The following article first appeared in a report published by CQ Researcher.

With all we now know about unrelenting bias and systemic racism in our criminal justice system, do we really want to let gang cops and prosecutors decide whose rights will be permanently restricted?

That is exactly what happens with civil gang injunctions. They never end. They are blunt instruments, too often wielded indiscriminately with their prohibitions against even innocuous, daily behavior.

While gang injunctions have been found to be constitutional, they nonetheless severely restrict civil liberties without adequate due process. Once someone is on an injunction, activities such as hanging out in public with friends or relatives (if police think they are gang members too), wearing certain colors, or being out at night violates the injunction and subjects them to arrest for violating a court order.

And those who are enjoined are rarely given the opportunity to challenge their inclusion under the injunction beforehand. There is no right to appointed counsel in civil proceedings, meaning those who want to fight these injunctions must either represent themselves in court or hire a private attorney.

Most often, however, an injunction is obtained against the gang itself, and then the police and district attorney or city attorney—without court oversight—decide against whom they will enforce it.

But the injunctions are ineffective in curbing gang violence. Instead they become a ticket to the prison pipeline for some young people who have never committed a single crime, and they shred relations between the police and communities of color.

An uglier consequence of these injunctions comes from studies showing that police in gang units have a greater bias against youth of color than other police officers. Gang officers see indicators of gang membership everywhere and are unable to distinguish between youth growing up in neighborhoods where gangs exist and those who are actually involved in gang crime.

These officers are more likely to label individuals as gang members, arrest them for alleged gang activity and use violence in the process. Recent studies suggest that gang injunctions actually increase the use of excessive force by police officers.

Gang crime and gang violence is a very real problem for many communities in our country. But the question we should ask is how we want to spend limited public resources to combat this problem.

A better approach would use after-school programs, job training and early intervention—strategies proven to be effective at addressing the root causes of gangs and gang violence.

Constitutionally problematic gang injunctions with little data to support their justification, while increasing the risk of police violence and criminalizing youth are not the answer.

Caitlin Sanderson is staff attorney at the ACLU of Southern California. Follow ACLU_SoCal.

Date

Thursday, October 22, 2015 - 3:00pm

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By Chris Rickerd

Yesterday's Los Angeles Times article, "Homeland Security email points to ongoing racial profiling by local police," shows that federal immigration enforcers believe in deporting people even if state or local police unconstitutionally detained them based on race.

Two construction workers were arrested for loitering by the New Llano, Louisiana Police Department. The Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties concluded that there was no legitimate basis for the arrests and advised that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) terminate deportation proceedings to avoid being complicit in discriminatory policing.

Instead, ICE has so far rejected that solution and the men face imminent deportation. If deportation happens, three disturbing conclusions must be drawn:

  • DHS doesn't care if racial profiling brings someone into their custody or respect the "fruit of the poisonous tree" idea that such deportations enable and encourage racial profiling;
  • The Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties' advisory role is not taken seriously;
  • An administration that through its Department of Justice has done fine work in holding state and local police to account (as in Maricopa County, AZ, and Alamance County, NC) has a double standard for its DHS immigration enforcers.

Pressure is building for ICE to relent, but if the two men are deported the administration's credibility as a leader in the fight against racial profiling will be dealt a staggering blow.

Chris Rickerd is policy counsel at the ACLU's Washington Legislative Office.

Date

Friday, October 16, 2015 - 2:15pm

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