Stops and Stares: Street Stops, Surveillance, and Race in the New Policing

76 Pages Posted: 6 Apr 2016 Last revised: 27 Sep 2017

See all articles by Jeffrey Fagan

Jeffrey Fagan

Columbia Law School

Anthony A. Braga

Harvard University - Harvard Kennedy School (HKS); Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - School of Criminal Justice

Rod Brunson

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey- Rutgers University, Newark; Northeastern University - School of Criminology and Criminal Justice

April Pattavina

University of Massachusetts Lowell

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Date Written: March 31, 2016

Abstract

The use of proactive tactics to disrupt criminal activities, such as Terry street stops and concentrated misdemeanor arrests, are essential to the “new policing.” This model applies complex metrics, strong management, and aggressive enforcement and surveillance to focus policing on high crime risk persons and places. The tactics endemic to the “new policing” gave rise in the 1990s to popular, legal, political and social science concerns about disparate treatment of minority groups in their everyday encounters with law enforcement. Empirical evidence showed that minorities were indeed stopped and arrested more frequently than similarly situated whites, even when controlling for local social and crime conditions. In this article, we examine racial disparities under a unique configuration of the street stop prong of the “new policing” – the inclusion of non-contact observations (or surveillances) in the field interrogation (or investigative stop) activity of Boston Police Department officers. We show that Boston Police officers focus significant portions of their field investigation activity in two areas: suspected and actual gang members, and the city’s high crime areas. Minority neighborhoods experience higher levels of field interrogation and surveillance activity, controlling for crime and other social factors. Relative to white suspects, Black suspects are more likely to be observed, interrogated, and frisked or searched controlling for gang membership and prior arrest history. Moreover, relative to their black counterparts, white police officers conduct high numbers of field investigations and are more likely to frisk/search subjects of all races. We distinguish between preference-based and statistical discrimination by comparing stops by officer-suspect racial pairs. If officer activity is independent of officer race, we would infer that disproportionate stops of minorities reflect statistical discrimination. We show instead that officers seem more likely to investigate and frisk or search a minority suspect if officer and suspect race differ. We locate these results in the broader tensions of racial profiling that pose recurring social and constitutional concerns in the “new policing.”

Keywords: new policing, surveillance, crime, criminal law, race, street stops, racial profiling

Suggested Citation

Fagan, Jeffrey and Braga, Anthony A. and Brunson, Rod and Pattavina, April, Stops and Stares: Street Stops, Surveillance, and Race in the New Policing (March 31, 2016). Fordham Urban Law Journal, Vol. 43, 2017, Columbia Public Law Research Paper No. 14-504, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2758852

Jeffrey Fagan (Contact Author)

Columbia Law School ( email )

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HOME PAGE: http://www.law.columbia.edu/fac/Jeffrey_Fagan

Anthony A. Braga

Harvard University - Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) ( email )

79 John F. Kennedy Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
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617-496-9835 (Phone)

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - School of Criminal Justice ( email )

123 Washington Street
Newark, NJ 07102-309
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Rod Brunson

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey- Rutgers University, Newark ( email )

180 University Avenue
Newark, NJ 07102
United States

Northeastern University - School of Criminology and Criminal Justice ( email )

Boston, MA 02115
United States

April Pattavina

University of Massachusetts Lowell ( email )

1 University Ave
Lowell, MA 01854
United States

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