December 26, 2024

cjstudents

News for criminal justice students

Michigan State Police must attack institutional racism

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Crime scene tape

The Michigan State Police deserve credit for completing a one-year study into big differences between traffic stops for Black drivers and everyone else in the state — which was announced earlier this month. But the MSP response to its own report fails to take dead aim at the social menace that lurks behind the study’s findings. This plague is institutional racism, and it will keep hiding in plain sight until MSP and other state leaders call it out and confront it. 

The MSP study, announced Jan. 12 after completion last fall by the Michigan State University School of Criminal Justice, found that 22.1% of all traffic stops in 2020 involved Black drivers, who comprise only 13.6% of Michigan’s population. Furthermore, the study found that “African American drivers are significantly more likely than White drivers to be searched or arrested after traffic stops.”

Michigan attorney Leonard Mungo

Tell me something I don’t know. Black Michigan residents could offer a plethora of anecdotes about harrowing traffic stops, especially in remote areas of the state. While I applaud the MSP for initiating the study and for coming up with a five-point plan to address the traffic-stop issue, the state agency’s follow-up is only a series of half-measures. The Michigan State Police don’t need to puzzle over the disproportionately high rate of Black drivers who get stopped and arrested on Michigan roads. After winning or settling major lawsuits against the state police — including two recent class-action cases — I can tell you plainly that the traffic-stop study is just symptomatic of the institutional racism MSP needs to attack directly. 

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