ACLU of North Carolina and Other North Carolina Civil Rights Groups Launch Investigation Into Johnston County Sheriff's Office After Sheriff Makes Racially Inflammatory Comments About Latinos to the Raleigh News & Observer (9/9/2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
CONTACT: aclunc@nc.rr.com
RALEIGH – The American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina Legal
Foundation (ACLU-NCLF), along with representatives from other North Carolina
civil rights organizations, announced that they were deeply alarmed by racially
inflammatory comments attributed to Johnston County Sheriff Steve Bizzell in the
Raleigh News & Observer on Sunday, September 7, 2008. This morning, the
groups launched an investigation and filed a formal public records request,
demanding public records and documents from Johnston County Sheriff Steve
Bizzell pertaining to DWI checkpoints, driver's license checkpoints, arrests,
jail bookings, and information pertaining to whether the County has fully
complied with North Carolina state law that prohibits racial or ethnic profiling
by law enforcement. The ACLU-NCLF and other local civil rights groups allege
that Sheriff Bizzell's statements in the September 7th article constitute direct
evidence of racial discrimination and hostility toward Latino citizens and
residents of Johnston County. Examples of such statements attributed to
Bizzell include:
Pointing to tiendas that have cropped up amid local barbecue joints, saying,
"You can't even read the durned sign. Everywhere you look, it's like little
Mexico around here."
Condemning undocumented Latino immigrants for "breeding like rabbits" and for
spreading a culture of drunkenness and violence, despite overwhelming evidence
to the contrary.
Claiming that undocumented Latino immigrants "rape, rob and murder" American
citizens, fail to pay taxes and drain social services, again despite
overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
"How long is it going to be until we're the minority?"
"Mexicans are trashy."
- "When people think about illegal Mexicans, you know the first thing they
think of?" Bizzell says – "driving drunk and shooting."
"Blanket assertions like this about an entire class of people, again despite
overwhelming evidence to the contrary, if put into practice, are the very
essence of racial and ethnic profiling by law enforcement that are prohibited
under state law," said Jennifer Rudinger, Executive Director of the ACLU of
North Carolina. "Our investigation aims to find out whether Sheriff Bizzell or
any of his deputies have engaged in racial or ethnic profiling or discrimination
in how they enforce the laws in Johnston County."
The groups have demanded that the Sheriff's Office comply with their public
records request no later than Friday, September 19, 2008.
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