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Regarding racial profiling and racism in Eugene, Ms. Jackson stated that Eugene was "the whitest town" she <br />had ever been in and the people needed to take a hard look inward. She did not think anyone could point an <br />accusatory finger at the police without looking in the mirror first. <br /> <br />Susan Miller, homeless, said she was 55-years-old and had raised three children. She related that she had <br />been harassed for being homeless. She recounted several incidents in which she had felt harassed. She <br />asserted that she contributed to her community and that her daughter volunteered. She said Eugene citizens <br />were all people and needed love and respect. She averred that the police should not step outside "the box of <br />the law." She stressed that she was not against the law or the police, she was against hate. <br /> <br />Charles Biggs, 540 Antelope Way, thanked the City for investigating the EPD. He said he had reviewed the <br />report up to page 55 and had made four pages of notes. He thought the report was "sugar-coated," as it <br />called the problems that had prompted the investigation "incidents" and "mishaps." He asserted that the <br />report missed the point. He asked what kind of community would allow something so horrendous to go <br />unaddressed for so long. He noted that Terry Orsby had filed a sexual harassment suit in 1996. He <br />recognized that an ethics program was part of the EPD training, but thought there was a culture within the <br />Police Department that fostered "protectionist" behaviors. <br /> <br />Patricia Hadley, 2611 Edison Street, said there was no option to "wait and see" at this point. She stated <br />that the role of the police and the role of good citizens had become adversarial. She agreed with the Police <br />Union that an external review board was in order. She thought the community should define what it <br />considered dangerous to public safety and there was no "one size fits all." <br /> <br />Ms. Hadley commented that the police issued tickets to homeless people for sitting on the grass and asked if <br />this made citizens feel safer. She averred that a homeless person who returned to a patch of grass that he or <br />she had been evicted from would receive a second ticket and ultimately be subject to arrest. She recounted <br />that she had recently met a homeless man in a wheelchair who had 30 tickets, some for sitting in the wrong <br />place and some for sitting in the wrong place again. She asked how it served our society for this man to be <br />ticketed and ultimately incarcerated. <br /> <br />Ms. Hadley believed racial profiling in Eugene was real. Referring to the recently publicized incident in <br />which Cortez Johnson was stopped, she asserted that if he felt racial bias then there was racial bias. She <br />noted that she had been accused in the past of seeing gender bias where there was none, but it felt like gender <br />bias and ultimately her feelings proved to be true. <br /> <br />Ms. Hadley thought the third recommendation should be the top priority of the council, that of determining <br />what the community's expectations of the police department and development of policies that matched those <br />expectations and fully implementing community policing. She remarked that there were already active <br />neighborhood groups. She pointed out that nearly every day she witnessed people being ticketed for <br />speeding on Roosevelt Boulevard while two drug houses in her immediate neighborhood went unaddressed. <br />She felt no one cared about that. <br /> <br />In closing, Ms. Hadley said she wished to know the name of her "beat cop." She opined that if New York <br />City could do it, Eugene could do it, too. <br /> <br />MINUTES--Eugene City Council April 25, 2005 Page 3 <br /> Regular Session <br /> <br /> <br />