Dec 11, 2019
Welcome to the first installment of a 3-part series where Sara
and Misasha cover topics such as DWB, or driving while black,
eye-popping traffic-stop statistics, and an overview of our
criminal justice system. You’ll even get to hear Sara rap!
Congratulations to Dear White Women Podcast, who was recently
awarded “Best Episode” for the Inaugural Colorado Podcast Awards
for the Crystal Echohawk episode!
Show Highlights:
- Sara and Misasha discuss the anxiety of being pulled over while
driving.
- If you’re driving while black, there’s a strong likelihood that
you’ll be stopped, asked to step out of the car, forcibly searched
and have your car searched during a routine traffic
stop.
- You need to know your rights because if you don’t, you could be
frisked, arrested, beat up, or even killed right in front of your
family that is with you, as has happened recently.
- Misasha covers your rights in a traffic stop, and what you
should and should not do.
- According to research based on 20 million traffic stops, blacks
are almost twice as likely to be pulled over as whites, even though
whites drive more, on average.
- Blacks are more likely to be searched following a stop.
- Just by getting in a car, a black driver has about twice the
odds of being pulled over and about four times the odds
of being searched.
- They’re more likely to be searched despite the fact that
they’re less likely to be found with contraband as a result of
those searches.
- The 2013 Justice Department study found that black and Latino
drivers were more likely to be searched once they have been pulled
over.
- About 2% of white motorists are searched compared to 6% of
black drivers and 7% of Latinos.
- In 2015, the Charleston Post & Courier looked at incidences in
which police stopped motorists but didn’t issue a citation. These
are called pretext stops and suggest that the officer was profiling
the motorist as a possible drug courier or suspected the motorist
of other crimes.
- After adjusting for population, blacks in nearly every part of
their state were significantly more likely to be the subject of
these stops.
- In 2017, a study of 4 1/2 million traffic stops by the 100
largest police departments in North Carolina found that blacks and
latinos were more likely to be searched than whites, even though
searches of white motorists were more likely than the others to
turn up contraband.
- Criminal justice is a big issue in the 2020 election with
several candidates talking about specific reforms.
- Sara and Misasha will be talking more in future episodes on
what the President and the office of the President has power to do
regarding criminal justice and what they need Congress for.
- Once you have a basic understanding of the criminal justice
system, it’s easier to understand why this is so important for the
upcoming election.
- The criminal justice system has 3 components that work together
to enforce the rule of law:
- Law enforcement
- The courts
- The correctional facilities
- The criminal justice system operates at the local level, the
state level, and the federal level.
- Law enforcement works to prevent crime, courts strive to enact
justice once a crime has been committed, and correction focuses on
retribution and rehabilitation.
- Misasha describes the hierarchy within the state and federal
levels and delves into each separate branch.
- Dr. Phillip Atiba Goff is a scientist who studies how our minds
learn to associate blackness, crime, and misperceived black
children as older than they actually are. He also studies police
behavior and knows that every year, one in five adults in the
United States will come in contact with law enforcement. Out of
this number, about a million are targeted for police use of force.
If you’re black, you’re 2 to 4 times more likely to be targeted for
that force than if you’re white.
- The US Corrections System stands alone as the largest system of
its type in the world. Though home to less than 5% of the world’s
population the US holds nearly 25% of the world’s prisoners, which
is the highest global per capita rate incarceration.
- Parole, probation, community service, and recidivism.
- Sara shares information on two organizations that are working
to help people who are re-entering society from prison.
- Along with corrections and our criminal justice system, it’s
also important to consider tribal law.
- Federally-recognized Native American tribes possess a form of
sovereign rule that preserves the inherent right of each tribe to
form their own government, make and enforce civil and criminal law,
collect taxes, and establish and regulate tribal citizenship.
- Native American reservations have more than 90 correctional
facilities.
Resources / Links:
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Listen to the Award-Winning “Best Episode” of the
Inaugural Colorado Podcast Awards!
Transforming Relationships with Native American Culture with
Crystal Echohawk
https://www.dearwhitewomen.com/episodes/crystal-echohawk
Book Mentioned:
Suspect Citizens: What 20 Million Traffic Stops Tell Us
About Policing and Race, by Frank R. Baumgartner, Derek A.
App, and Kelsey Shoub
Dr. Phillip Atiba Goff TED Talk
https://www.ted.com/speakers/phillip_goff
Organizations That Are Helping People Coming Out of
Prison
Second Chances
Farm
Forgive
Everyone