- (a) Municipal and state law enforcement officers play a vital role in protecting the public from crime. The vast majority of police officers discharge their duties professionally and without bias.
- (b) The use by police officers of race, ethnicity, or national origin solely in deciding which persons should be subject to traffic stops, searches and seizures is improper.
- (c) In many communities nonwhite drivers in Rhode Island, subjected to discretionary searches, are twice as likely as whites to be searched.
- (d) In some instances, law enforcement practices may have the unintended effect of promoting racially disparate stops and searches.
- (e) Racial profiling harms individuals subjected to it because they experience fear, anxiety, humiliation, anger, resentment and cynicism when they are unjustifiably treated as criminal suspects.
- (f) Racial profiling damages law enforcement and the criminal justice system as a whole by undermining public confidence and trust in the police, the courts, and criminal law, and thereby undermining law enforcement efforts and ability to solve and reduce crime.
- (g) A comprehensive solution is needed to address racial profiling at the state and local levels.
History of Section.
P.L. 2004, ch. 331, § 1; P.L. 2004, ch. 356, § 1.