OFF THE WIRE
Police departments all over the United States are raking in the money
from average citizens. These aren’t hardened criminals, they are
every-day people whose rights are being violated by greedy departments
and cities which have criminalized victimless behavior in order to make
millions off of people who are just minding their own business.
In some cases, these revenue-generating schemes seem to deliberately
target specific groups that the police want to shake down for revenue.
Now, right on the heels of the Department of Justice report on Ferguson,
Missouri, Representative Emanuel Cleaver came out with a bill that he
says will help keep the police under control.
Cleaver’s will introduce a bill that would make the sort of policing
practices documented in the DOJ report a federal civil rights violation.
Representative Cleaver is calling the bill The Fair Justice Act. It
would make it a civil rights violation punishable by up to five years in
prison for any police officer, chief or department in the United States
to try to enforce any criminal or traffic laws if the purpose for such enforcement is raising revenue for the city.
“The time has come to end the practice of using law enforcement as a cash register,
a practice that has impacted too many Americans and has
disproportionately affected minority and low-income communities,”
Representative Cleaver told The Washington Post. “No American should
have to face arbitrary police enforcement whose sole purpose is to raise
revenue for a town, city, or state.”
The FBI investigation into
the Ferguson Police Department documented dozens of anecdotal data of
African American residents being disproportionately targeted by police
for ticketing schemes. We recently reported that a full 75% of Ferguson residents have active warrants out for their arrests right now!
“What we saw was that the Ferguson Police Department, in conjunction
with the municipality, saw traffic stops, arrests, tickets as a revenue
generator, as opposed to serving the community,” President Obama said,
commenting on the DOJ report. “And that it systematically was biased
against African Americans.”
But is there hope for this bill? Most of the mainstream media has been strangely silent on it, not even mentioning its proposal. If anyone is going to get the word out about the bill, it’s going to have to be all of us, on a grassroots level.
(Article by S. Wooten and Jackson Marciana)