Arguments Against Racial Profiling

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Racial Profiling: Fact or Myth
Since the 1990’s there have been great efforts to stop drug distribution and an effort to prevent crime. Also there have been concerns about illegal immigration. Profiling is one tool being used to aid the law enforcement in catching the criminals involved in these crimes. This practice, profiling, has turned into racial profiling and has generated controversy (Welch, 2007, p. 277). Even though it has been realized that profiling has changed, the motivation for its use has not. More reasons for profiling have come about from the 2001 September 11th terrorist attacks. This has led to other forms of profiling that relate more to race and national origin (Pampel, 2004, p. 3-4). Both racism and prejudice are the …show more content…

Drug profiling was used against the war on drugs and skin color was part of this profile. This caused minority groups to be searched at airports and interrogated frequently by the U.S. Customs Service. Field interrogations were causing friction between police officers and minority groups, but police officers saw drug profiling as a great new crime-fighting tool to get a hold on drugs. This was one of the earliest forms of racial profiling (Holbert & Rose, 2004, pgs. 39-41).
The media in depicting black men as the bad guy on television shows and racial hoaxes, such as when Miriam Kashani, a young woman whom claimed she was raped on a college campus by two black men, but later admitted that she made the story up to heighten rape awareness on campuses; fuels the practice of racial profiling by criminal justice officials (Welch, …show more content…

The thought that the police act unfairly towards racial minority groups, leads to distrust and confrontations with people and the police. Racial profiling violates civil rights, reduces public support for police, and increases crime (Pampel, 2004, p. 4). Racial profiling makes certain members of certain minority groups guilty and suspicious to others. They become offended because this happens without any regard to specific happening of a crime and makes them improperly targeted. Minority group members feel victimized by their race rather than their behavior. They feel stereotyped as drug dealers or terrorists (Pampel, 2004, p. 4). Some believe that group’s interests will become better by challenging how the racial order is today. Most want more law enforcement, but people in the group often criticize the police in public. This gives whites the impression that the group is trying to interfere with the control of crime. The white people are referred to as the dominant racial group. They believe that police are on their side and that they have a good relationship with them that entitles them to valuable resources. They have become afraid of losing their privileges to minority groups because of the public’s hate for racial profiling. People are arguing that valuable resources are being wasted searching people who pose no threat rather than investigating those that do (Holbert & Rose, 2004, pgs.

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