Justice Department expands anti-profiling rules
WASHINGTON – The Justice Department issued new guidance Thursday emphasizing that investigations must be free from bias involving race and gender or against people with disabilities. Antiprofiling rules were also expanded to include thousands more people who are part of the justice system.
The guidelines obtained by The Associated Press, the first updates in nearly a decade, cover thousands more people than before, including prosecutors, lawyers, analysts and contractors. They already applied to agents for Justice Department agencies such as the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration and local officers who work with them on task forces.
The update also requires, for the first time, more extensive data collection measures that are intended to ensure the guidance is being followed.
The effort is intended to root out biased work and practices condemned as unfair or likely to create mistrust and violate civil rights. The guidelines aim to bar bias based on the use of race, ethnicity, gender, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity and, now, disability.
“Fair and unbiased law enforcement practices are smart and effective law enforcement practices,” according to the guidance.
Details about those characteristics can be used, though, if investigators obtain such information along with additional, detailed context that shows it’s reliable and linked to a specific incident or investigation.
For example, investigators could not single out people of a certain race or faith based on a tip about a possible attack without any specifics about date, time or a full description of a suspect.