SCOTUSblog: Cases and controversies: Racial disparities in law enforcement practices

SCOTUSblog: Cases and controversies: Racial disparities in law enforcement practices by Eric Criton:

In the 1996 case of Whren v. United States, the Court considered essentially the following question: If the police pull you over because you are black, but could have pulled you over for breaking the law (in that case, turning right without signaling and driving off at an ‘unreasonable’ speed), do you have the right to complain under the Fourth Amendment, and suppress evidence found after the stop? The Court said no. If there was a viable reason for the police action, it simply did not matter that there was also a bad reason. That’s true even if you could definitively prove that the stop wouldn’t have happened but for the racial prejudice of the officers.

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