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How self-driving cars will improve race relations in America
On July 10, a trooper with the Texas Highway Patrol
initiated a traffic stop of a woman for allegedly failing to use her turn
signal before changing lanes. What makes this case stand out from the thousands
of other police traffic stops that occur throughout the country each day is the
current state of race relations in America. How did this seemingly routine
traffic stop in Waller County, Texas end with an arrest, and ultimately spark a
homicide investigation?
To unravel the mysteries surrounding that question it’s
important to first know that the 30-year-old Texas State Trooper who initiated
that traffic stop is Caucasian, and the now deceased woman he pulled over was
African-American. According to police
dashcam footage, Officer Brian Encinia can be heard telling the driver,
28-year-old Sandra Bland, that the reason for the stop was because she had failed
to signal a lane change. Reviewing the tape, it’s unclear exactly what Bland said
precisely at that moment, yet Encinia later acknowledges that Bland is irritated.
He then questioned her regarding her apparent displeasure with the situation.
Bland responded by stating that she was indeed irritated at being pulled over.
She went on to say that the reason she changed lanes without signaling first was
in response to the manner in which the officer had quickly accelerated his
patrol car behind her vehicle just prior to the stop. According to Bland, she
was simply trying to get out of the officer’s way.
Routine traffic stop culminates in criminal investigation
What happened next is now the subject of a joint criminal
investigation by the
Texas Rangers and the FBI . At one point in their discussion Encinia asked
Bland to extinguish her cigarette, which she vehemently refused. After a heated
exchange, the officer then ordered Bland to exit her vehicle. Bland refused to
comply once more, and a physical altercation ensued. It culminated with the
officer deploying his stun gun and reportedly slamming Bland to the ground
before another officer placed her in handcuffs. The latter end of that fight
took place out of the dashcam’s view, so it’s unclear if officers actually
slammed Bland’s head on the ground. However, a bystander to the arrest provided
a cellphone video to the news media that reveals audio recordings of Bland complaining
about an injury
to her head as a result of the altercation.
Just three days later, jailers would discover Bland’s
lifeless body inside her cell at the Hempstead County, Texas jail. Authorities
were holding Bland there in isolation on charges related to her altercation
with police. Bland reportedly died from asphyxiation sometime in the early
morning hours of July 13. According to the Waller County Prosecutor, Bland’s death was a result of a
suicide by hanging using a plastic trash bag.
Bland’s death has rekindled a national debate on whether some
police officers treat minority motorists differently than their white
counterparts during traffic stops. The incident has also sparked question on
whether police officers have a duty to avoid the unnecessary escalation of
force when non-compliant motorists disobey or disrespect them. Although, both issues are important, a new
technology currently under development may inadvertently solve both problems. In
fact, this technology might also hold the key to improving the overall state of
race relations across America.
Enter the self-driving car. Since 2009, Google has been working
to develop autonomously driving vehicle technology through its Self-Driving Car Project.
Their goal is to reduce traffic accidents throughout the world and offer
transportation to people regardless of their ability to drive. So far, Google
self-driving cars, or SDCs, have collectively racked up nearly 1 million miles
on the road with only 14 accidents. According to the program’s director, Chris Urmson,
human
drivers were at fault for each of those accidents. In fact, Google says
that 94 percent of all vehicle accidents in the U.S. contain some element of
driver error.
Google is not the only company looking to get into the
self-driving car business. On July 20, a consortium of traffic safety
proponents, engineering researchers and automakers, launched a $6.5 million
experiment located on the University of Michigan’s campus with the mission of
testing and developing SDCs. The 23-acre testbed is a collaboration between the
Transportation Research Institute, the Michigan Department of Transportation
and three large automakers: Ford, General Motors and Toyota. Dubbed, “M City”, this
state-of-the art facility is located in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The project
contains all of the trappings of an urban environment that a human driver might
expect to see while driving in a populated area. M City observes its own traffic laws, though
they are patterned on similar laws found in real world setting. M City even
contains pedestrian and cyclist traffic to provide an added sense of realism
for SDC developers.
Why Self-Driving Cars are important for cases like Sandra Bland’s
In addition to being a college graduate, Sandra Bland was
also a supporter of the
grass-roots protest movement known as “#BlackLivesMatter”. The organization
first came to prominence at the end of 2014 in the wake of the riots in
Ferguson, Missouri. The movement picked up momentum into 2015 after the deaths
of Eric Gardner in New York, and Freddy Gray in Baltimore, Maryland. Sandra
Bland posted several videos of herself onto her Facebook account in support of
the movement. In one of her “#SandySpeaks” videos, Bland openly discussed the
need for white people to understand that black
people are treated differently than their white counterparts in America.
The reason why this matters is because self-driving cars
almost never make the same mistakes that would lead to a traffic stop in the
first place. SDCs are programmed to observe all applicable traffic laws;
including signaling before turning. It’s very likely that Trooper Encinia and
Sandra Bland might have never met if she had been traveling in a self-driving
car.
Another way that SDCs might improve race relations is in the
way that some municipalities across America treat traffic
infractions as a legitimate source of revenue. In the wake of the Ferguson,
Missouri riots, questions were raised about the seemingly disproportionate
amount of white police officers servicing the predominately black smaller
communities that surround St. Louis. An in-depth examination of this phenomenon
revealed that many of the 90 municipalities that comprise St. Louis County
derived a great deal of their public revenue from fines, court costs and other
fees. A large percentage of which originated as a result of traffic tickets. In
fact, that investigation revealed that some of the municipalities in the
surrounding St. Louis suburbs garnered 40 percent of their total revenue from
fines and fees collected via their municipal court systems.
Some police departments use traffic stops as a means to fill municipal
coffers
The most stunning examples of how traffic tickets helped to
fund these smaller municipal courts, city councils and their attendant police
forces can be found in a January 2015 white paper issued by a Missouri
public advocacy group called “ArchCity Defenders”. The paper highlighted
the fact that many small municipalities in St. Louis County shared a portion of
their borders with a major interstate. According to the white paper, police
officers working for those municipalities patrolled those areas and issued
tickets to motorists so frequently that it is hard to believe that they were
not observing policies encouraged by the municipalities that stood to benefit
from that revenue. The report found that along one particular stretch of I-70
in St. Louis County, it was theoretically possible for a person driving that
route who never signaled prior to changing lanes to receive 16 separate
citations from 16 different municipalities. Even worse, a failure to pay the
fine or appear at a hearing for any one of those citations could potentially result
in the issuance of a “bench-warrant” for the driver’s arrest.
Poor people unduly burdened by expensive traffic tickets
For many minority residents living within these types of
communities receiving a traffic ticket is tantamount to a jail sentence. Unable
to pay the hefty fines, court costs and fees, many defendants simply continue
to drive while living in constant fear of being pulled over and hauled to jail.
This unfortunate reality creates an endemic antipathy towards police among many
members of those communities who also happen to be minorities. Many of those
ticketed minorities view the police, and the municipal courts they represent,
as the ultimate
violation of the “social contract” first introduced by the 18th
century French Enlightenment philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Rousseau
believed that citizens within an ideal Republic could not be forced into a
community, but rather they must voluntarily agree to form a government for the
purposes of mutual benefit. Today, this theory is recognized as the core
meaning behind the often misused police phrase, “to protect and serve”. Far too
many black and brown people view the real job of the police within their
communities is to protect the white residents and serve the residents of color
with traffic tickets.
The result of the growing perception that the police
intentionally target black and brown members of the community for traffic
tickets has created an atmosphere of antipathy and distrust towards police.
Evidence of this is apparent in many viral posts regarding Sandra Bland’s case currently
circulating on social media sites. Many within the black community remain
unconvinced that Bland’s death was a suicide. Some pundits have even gone so
far as to make allegations that the police actually killed Bland, and that she
was already dead when presented for her mug shot. There is sufficient
evidence to disprove both assertions, nevertheless, these allegations point to
alarming public perceptions that likely would not have occurred if Bland had
been traveling in a self- driving car.
The “thin side of the
wedge” for many police searches begins with a traffic violation stop
Finally, there is the matter of the officer ordering Bland
to exit her vehicle. In the landmark Supreme Court
ruling Pennsylvania vs. Mimms, the court ruled that a police officer does
not violate the search and seizure limitations placed on them by the Fourth
Amendment when they order a driver out of their vehicle and conduct a pat down
search for weapons. However, police only gain those broad powers if they have
first lawfully detained an individual during a traffic violation, and they have
a reasonable suspicion to believe they may be in danger.
For many residents of minority communities these so-called, “Mimms”
searches represent the “thin side of the wedge” with regards to racial
profiling and unlawful searches. Too often, black and brown members of some
communities view the traffic stop for minor traffic violations as a pretense that
police abuse in order to gain additional authority over them. Many view the
Mimms searches as a way for police to humiliate targeted individuals while
performing rather invasive personal body searches.
Is the Mimms search
really about officer safety or humbling mouthy motorists?
This seems to be rather clear in the dash cam video of the Sandra
Bland arrest. In the video, Bland finally exits her vehicle after Trooper Encinia
threatens to “light you up” with his Taser. Bland exits her car and it is
apparent that she is wearing a form fitting dress; a popular style for women
known as a “maxi-dress”. Encinia and a
responding female officer conduct a search of Bland outside the view of the
dashcam, this despite the fact that Bland’s sheer dress would make any
concealed weapon easily visible to a casual observer. This seems less like a
perfunctory check for weapons, as the Mimms decision allows for, and instead
more like an attempt to humble a still very vocal Sandra Bland. At one point
Bland protests that the officers have banged her head, and that she suffers
from epilepsy. The officers respond almost in unison by saying, “Good”. It seems
as though the police were attempting to convince Bland that she was no longer
in control, rather than simply ensuring that she was unarmed.
Regardless of your politics, the prospect that many
Americans will gain a safe, affordable and reliable mode of transportation
regardless of their ability to drive should be a cause for celebration. The
developers and engineers at Google and others at the bleeding-edge of
self-driving car technology probably imagined that SDCs would reduce traffic
accidents. It’s even possible that they might have even anticipated that SDCs
would decrease the overall global consumption of fuel. However, it’s probably
safe to say that none of those at the forefront of this technology might have
predicted back in 2009 that SDCs might ultimately improve race relations
throughout America.
Even under the best conditions self-driving vehicles are
still probably 5-7 years away from becoming commercially available in most
states. Still, for many people of color who currently live within small
municipalities throughout the U.S., the technological revolution of the
self-driving car can’t arrive soon enough.
Author bio:
Mr. Williams first gained public attention due to his popular You-Tube channel where he offers life advice and DIY pest control strategies to people with limited funds. At the time of print, Joel Z. Williams' YT channel, which also shares his name, has been viewed by nearly 1 million people worldwide.
Sunday, August 2, 2015
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