What we learned by analyzing 42 million Illinois traffic stop records
One of the more polarizing debates in America is whether police treat Black people fairly.
For more than two decades, Illinois has required police to record details about every traffic stop throughout the state — including the race of the driver, the reason for the stop and the outcome. WBEZ, in partnership with the Investigative Project on Race and Equity, has compiled tens of millions of records and found that racial disparities are widening, police compliance is falling, and the state has done little to reverse the trend.
One of the more polarizing debates in America is whether police treat Black people fairly.
Search for any of 1,000-plus law enforcement agencies and view nearly two decades of their traffic stop data
Since 2004, only Chicago Police and Illinois State Police have stopped more Black drivers than southwest suburban Evergreen Park, data show.
When police pull over Black drivers in Illinois, it’s mostly for non-moving violations
State law and oversight board fall short of goals to collect law enforcement data and to reduce racial disparities in police traffic stops
Officer body camera video footage shows police engaged in heavy gunfire after pulling Reed over for purportedly not wearing a seat belt.
Critics say people arrested for gun possession during traffic stops are collateral damage in an ineffective police strategy to fight crime.
West Side residents near where police killed Dexter Reed share details of their trauma from that incident and their own traffic stops.