I do find it likely. Maybe it is just media reporting although I believe the facts uphold the view. I do not believe there is something inherent in African-Americans that would make it so.
The
DoJ explicitly rejected that idea, and the stats also undermine it.
While they were bombarded with fines and tickets, white figures – including the municipal judge, court clerk and senior police officers – were found “assisting friends, colleagues, acquaintances, and themselves in eliminating citations, fines, and fees”.
The review found that 95% of people detained at the city jail for more than two days between April and September 2014 were black. During the same period, black defendants were 68% less likely than others to have their cases dismissed.
Dismissing the notion that the discrepancies could be explained simply by a “difference in the rate at which people of different races violate the law”, the Justice Department investigators pointed to “substantial evidence of racial bias” among court and police officials.
Missouri's report into vehicle stops:
http://ago.mo.gov/divisions/litigation/vehicle-stops-report
|Event|White|Black|
|Disparity Index|0.38|1.37|
|Search Rate|47 / 686|562 / 4632|
|Contraband Hit Rate|16 / 47|122 / 562|
|Arrest Rate|36 / 686|483 / 4632|
By my sums, corrected per head of population, blacks were 3.6 times as likely to be stopped (1.37/0.38)
12% of stops involving blacks involved a search
7% of stops involving whites involved a search - the actual numbers mean that a black who was stopped was 1.77 times more likely to be searched.
By my reckoning, a black motorist is 6.4 times more likely to be searched than a white motorist.
When searched, contraband was found in 22% of stops involving blacks and 34% of stops involving whites.
In itself, I would say the above would be grounds for suspicion of bias.
I also take issue with what Dan Jackson said (Thanks to the link from LTC8K6 in
this post) where he claimed
" The actual legitimate racial profiling states collected by MO attorney general show that Ferguson is better than the state average and has been improving over the last 3 years"
Here are the disparity index results for 2011, 2012, 2013 (the last year with data)
http://ago.mo.gov/divisions/litigation/vehicle-stops-report?lea=161
|2011|2012|2013|
|1.30|1.31|1.37|
which strikes me as going the wrong way.
I do agree that it looks better than the state average, but that doesn't answer whether there is a problem.