The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Inquiry sought in stop of HBCU team bus

Delaware governor calls actions of Ga. deputies ‘upsetting.’

- By Alexis Stevens alexis.stevens@ajc.com

Delaware Attorney General Kathleen Jennings requested the U.S. Department of Justice investigat­e after a Delaware State University bus was stopped and searched in Liberty County.

“By all accounts, these young women represente­d their school and our state with class — and they were rewarded with a question- able-at-best search through their belongings in an effort to find contraband that did not exist,” Jennings wrote in a letter to the DO J. “Not only did the deputies find nothing illegal in the bags, they not issue a single ticket for the alleged traffic infraction.”

Delaware Gov. John Car- ney and the state’s congressio­nal delegation have condemned the incident.

“I have watched video of this incident — it is upsetting, concerning, and disap- pointing,” Carney said in a statement, The Hill reported. “Moments like these should be relegated to part of our country’s complicate­d history, but they continue to occur with sad regularity in communitie­s across our country. It’s especially hard when it impacts our own community.”

Liberty County in coastal Georgia is about 260 miles from Atlanta. A deputy stopped the bus because the driver was violating a state law requiring that type of vehicle to travel in the two right-hand lanes, the county’s sheriff said.

“Before enter i ng the motorcoach, the deputy was not aware that this school was historical­ly Black or aware of the race of the occu- pants due to the height of the vehicle and tinted windows,” Liberty County Sher- iff William Bowman, who is Black, said in an online post. “A canine sniff of the exterior of a vehicle is not a search under the Fourth Amendment and does provide cause to search the vehicle.”

The coach of the women’s lacrosse team at the predominan­tly Black university believes South Georgia deputies racially profiled her team during an April 20 traffic stop that is being investi- gated by local law enforce- ment and the school.

The Delaware State Uni- versity lacrosse team bus was returning from Flor- ida when it was pulled over on I-95 in Liberty County, head coach Pamella Jenkins said. Six white deputies and a police dog searched the bus for drugs and found none, the coach said.

A video recorded by some- one on the bus shows a dep- uty asking the team to tell them now if anyone has mar- ijuana, devices to smoke or weigh it or other “questionab­le” items.

One student asked the deputies why they wanted to search the bus, Jenkins said. The deputy said that they frequently find drugs or human traffickin­g during traffic stops, the coach recalled.

According to Sheriff Bowman, deputies had been conducting traffic stops on commercial vehicles that morning, and a police K-9 was involved. Several vehicles had already been stopped before the Delaware team’s bus, he said. The driver of the Delaware bus was issued a warning, Bowman said.

His department is reviewing the traffic stop, Bowman said. He requested feedback from those on the bus.

“From what I have gathered, I believe that the stop was legal but I also understand my duty to help the public nderstand law enforcemen­t while seeking ways to improve services,” he said.

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