Racial profiling is a practice used by law enforcement personnel that discriminates and targets individuals for suspision of criminal activity based on the indiviuals race, ethnicity, or religion. Racial profiling is illegal as one would assume from its definition yet occurs all the time and ironically, it is practiced by the men and women who are meant to uphold the law. Race differecnes and the roles they play in police procedures such as traffic stops are an important topic in American society. Sometimes racial profiling is useful only in the sense that stereo-types and certain social stigmas attached to those who look, dress, and act a particular way don't mysteriously come from no where. There's a certain level of truth to some of them. As such, police officers often tie in race or ethnicity into their procedures. An officers likliness to racially profile an individual is a large factor weighed when recruiting law enforcement, however, it's bound to happen. Continued discrimination and the legacy created by each instance of racial profiling fuels the distrust that different ethnic groups feel towards one another.
Race involvement with police procedings have been the tip of the spear for many political agendas of public figures. Accordingly, there are many studies on the issue. Traffic stops are the single most frequent type of police-citizen encounter. As such, traffic stops are central to citizens' perceptions of the police. For many citizens, their only first-hand source of contact with the police occurs during a traffic stop (Article 1 page 2). This indicates that when racial profiling occurs, traffic stops are the most likely avenue. This is very important for two reasons. The first is that first impressions usually last and another is that for many who only encounter officers as part of a traffic stop, that is thier first offence. With race influence stops, this could be considered the gateway crime for those targeted by racial profiling. Studies...