November 29th, 2004

Civil Rights Laws Not Being Enforced

A recent New York Times article cites a study which notes that criminal charges of civil rights laws have fallen dramatically under Bush’s administration:

Criminal charges of civil rights violations were brought against 84 defendants last year, down from 159 in 1999, according to Justice Department data analyzed by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University. The study also found that the number of times the Federal Bureau of Investigation or another federal investigative agency recommended prosecution in civil rights cases fell by more than one-third, from more than 3,000 in 1999 to just over 1,900 last year.

Federal court data also show that the government has sought fewer civil sanctions against civil rights violators. One of the study’s authors, David Burnham, said the results showed that civil rights enforcement dropped across the board in President Bush’s first term in office. . . It is unlikely the decline has occurred because of fewer civil rights violations occurring, the study suggests.

The number of complaints about possible violations received by the Justice Department has remained at about 12,000 annually for each of the past five years. . . Civil rights cases made up a tiny fraction of the Justice Department’s total of 99,341 criminal prosecutions in 2003. The study found, however, that only civil rights and environmental prosecutions were down from 1999 to 2003 as the total caseload rose by about 10 percent.

What’s that again about being a “uniter, not a divider?”


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