In the wake of the death of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers last month, questions about whether police officers treat black people differently than their white counterparts have taken on a new urgency.
An analysis of arrest data voluntarily reported to the FBI by thousands of city and county police departments around the country reveals that, in 800 jurisdictions, black people were arrested at a rate five times higher than white people in 2018, after accounting for the demographics of the cities and counties those police departments serve.
In 250 jurisdictions, black people were 10 times more likely to be arrested than their white counterparts.
© Ringo H.w. Chiu/AP, File In this May 31, 2020, file photo, Los Angeles police officers arrest a demonstrator in Los Angeles.
The analysis, conducted by ABC News in collaboration with ABC-owned stations, covers a three-year period ending in 2018, from which the most recent data is available.
It does not include data from police departments in Florida or Illinois — or the New York Police Department, the country’s largest police force — which do not report demographic data on arrests to the FBI. It also excludes police departments serving cities with fewer than five black residents.
According to Kristen Clarke, president and executive director of the National Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the data reveals a “pervasive problem.”
“We have to deal with the over-policing of low-income African American communities in our country,” Clarke told ABC News. “When we see data that shows that African Americans are singled out, unfairly targeted, disproportionately subject to arrest and prosecution — that should sound an alarm.”
© Jae C. Hong/AP, File FILE – In this May 31, 2020, file photo, a police officer arrests a woman as protests over the death of George Floyd continued in Los Angeles.
Carter, meanwhile, has since filed a lawsuit against the Wauwatosa Police Department. His attorney believes he was stopped simply because he was black, an assertion the police department has denied.
“I feel like being a black, 6-foot man in America, I’m a threat,” Carter said.
A hearing in Carter’s case was scheduled for September, but it was delayed due to the pandemic. Asked whether he had watched the video that sparked the nation’s latest reckoning, Carter expressed a mix of disbelief and disappointment.
“I watched some of it. I can’t watch — I want to — but it’s so hard,” Carter told ABC News. “Like, this is what our world is. This is where we live. … This is the harsh reality.”