Blacks Stopped, Questioned and Photographed Jackson native Donald Wilkes recalls being stopped four years
ago by an officer who questioned why he was walking through the Lambuth
neighborhood after 1 a.m. ''A police officer stopped to ask me could he
help me,'' said Wilkes, 53. ''I told him 'no' and kept walking. When he
stopped me, he asked me what I was doing, then said he was going to
take my picture.'' After a 10-minute discussion with the officer,
Wilkes said he would not allow the officer to take a photo of him. ''I
think when he realized that I knew my rights, he finally backed off,''
Wilkes said. Although they haven't been charged with a crime, some
local residents are stopped, questioned and even photographed by
Jackson Police Department officers. That information is kept on file.
The practice is called a field interview and law enforcement officials
are standing by it, despite some local concerns about racial profiling
and statistics that show that three out of every four such photos taken
in recent months were of black citizens, most black males. According to
statistics provided by JPD, a total of 369 photos were taken from June
to September of this year alone. Of those, 281 (76 percent) of the
people photographed were black, while 88 (24 percent) were white. Out
of 17 crime categories, the highest number of photographs were taken
for reasons of ''suspicious circumstances.'' Of the 118 photos taken,
75 percent were of blacks. In burglary investigations, 92 percent of
the 62 photos were of blacks. [more ]
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