Legislation and Litigation
Legislation
CALIFORNIA
California has enacted legislation which mandates sensitivity training, but there is currently no legislation in effect mandating data collection. In 1999, Governor Gray Davis vetoed legislation (S.B. 78, the "DWB - Driving While Black or Brown Bill") that would have required law enforcement agencies to collect data to show whether people of color are stopped by police at disproportionate rates. Bills that would have prohibited racial profiling and required data collection either died on inactive file or were stripped of content before being passed. A large number of individual jurisdictions are collecting data either voluntarily, through court settlements, or through federal consent decrees.
S.B. 205, § 63 (2001), amending Cal. Pen. Code § 13519.4, Racial and Cultural Diversity Training
Status: Enacted October 12, 2001
No jurisdictions required to collect data
Restrictions: no data collection
Other Information: Defines racial profiling as "the practice of detaining a suspect based on a broad set of criteria which casts suspicion on an entire class of people without any individualized suspicion of the particular person being stopped." States inappropriateness of racial profiling, and provides that training will be instituted. A Legislative Analyst was supposed to review the results of departments who have been voluntarily collecting data, with the report and recommendations due July 1, 2003, but it is unclear whether that report was ever completed.
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Contact Information:
Senator Bruce McPherson
State Capitol, Room 2054
Sacramento, CA 95814
916-445-5843
senator.mcpherson@sen.ca.gov
