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The state's second-highest court handed the NAACP a victory Tuesday in the long-running "driving while black" issue, ordering the Maryland State Police to turn over records showing how the department dealt with complaints of racial profiling by its troopers, according to The Sun's Andrea Siegel.
"The public has a right to know exactly what the state police has done to investigate complaints of racial profiling - whether those complaints were being meaningfully investigated, given that none of them had been sustained," said Seth A. Rosenthal, an attorney for the NAACP.
He hailed the ruling as "rock-solid public policy rooted in the law" and a win for "open, transparent and accountable government."
"The public has a right to know exactly what the state police has done to investigate complaints of racial profiling - whether those complaints were being meaningfully investigated, given that none of them had been sustained," said Seth A. Rosenthal, an attorney for the NAACP.
He hailed the ruling as "rock-solid public policy rooted in the law" and a win for "open, transparent and accountable government."
Posted by Justin Fenton at 11:21 PM | Permalink
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Categories: Confronting crime, Courts and the justice system
Categories: Confronting crime, Courts and the justice system



