We measured inequities in policing across the San Francisco-Oakland region by looking at differences in arrest rates and the diversity of police officers compared to the public they serve.
The chart shows the rate of arrests per 1,000 residents for different racial and ethnic groups in San Francisco-Oakland. For decades, researchers have found white residents face less chance of being arrested in most cities than Black, Latino or Hispanic residents, who also are stopped and searched more frequently. We found Black residents were more likely to be arrested in all 100 metro areas and at least twice as likely to be arrested in 95 metro areas.
Data Source: U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, (2019); FBI’s Uniform Crime Reports system (2019); and arrest data from local police agencies (2019)
UNEQUAL DRUG ENFORCEMENT
Inequity
The chart shows the rate of drug-related arrests per 1,000 residents for different racial and ethnic groups in San Francisco-Oakland. Despite research showing white people use drugs equally, they’re arrested for drug crimes at lower rates in almost every city in the U.S. We found Black residents were at least twice as likely to be arrested on drug charges in 88 of 100 major metro areas.
Data Source: U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, (2019); FBI’s Uniform Crime Reports system (2019); and arrest data from local police agencies (2019)
DIVERSITY OF POLICE FORCES
Inequity
This chart compares the racial and ethnic makeup of police officers working for all law enforcement agencies across the San Francisco-Oakland metro area, compared to the population of the region. We considered a gap of more than five percentage points for any racial or ethnic minority group as inequity.