Legislation and Litigation
Legislation
ARKANSAS
In 2003, the Arkansas Legislature passed an act (sponsored by Henry Wilkins) which created a racial profiling task force, mandated policy and training requirements, and banned the practice of racial profiling in law enforcement agencies. Prior to this act, Representative Lendell attempted to pass a racial profiling bill in 2001. It would have required state police troopers to record data upon every stop for a routine traffic violation. After the bill was withdrawn by its author, on March 6, 2001, the House Public Transportation Committee voted to study whether the Arkansas State Police practice racial profiling during traffic stops. The Committee thought the provisions of the proposed bill were not feasible because of the high cost of processing the information.
S.B. 96, 84th General Assembly. (Ark. 2003), An Act Creating a Task Force on Racial Profiling
Status: Enacted March 25, 2003
No jurisdictions required to collect data
Other Information: This Act does not require data collection, however training and policy changes were mandated, as well as the formal ban of racial profiling, and the creation of a racial profiling task force.
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Contact Information:
Arkansas Legislative Black Caucus
Senator Henry Wilkins
P.O. Box 1130
Little Rock, AR 72203
