ACLU: Fight police profiling and misconduct by filing complaints, not in traffic stops


Aaron Knapp

RACINE — A team from the American Civil Liberties Union will hold a free training session on Thursday about what residents should do when they… Read more
RACINE — Although one turns to authorities for assistance with racial profiling and misconduct, fighting a police officer at the moment of misconduct is the worst approach.
This is according to Emilio De Torre, Youth and Program Director with the American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin, who gives frequent training sessions around southeast Wisconsin on how residents should conduct themselves in contact with police and what their rights are.
While residents have a right to not give consent to officers without a warrant to search their cars or homes, he said it is unwise to stand in the way of officers who go through with a search anyway.
“Verbally, respectfully assert your right, and then let whatever transpires transpire, because any other altercation is going to be very bad, but not for the police officer,” he said.
He spoke to several dozen residents on Thursday at the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center, 1134 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, in a training session on the rights of residents and powers of police, particularly during traffic stops.
The session — scheduled to last 90 minutes — went well more than two hours as attendees asked questions and voiced frustrations about their experiences with police, even to two members of the Racine Police Department, Sgt. Jessie Metoyer and Lt. Aldred Days, who attended the meeting.
“There always is criticism,” said Metoyer after the session. “As supervisors we need to know when people feel that their rights have been violated.”
The session was hosted by North/South Outreach, which was founded to offer community events and stop youth from getting involved in gangs and crime, according to founder Tyrell Davis.
“Everything is for the community that I polluted and destroyed once upon a time,” he said, recalling crimes he committed.
Davis asked the ACLU to host this session due to recent incidents of racial profiling he said he has experienced and heard about.
“There’s a lot of racial profiling going on in my neighborhood and I know it’s not just around here, around the north side area, it’s everywhere in the inner city,” he explained. “I chose to be part of the solution and find someone who can give the correct information to educate everybody else.”
Acknowledging that there is little a person can do if they feel they have been profiled or mistreated as the incident is unfolding, De Torre explained that every officer is accountable to a superior and the recourse is to file a complaint with the department.
He said if every person alleging police misconduct files a complaint with the Police Department, those complaints will go to superiors and stack up.
If that fails, he said, the community should band together and refer the issue to the media, the Department of Justice, the FBI and higher until the issue is resolved.
“If the police are not giving you quality policing, if everybody else in the community gets it but not Latinos, or not black folks, or not white folks, then you have a right to complain,” De Torre said.
Metoyer noted the importance of residents and police knowing their rights and how to conduct themselves during traffic stops and urged residents to find complaint forms in English and Spanish on the department’s website.