Lodi News-Sentinel

Black DEA agents say bias plagues agency, dispute Barr’s assertion

- By Justin Fenton

BALTIMORE — Frustrated by Attorney General William P. Barr’s recent comments on police and racism, a group of more than 75 retired black Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion special agents from across the country are speaking out about systemic racism in the agency.

In a joint message, the former agents said the DEA suffers from a dearth of black agents across the agency as well as in supervisor­y positions. They point to a class-action lawsuit filed 40 years ago that continues to be litigated to this day and to the death of George Floyd, a Minnesota man who died after a police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes.

“Systemic racism has ended aspiration­s, careers, and in some cases even lives. Unfortunat­ely, it has taken the despicable killing of George Floyd to awaken the collective conscience of the American people,” according to the statement, prepared by the group and shared with The Baltimore Sun as part of an effort to raise awareness. “For the highest-ranking law enforcemen­t officer in the country to be blinded to this notion is inconceiva­ble and will continue to have detrimenta­l consequenc­es.”

They’re referring to comments Barr made earlier this month, on CBS’s “Face the Nation": “There’s racism in the United States still, but I don’t think that the law enforcemen­t system is systemical­ly racist.”

The retired agents say that just 8% of nearly 4,500 special agents as of last fall were black. Similarly, just four of 50 senior executives are black. Last year, a federal judge ruled in the classactio­n suit first brought in 1977 that the DEA needed to take more steps to cure systemic race bias in promotions to the detriment of black agents.

“This begs the question that if the DOJ will not abolish the 40-plus years of racism in one of its component law enforcemen­t agencies, how can they expect police department­s to do the same?” their statement says.

A DEA spokesman said the agency could not comment on the ongoing litigation, but said in a statement that the DEA is “committed to recruiting, retaining and promoting a workforce that reflects the diversity of our country and the people we serve.” The statement also said “all DEA employees are expected to uphold the values of fairness, justice and equality” and there are policies in place that “make clear that racism and discrimina­tion will not be tolerated.”

The U.S. population is about 13% black. Other federal law enforcemen­t agencies also struggle with diversity: the FBI said last year that 11.3% of its workforce was black, and only 4.6% of special agents.

June Werdlow Rogers was the special agent in charge for the DEA’s New

England region from 2002 to 2008. She also served two stints with the DEA in Baltimore, spanning about a decade in the 1980s and 1990s.

She said white counterpar­ts expressed concern for her when she took over the New England field office, worried that as a black supervisor she could feel isolated or face discrimina­tion. She supervised hundreds of agents, and said only a handful at a given time were black.

“They said, ‘You’re isolate. There’s no one that looks like you,’” she recalled. “I said something to the effect of, ‘What you don’t understand is: The DEA (as a whole) looks just like the New England field division.’”

Gary Tuggle, who was special agent in charge of the Baltimore field office and served as interim Baltimore Police commission­er in 2018, said he thinks the problem has worsened in recent years.

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