Chattanooga Times Free Press

WHO’S DOING THE ‘RACIAL PROFILING’?

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In the last few weeks, three black motorists, including an NAACP chapter president, made blatantly false allegation­s against perfectly courteous police officers.

Now who’s “racially profiling”?

First, in Timmonsvil­le, S.C., the Rev. Jerrod Moultrie, the local NAACP president, put up a lengthy post on his Facebook page: “Tonight, I was racially profiled by Timmonsvil­le Officer CAUSE I WAS DRIVING A MERCEDES BENZ AND GOING HOME IN A NICE NEIGHBORHO­OD.” He claimed the officer told him, “I am doing you a favor tonight not taking you to jail or writing you a ticket.”

Timmonsvil­le Police Chief Billy Brown said Moultrie contacted him the next morning with his accusation­s of racial profiling and mistreatme­nt. “He made a comment that the officer accused him of having drugs in the car,” said Brown. “He said that his wife and grandchild were in the car. He asked them not to move because the officer looked as if he might shoot them or something. He also made mention that the officer continued to ask him about his neighborho­od. Why was he in that neighborho­od? And (threatened) to put him in jail in reference to something dealing with the registrati­on to the vehicle.”

But Brown reviewed the body cam video of the four-minute traffic stop. It showed a very polite officer explaining he pulled the car over for failing to signal a left turn and reminding the occupants to wear their seat belts. Brown said: “When I saw the video, I was shocked that someone who is supposed to be a community leader, a pastor and head of the NAACP would just come out and tell a blatant lie. It bothered me. It really bothered me, thinking about the racial unrest it could’ve cost in the community and it’s just troubling to me that someone who held a position like that would come out and just tell a lie.” The Rev. Moultrie removed his original Facebook post, and refused further comment.

Second, a black South Carolina woman said she had a “traumatic experience” in Virginia when pulled over for speeding and “threatened” by a “white cop.” Dawn Hilton-Williams posted an 11-minute Facebook Live video accusing a Brunswick County Sheriff’s Office deputy of racism after she was ordered to sign a summons asking her to appear in court or prepay a traffic ticket.

“I have had a traumatic experience, and I want the people who are not African-American who know me to really get where we are coming from,” Hilton-Williams says. “When I saw the police pull up behind me, the state trooper, I was immediatel­y afraid. …

“This is the area,” she says, moving the camera to show the rural road. “In the middle of this kind of stuff. This is where I am, so it’s not like I’m not afraid, because this is where we got lynched. … Do any of my white friends … feel like that when they get pulled over?” Her Facebook footage — taken right after she was stopped — was widely shared.

But the body cam video tells a different story. The officer, addressing her as “Ma’am,” explains he clocked her going 70 mph on a rural highway that has a 55 mph limit. Asked to sign the summons for speeding, she repeatedly refuses. The officer explains: “What you are signing here is a promise to come to court or a promise to prepay. It’s not an admission of guilt. … If you refuse to sign the summons, at this point, I’m going to have to get you outside of this car, I’m going to place you under arrest and take you in front of a magistrate. … So thank you. I knew you were going to sign it. Thank you very much. … Have a very safe day.”

Third, a viral post last week by civil rights “activist” Shaun King claimed that in Ellis County, Texas, a Texas Department of Public Safety trooper sexually assaulted a black woman, Sherita Dixon-Cole, following a traffic stop, then arrested her for driving while intoxicate­d. But two days later, the TDPS released a nearly two-hour body cam video and issued the following statement: “The video shows absolutely no evidence to support the egregious and unsubstant­iated accusation­s against the Trooper during the DWI arrest of the suspect. The Department is appalled that anyone would make such a despicable, slanderous and false accusation.”

When a cop is caught on tape mistreatin­g a suspect, many say, “Imagine what would’ve happened had this not been filmed by a civilian with a smartphone.” But this cuts both ways. How often do civilians falsely accuse police officers of misconduct?

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 ??  ?? Larry Elder
Larry Elder

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