Report: Blacks and Latinos Make Up 86 Percent of Pot Arrests in NYC
In 2005, just 29,752 people were arrested for similar offenses, the Drug Policy Alliance says, adding that marijuana use hasn’t increased. Rather, the “dramatic rise” in arrests is due to a shift in policy within the NYPD to prioritize low-level drug offenses. The city is going on the sixth consecutive year of increases in arrests for pot possession.
“The NYPD and Mayor Bloomberg are waging a war on young blacks and Latinos in New York,” said Kyung Ji Rhee, director of the Institute for Juvenile Justice Reforms and Alternatives, in a statement. “These 50,000 arrests for small amounts of marijuana can have devastating consequences for New Yorkers and their families, including: permanent criminal records, loss of financial aid, possible loss of child custody, loss of public housing and a host of other collateral damage. It’s not a coincidence that the neighborhoods with high marijuana arrests are the same neighborhoods with high stop-and-frisks and high juvenile arrests.”
It’s not just that these mass arrests cripple black and Latino communities. Blacks are not more likely than whites, and in fact as of 1994 were less likely than whites to be past or current users of drugs. A more recent 2009 study from the Department of Health and Human Services pins drug use among black, white, Latino and Native American communities around a very close range, all are around seven to 10 percent. And yet the disparities in arrests are vast.
If ever a person needed more salient proof of systemic inequities in criminal justice system, these numbers seem to provide it.
I'm sure there is inequality, but I don't think that these numbers fairly represent the inequality. The author states it herslef " It’s not a coincidence that the neighborhoods with high marijuana arrests are the same neighborhoods with high stop-and-frisks and high juvenile arrests.” It is not as simple as saying the NYPD is going after latinos and blacks to find drug possession - it is much more likely that they are already arresting these people for other offenses and they then have the opportunity to arrest them for possession when they see that they are possessing. Additionally, the article says that blacks and latinos are less likely to use drugs, but it did not cite who is more likely to sell the drugs, which would also give cause to possess it.
The real issue may not be with the police so much as it is with a social system that has not educated our youth and prepared them for responsible adulthood--a much more complex social problem than simply "racial profiling." Since it is so much more complex, it doesn't get discussed in quick five-paragraph articles.