Following the death of unarmed teen Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, most Americans don’t have confidence in police departments holding officers accountable for misconduct nor treating different racial groups fairly.
A new Pew Research Center/USA Today poll found that the public by 2-to-1 doesn’t think departments across the country treat racial groups equally, use the proper amount of force, nor penalize cops for acting immorally. White people ranked law enforcement low on each of those measures, but African-Americans were overwhelmingly negative in their views toward police.
The majority — 70% — of blacks said police departments nationwide do a “poor job” both in holding officers accountable for misconduct and of treating racial and ethnic groups fairly, according to the poll. Fifty-seven percent of African-Americans believed police also do a “poor job” of using the correct amount of force.
Fifty-eight percent of whites said the departments are “only fair” or do a “poor job” both in penalizing officers for acting immorally and managing different groups equally.
The poll, published the same day as Brown’s funeral on Monday, was conducted between Aug. 20 and Aug. 24 among 1,501 adults. It revealed only slight changes to a 2009 survey to the ways whites and blacks view the police.









