The Justice Department on Tuesday released a scathing report, saying the Ferguson, Missouri police department engaged in a broad pattern of conduct that routinely violated the constitutional rights of African-Americans.
The DOJ findings include the following: (1) a pattern and practice of disproportionate stops and arrests of blacks without probable cause, (2) unreasonable force, (3) racially biased handling of warrants by municipal courts, and (4) a pattern of focusing on revenue over public safety that violated the rights of poor, black residents.
RELATED: Ferguson sued over alleged modern-day debtors’ prison
As part of the investigation, federal investigators also uncovered email evidence of further racial bias and stereotyping by both members of the Ferguson police department and municipal court officials. The email evidence includes racist jokes, one that referenced President Barack Obama and another that referred to a refund a black woman received for an abortion as a credit from “Crimestoppers.”
%22And%20while%20blacks%20were%20more%20than%20twice%20as%20likely%20as%20whites%20to%20be%20stopped%20while%20driving%2C%20they%20were%2026%25%20less%20likely%20to%20be%20found%20with%20illegal%20contraband.%22′
The report comes six months after a white Ferguson police officer shot and killed unarmed black teenager Michael Brown Jr., an incident that drew widespread scrutiny and brought national attention to the long history of abuses allegedly committed by the city’s overwhelmingly white police force against its majority black population.
Shortly after Brown’s killing by former Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson, the Justice Department announced parallel investigations into both the incident itself and the entire Ferguson police department.
A grand jury in November declined to indict Wilson. He resigned from the police department shortly thereafter.
While there has been little expectation that the Justice Department would file federal civil rights charges against Wilson — the bar for such charges is set extremely high — a finding that the police department engaged in some form of racially biased policing seemed more likely.
RELATED: Protests continue as Holder pushes new steps on police shootings
African-Americans make up nearly 70% of the city’s population but only about 3% of Ferguson’s police department. Residents have alleged physical abuse, unfair and random stops and searches. In 2013, the state’s attorney general found that black motorists were twice as likely as white drivers to be stopped by police, despite being less likely to be carrying contraband.
In 88% of documented incidents in which police used force against someone, that person was black. In each of the 14 cases involving someone being bitten by a police dog, that person was black.








