Is Federal Government Guilty of Racial Profiling?

August 1, 2013
Written by Michael Tarm in
Race Relations
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Chief judge Ruben Castillo
Chief judge Ruben Castillo wrote an option outlining the number of African-Americans and Latinos that have been charged in drug stings in the Chicago area, which indicates a strong showing of potential racial bias. Photo Credit: AP

CHICAGO (AP) – Is the federal government guilty of racial profiling in conducting drug stings? The chief judge of U.S. District Court in Chicago has questioned whether the federal government in a drug case racially profiled African-Americans and Latinos.

Judge Ruben Castillo wrote in a decision posted late Wednesday that since 2011, 19 African-Americans and seven Latinos have been charged in drug stings in the Chicago area, in which agents used an informant to talk suspects into robbing a house where drugs were supposed to be held.

The decision has potential to reach beyond Chicago. Law enforcement in other metropolitan areas has been accused of racial profiling, and similar stings are done nationwide.

Castillo says there's a "strong showing of potential bias" and ordered the government to turn over the name and race of each defendant in such cases brought by federal prosecutors in the Chicago area since 2006.

Last month, Castillo became the first Hispanic chief judge for the northern Illinois district. He told The Associated Press then that one of his priorities was to ensure diversity issues were looked at more closely at the courthouse.

In the Chicago case, five men were charged after an undercover agent told them he knew of a house where Mexican cartel operatives keep stashes of cocaine. They were arrested as they prepared to storm the house.

Castillo in his ruling asks for the instructions that prosecutors and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms provide to employees on how to avoid profiling based on race.

Attorneys for a defendant in the case, Abraham Brown, have sharply criticized the practice of using fake drug houses.

"The informant and agent search for their prey - someone whom they can convince to act on their phony plan," their motion, filed in June, says. Numbers indicating most targets are black, it adds, "presents a stark discriminatory picture."

In their reply, prosecutors said there was no evidence that's true. To show any such bias, the government argued the defense had to show that non-minorities with criminal histories who were potential sting targets "were not further investigated or prosecuted because of their race."

The question regarding the fairness of drug-house stings has arisen before in this district, court filings show.

Last year, the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago found such stings were acceptable. But in a partial dissent, Judge Richard Posner wrote there is a greater risk of illegally entrapping suspects because of promise of hundreds of thousands in drug money dangled before targets.

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Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

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