Grits reported Sunday that disparities in who is searched at Texas traffic stops differ more by department than by race. Most departments do show racial differences -- i.e., usually blacks and Latinos seem to be searched more often than whites -- but much greater disparities exist from one department to the next.
The biggest problems seem to come in departments where oversearching is the policy for everyone, not just minorities. Sunday I looked at the big city PDs, so today I thought I'd examine what's happening at a few other departments.
Take, for example, the West Texas towns of Midland and Odessa. Whether you're black, white or green, you're much more likely to be searched after a traffic stop in Midland, hands down, compared to its sister city. Certainly, black folks are 4.2 times more likely than whites to be searched in Midland, and Latinos are searched 1.7 times as often, compared to 2.6 and 1.5 times, respectively, for Odessa. So both departments exhibit racial disparities.
But that doesn't nearly tell the whole story. Drill deeper and we find that everyone gets searched more in Midland. Black folks there are 6 times more likely to be searched at a traffic stop than in Odessa; Latinos are about five times and white folks are more than 4 times as likely to be searched in Midland as in Odessa. You're even more likely to be searched by the Midland County Sheriff, regardless of race. This table depicts the percentage of total traffic stops where searches were conducted, by race:
as a percentage of local traffic stops by race
| Black | Latino | Anglo |
Midland PD | 25.1% | 10.3% | 6.0% |
Midland Sheriff | 41.4% | 15.6% | 11.5% |
| 3.8% | 2.1% | 1.4% |
Similarly, you're a lot less likely to get searched if you're stopped by the Lubbock Police Department than if you're stopped by the Lubbock County Sheriff, again regardless of race. The numbers reported by Lubbock PD showed large racial disparities, much worse on its face than the County Sheriff. Black folks were searched 5.4 times more often than whites by Lubbock PD, compared to 3.3 times more often by Lubbock County Sheriff. Again, though, when you drill deeper, the Lubbock County Sheriff has a much worse problem because they have a generalized policy of oversearching everyone.
as a percentage of local traffic stops by race
| Black | Latino | Anglo |
| 1.6% | 0.7% | 0.3% |
Lubbock Co. Sheriff | 20.8% | 10.1% | 6.3% |
Bottom line, the Sheriff's policy of oversearching, not race, is the most important factor. Minorities are more likely to be searched by both departments, but a black person stopped by the Lubbock County Sheriff is 16 times more likely to have their car searched than if they were stopped by Lubbock PD. Not to be outdone, white folks are an astonishing 21 times more likely to be searched at a traffic stop by the Lubbock Sheriff compared to the local police department.
as a percentage of local traffic stops by race
| Blacks | Latino | Anglo |
| 3.3% | 3.1% | 1.3% |
| 19.6% | 9.8% | 7.2% |
So once again, while both department's search patterns exhibit racial disparties, as a percentage of total stops, Longview is engaging in MANY more unnecessary searches than the Tyler PD. Indeed, whether a department has a policy of oversearching is a more significant factor than race: a white driver in Longview is more than twice as likely to be searched at a traffic stop as a black driver in Tyler.
See the report and local profiles, from which these figures were taken.
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