ACLU Reveals Proof of Racial Targeting in Major Meth Investigation (4/5/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
Police Scapegoated South Asians While Ignoring Others, Says ACLU in Legal
Papers Filed Today
ROME, GA – The American Civil Liberties Union today unveiled evidence that a
major police investigation into methamphetamine production unlawfully targeted
South Asian convenience store owners and clerks based on race and national
origin. In legal papers filed today, the ACLU asked a federal court to dismiss
all remaining charges related to the controversial investigation in northwest
Georgia, dubbed “Operation Meth Merchant.”
According to law enforcement’s own records as well as testimony from former
investigators and informants involved in Operation Meth Merchant, the
investigation intentionally targeted South Asians without any evidence of
wrongdoing, while ignoring known white suspects, the ACLU’s filing reveals.
“Selling Sudafed while South Asian is not a crime,” said Christina Alvarez,
an attorney with the ACLU Drug Law Reform Project. “The U.S. Constitution
requires police to investigate people based on evidence, not ethnicity.”
Undertaken by local and state police in partnership with the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA), Operation Meth Merchant was purportedly aimed
at convenience store owners and clerks selling legal household products, such as
cold medicine, cooking fuel and matchbooks, which police claimed they knew would
be used to make the illegal drug methamphetamine.
By the time Operation Meth Merchant was completed, almost 20 percent of the
South-Asian-owned stores in the area were indicted, while only 0.2 percent of
stores owned by whites or other ethnic groups were similarly accused. All in
all, South-Asian-owned stores were nearly 100 times more likely to be targeted,
according to the ACLU’s motion.
The charges arising from the investigation relied on the assumption that the
South Asian store owners and clerks, most with limited English proficiency,
understood slang terms used by police-directed informants during transactions,
such as “cook,” to mean that the products sold would be used to make
methamphetamine.
“They only sent me to Indian stores…they wanted me to say things like ‘I need
it to go cook’ or ‘Hurry up, I’ve got to get home and finish a cook’,” said an
undercover informant in a sworn statement attached to the ACLU’s legal papers.
“The officers told me that the Indians’ English wasn’t good, and they wouldn’t
say a lot so it was important for me to make these kinds of statements.” The
informant, listed as John Doe #2, must remain anonymous for fear of retaliation
by law enforcement.
The ACLU also exposed evidence that police failed to act on numerous tips
implicating at least 16 white-owned stores in the area. Forced to divulge
the source of their ingredients to police upon arrest, methamphetamine
manufacturers routinely identified this group of local white-owned stores, yet
there is no indication that police acted on such leads.
In at least one instance, according to a witness statement cited in the
ACLU’s motion, law enforcement officials actually alerted a white store owner of
the investigation and provided recommendations to avoid scrutiny, such as
removing particular products from store shelves.
In its dismissal motion, the ACLU argues that the police’s decision to ignore
substantial evidence specifically pointing to white-owned stores, and instead
target South-Asian-owned stores absent any evidence against them, constitutes a
clear violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to
the U.S. Constitution, which protects people from being selectively targeted by
law enforcement based on their race and/or ethnicity.
Of the 49 individuals charged as a result of the investigation, 44 are of
South-Asian descent – and 33 share the common last name of Patel. Notably, while
more than 80 percent of area stores are owned by whites or other ethnic groups,
23 of the 24 stores targeted by the investigation are owned by South
Asians.
“Northwest Georgia is made no safer by police targeting a particular
racial group while giving a free pass to those they have good reason to believe
are actually making and selling meth,” said Deepali Gokhale, organizer of the
Racial Justice Campaign Against Operation Meth Merchant, a coalition of diverse
community groups formed to protest the prosecutions.
Gokhale added, “Families
have been torn apart and lives have been destroyed by this racist investigation,
and they aren’t the only victims here. We all lose when law enforcement
adopts irrational approaches that waste taxpayer money, undermine the public’s
trust, and leave us less safe in the process.”
Those charged face up to 20
years in prison, forfeiture of their stores, fines of up to $250,000, and, in
some cases, deportation. None of the South Asians targeted by Operation
Meth Merchant are suspected of or charged with using, selling or producing
methamphetamine. The ACLU is representing Falgun Patel, Sudhirkumar Patel and
Satishkumar Patel. The cases are before the U.S. District Court for the
Northern District of Georgia.
The ACLU’s dismissal motion may be viewed at: www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/racialjustice/24908lgl20060405.html
Additional facts about Operation Meth Merchant may be found at: www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/racialjustice/24909res20060405.html
|