Writing in the
New York Times,
David Cole and John Lamberth argue that, "even on its own terms,
racial profiling doesn't work." As proof they note that "73 percent
of those stopped and searched on a [Maryland] section of Interstate 95
were black, yet state police reported that equal percentages of the
whites and blacks who were searched, statewide, had drugs or other
contraband."
[Ed.: In the wake of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon in September, polls by Gallup and Zogby found
that African Americans are more likely than other racial groups to
favor profiling and stringent airport security checks for Arabs and
Arab-Americans.]
†