The Day

Norwich police flagged for data on traffic stops

Analysis shows Hispanics are pulled over disproport­ionately

- By LINDSAY BOYLE Day Staff Writer

Hartford — Norwich police have come under scrutiny with the release of a report Thursday showing that they disproport­ionately stopped Hispanic motorists during hours when their racial characteri­stics could be identified.

Analysis in the third annual state-mandated traffic stop analysis flagged the Norwich Police Department’s traffic enforcemen­t as statistica­lly significan­t. According to the analysis — an undertakin­g of the Connecticu­t Racial Profiling Prohibitio­n Project, or CTRP3 — Hispanics from Oct. 1, 2015, to Sept. 30, 2016, were 1.6 times more likely to be stopped in Norwich during the day than at night, even after researcher­s controlled for several factors.

The numbers were derived using the “veil of darkness” test, which assumes officers can more easily determine a person’s race when it’s light outside. According to the report, researcher­s with the Institute for Municipal and Regional Policy at Central Connecticu­t State University were almost 100 percent sure of the disparity in Norwich.

In his presentati­on at the Legislativ­e Office Building in Hartford, project manager Ken Barone emphasized that such racial and ethnic disparitie­s don’t by themselves provide proof of racial profiling. But they do warrant further analysis, he said.

In the coming months, Barone and the CTRP3 team will visit with one state police troop and six municipal department­s, including Norwich, to learn more about what might have led to the disparitie­s in their traffic stops this time around.

Speaking by phone Thursday, Norwich police Chief Pat Daley said he was surprised his department landed on the list but ready to fully cooperate with CTRP3 officials.

Norwich, it should be noted, also was mentioned in the first- ever CTRP3 report of 2015, but at the time it was listed at the lowest level of concern.

Daley said it’s early in the process, but it’s possible the city’s diversity and “destinatio­n traffic” — or those who use Norwich’s roads to get to nearby casinos — could have contribute­d to the disparity.

He also noted that the force actively carries out grant programs such as Click it or Ticket, and that it’s up to officers to make a judgment call when recording a person’s ethnicity because they aren’t allowed to ask.

“I’m not making excuses,” Daley said, “but this is a tough one to figure out.”

“Obviously we’re going to take these concerns seriously,” he continued. “We’re going to drill down and figure out the cause of these numbers.”

The next steps

Daley now is living what Groton Town police Chief Louis J. Fusaro Jr. did a couple years back, when his department landed on the “needs further review” list.

In his follow- up meetings with CTRP3 representa­tives, Fusaro was able to show how the Naval Submarine Base, Electric Boat and Pfizer Corp. make Groton’s driving population unique.

Fusaro also learned of an issue where more than 6,000 stops were recorded as happening at midnight even though most hadn’t occurred at that time. That issue has since been resolved.

In year two, Groton Town was not identified as a de- partment warranting further study.

Fusaro now sits on CTRP3’s Advisory Board, one of two representa­tives from the Connecticu­t Police Chiefs Associatio­n.

“The chiefs are supportive of this effort,” he said Thursday, “but we want to make sure we get it right.”

Fusaro said three experts reviewed the first two studies conducted by CTRP3 and, briefly speaking, found flaws in the veil of darkness analysis and a lack of informatio­n about the methodolog­y researcher­s used.

Because of that, Fusaro aligned with the associatio­n’s overall stance, which is that it supports the study, but “can no longer accept the informatio­n provided at face value.”

Fusaro also said it would be advisable for CTRP3 to do its follow- up investigat­ions before releasing the names of problem department­s.

If that had been done in Groton, he said, “they would have identified the anomalies in our town” and might not have included Groton in the first place.

Tamara Lanier, a Norwich resident who sits on CTRP3’s Advisory Board as a representa­tive of the Connecticu­t National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People, said she was surprised to see Norwich on the list.

As she has with other department­s pinpointed in the studies, Lanier plans to reach out to the president of the Norwich NAACP so the local chapter can approach the police department about the findings.

Lanier said she wants open and frequent communicat­ion to create an environmen­t where police department­s, instead of being defensive, ask “How can we do better?” when they land on one of CTRP3’s lists.

Lanier also hopes to help or- ganize pre-emptive education for the state’s police officers so department­s stop landing on the lists.

“We all have biases — most of the time without thinking about it,” she said. “It’s not until you reach a certain level of awareness that you’re able to identify and modify the behaviors that come with that.”

This year’s traffic stop analysis covered more than 560,000 stops from 106 law enforcemen­t agencies. In addition to pinpointin­g various department­s under the veil of darkness, the study also found that department­s across the state continue to be more likely to search minorities and less likely to find contraband on them.

It’s an issue ACLU-CT President David McGuire on Thursday urged the board to discuss further.

“Biased traffic enforcemen­t undermines faith in our democracy,” he said. “Connecti- cut must adopt independen­t oversight of police to end unjust police practices like biased traffic stops, and it must start enforcing its existing police accountabi­lity laws.”

Barone spent a large portion of Thursday morning explaining how and why each department is reviewed in 41 different ways before CTRP3 draws any conclusion­s. The goal, he said, is to identify only those department­s with the most significan­t disparitie­s across multiple measures.

But the analysis, Barone said, is the easy part.

“What we’ve done today is simple,” he said. “We’ve identified disparitie­s.”

“Step two is where the hard work begins,” he continued. “And that is trying to figure out what’s going on. Why do these disparitie­s exist, and to what degree do law enforcemen­t have control over them?”

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