable cause. Racial bias is so ingrained, the report said, that Ferguson officials circulated racist jokes on their government email accounts.
The town will continue to discriminate so long as it makes a profit from doing so.
People should not hate their own police, but it is the God given right of any free citizen to hate the tax collector, even though it is an essential function.
By turning the Ferguson courts and police into a revenue source it creates a toxic environment.
The people hate the cops.
The cops hate them back, and come to believe that they are surrounded by the enemy, and not familiar citizens.
Then you get a kid shot and left to lie in the street for hours in plain view as a warning to the community.
I'd also like to see some criminal prosecutions, perhaps under RICO, against those who created, promulgated, and maintained such a system.
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