ADVANCE FOR RELEASE AT 4:30
P.M. EST
SUNDAY, March, 11, 2001 202/307-0784
FORCE OR THREATENED FORCE USED IN LESS THAN 1 PERCENT OF
ALL POLICE-PUBLIC INTERACTIONS
Half of all Contacts with Law Enforcement Officers are
in Traffic Stops
WASHINGTON, D.C. An estimated 43.8 million people 16 years old or older,
or about 21 percent of the population of that age, had contact with the
police during 1999, the Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS) announced today. The report on police- public contact noted that more
than half of these face- to-face interactions were in traffic stops.
In the bureau's most comprehensive analysis
of citizen-police contact, the analysis found that less than 1 percent of
these contacts resulted in police force or threat of force. An estimated
20 percent of such incidents involved only the threat to use force. Approximately
422,000 people 16 years old and older were estimated to have had contact
with police in which force or the threat of force was used during 1999.
Among blacks and Hispanics, 2 percent reported
force or threatened force, compared to just under 1 percent among whites.
Fifty-seven percent of those involved in a police force situation reported
that they had argued, disobeyed or resisted or had been drinking or using
drugs at the time.
During 1999 an estimated 10 percent of all
licensed drivers, including almost 20 percent of teenage drivers, were pulled
over by law enforcement officers. Eighty-four percent of the drivers said
they were stopped for a legitimate reason, and 90 percent said the police
officers had behaved properly during the stop.
Interaction with the police arose for the following reasons in percentages:
Motor
vehicle stop
| |
52 |
%* |
To
report a crime
| |
19 |
|
To
ask for assistance
| |
12 |
|
To
report a neighborhood problem
| |
9 |
|
Involved
in a traffic accident
| |
8 |
|
Witnessed
a traffic accident
| |
5 |
|
Witnessed
a crime
| |
3 |
|
Questioned as a crime suspect
| |
3 |
|
Attended a crime prevention meeting
| |
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
*Includes drivers and passengers. Total sums to more than 100 percent
because some people cited more than one reason for the contact. |
An estimated 51 percent of the stopped drivers said they had been speeding,
24 percent cited reckless driving, an illegal turn, going through a red
light, tailgating or some other traffic violation. An estimated 11 percent
said the police stopped them because of a burned out headlight, a loud
muffler or some other vehicular defect. Nine percent said they were stopped
so police could check their registration, insurance coverage, driver's
license or some other record. Two percent said they were stopped in a
roadside check for drunk drivers, and another 2 percent said police suspected
them of something.
Of the estimated 19.3 million stopped drivers in 1999, police issued tickets
to 54 percent. Among licensed drivers, an estimated 10 percent of whites,
12 percent of blacks and 9 percent of Hispanics were pulled over by police
at least once during 1999. In 7 percent of the stops the driver or vehicle
were searched. Black and Hispanic motorists (11 percent each) were more
likely than whites (5 percent) to be physically searched or have their
vehicles searched. In almost 90 percent of such searches the police found
no evidence of criminal wrongdoing. Three percent of the stops involved
the police using handcuffs.
In 0.7 percent of the stops the surveyors were
told that force was used, and in 0.5 percent the survey respondents alleged
that excessive force was used.
The survey was carried out during the last six
months of 1999 among a nationally representative sample of U.S. residents
aged 16 and older. More than 80,000 people took part. Sampling and interviewing
was conducted for BJS by the Bureau of the Census.
The report, "Contacts between Police and
the Public--Findings from the 1999 National Survey" (NCJ- 184957), was
prepared by BJS statisticians Patrick A. Langan, Lawrence A. Greenfeld,
Steven K. Smith, David J. Levin and Matthew Durose. Single copies may
be obtained from the BJS fax-on-demand system by dialing 301/519-5550,
listening to the complete menu and selecting document number 229. Or call
the BJS clearinghouse number: 1-800-851-3420. Fax orders for mail delivery
to 410/792-4358. The BJS Internet site is:
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/
Additional criminal justice materials
can be obtained from the Office of Justice Programs homepage at: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov
# # #
BJS01035 (L)
After hours contact: Stu Smith at 301/983-9354
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