Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A jury in Oregon has ordered Walmart to pay $4.4 million in damages to a Black man who filed a lawsuit saying he was racially profiled and harassed by an employee while shopping.
7 Racial Profiling Cases. Racial Profiling. +4 Issues. Winston v. Salt Lake City Police Department, et al. The Salt Lake City Police Department and the Salt Lake City School District will make broad changes in how they treat students of color and engage in school disciplinary issues under settlements announced today by the ACLU. Mar 2016.
Jeffrey Otto. Rapid City Police Department. CNN — The fallout from a police officer who followed a car thinking the man behind the wheel was Native American is testing the fragility of race...
A lawsuit accuses Beverly Hills, California, police of racially profiling nearly 1,100 Black people during traffic stops. The suit announced Monday was filed on behalf of most of the...
The Center for Constitutional Rights filed the federal class action lawsuit Floyd, et al. v. City of New York, et al. against the City of New York to challenge the New York Police Department’s practices of racial profiling and unconstitutional stop and frisks of New York City residents.
Courtesy Michael Mangum. CNN — A jury in Oregon awarded a Black man $4.4 million in damages after he claimed in a lawsuit that a White Walmart employee racially profiled him while shopping and...
A Black man says officers with the Los Angeles Police Department violated his civil rights by racially profiling and wrongfully arresting him in a May 2019 incident during which he was...
There are three high profile court cases going on in three different parts of the country. Central to all are race and racism in the United States.
The New York City oversight body that examines police misconduct will now have the authority to investigate claims of racial profiling, as well as officers’ misuse of body cameras, and...
RIPA agencies reported reaching a disposition for 713 racial and identity profiling complaints in 2021. Only 1.8 percent of those complaints were sustained. The rest were reported as exonerated (18.2 percent), not sustained (11.6 percent), or unfounded (68.3 percent).