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Testing for Racial Profiling With the Veil-of-Darkness Method

NCJ Number
239165
Journal
Police Quarterly Volume: 15 Issue: 1 Dated: March 2012 Pages: 92-111
Author(s)
Robert E. Worden; Sarah J. McLean; Andrew P. Wheeler
Date Published
March 2012
Length
20 pages
Annotation
This study conducted research using the veil-of-darkness method to examine research on racial profiling.
Abstract
The "veil-of-darkness" method is an innovative and low-cost approach that circumvents many of the benchmarking issues that arise in testing for racial profiling. Changes in natural lighting are used to establish a presumptively more race-neutral benchmark on the assumption that after dark, police suffer an impaired ability to detect motorists' race. Applying the veil-of-darkness method to vehicle stops by the Syracuse (NY) police between 2006 and 2009 and examining differences among officers assigned to specialized traffic units and crime-suppression units, the study found that African-Americans were no more likely to be stopped during daylight than during darkness, indicating no racial bias. (Published Abstract)