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Policing By Fleecing, in Ferguson and Beyond

Ruth Marcus on

WASHINGTON -- The most important thing to understand about the problems with the Ferguson, Missouri, police force is that they're not unique to Ferguson.

The investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division, launched in the aftermath of a police officer's fatal shooting of Michael Brown, would be upsetting, infuriating -- pick your adjective of outrage -- if Ferguson were a one-off.

The 102-page report depicts a department -- indeed, an entire city bureaucracy -- more focused on raising revenue than protecting public safety. Ferguson used its police force and court system to make ends meet -- on the backs of poor and minority residents.

As described in the report, Ferguson police, under pressure to bring in fines to boost the city's coffers, pile on multiple, often bogus, charges for minor infractions. Then they top that up with additional charges, fines, fees and even jail time for those who fail to pay, promptly and in full.

Police see residents, especially African-Americans, "less as constituents to be protected than as potential offenders and sources of revenue," the investigation found.

For example, an African-American woman parked her car illegally on a single occasion in 2007, receiving two tickets and a $151 fine, plus fees. Eventually charged with seven "Failure to Appear" offenses for missing court dates or payments on the fines, she was arrested twice, spent six days in jail, and paid $550. As of last December, seven years later, she still owed another $541.

 

Forget community policing. This is community fleecing, with an ugly racial element. African-Americans are disproportionately at risk for being stopped, searched, cited and arrested. Most disturbing, Ferguson citizens are at risk of being jailed -- not for committing crimes or posing a danger to the community if released before trials but because they can't pay fines or post bond on arrest warrants for offenses as minor as traffic tickets.

"There have been many cases," the Justice report noted, "in which a person has been arrested on a warrant, detained for 72 hours or more, and released owing the same amount as before the arrest was made." When asked why time in jail is not tracked as part of a case, "a member of court staff told us: it's only three days anyway."

Imagine if you were imprisoned for "only three days" over a parking ticket.

Debtors' prisons are -- or are supposed to be -- illegal in the United States. In a 1983 case involving an indigent defendant whose probation was revoked after he failed to pay a fine, the Supreme Court ruled that "punishing a person for his poverty" violates the Equal Protection Clause.

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