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Profiling : The Dangers Of Racial Profiling And Justice

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Picture yourself as a 36-year-old white male boarding an airplane. Now imagine being forcefully removed from the flight by armed agents, held in a jail cell, humiliated by a strip search, and detained for hours without explanation. Do you find this hard to envision? For many Americans this may sound like an absurd, impossible scenario but unfortunately minorities know this situation all too well. This is the reality of Shoshana Hebshi, an Ohio woman who is half-Jewish and half-Arab. Hebshi’s frightening experience was caused by passenger’s suspicions of the amount of time two South Asian men spent in the restroom who were seated next to her. Her proximity in closeness and skin color to these strangers lead to her arrest (American Civil Liberties Union [ACLU], 2015). Shoshana Hebshi was racially profiled because of a flawed system that inadequately protects the Fourth Amendment but sought justice with the help of interest groups.
Hebshi’s mistreatment originates in a justice system spoiled with racial profiling. Racial profiling can be defined as a “discriminatory practice by law enforcement officials of targeting individuals for suspicion of crime based on the individual's race, ethnicity, religion or national origin” (ACLU, 2017). Law enforcement officials may include but are not limited to: police officers, security guards, TSA agents, and airline pilots. Racial profiling is evident in the heightened percentage of minorities that are sighted for minor traffic violations

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