Login

Register | Forgot Your Password? | Close

PHOENIX -- A hearing room filled with patch-wearing motorcycle club members broke out in cheers as an Arizona Senate committee passed a bill requiring police to take training highlighting a ban on profiling of motorcyclists by law enforcement officers.

Wednesday's hearing before the Senate public safety committee was prompted by complaints from bikers who say they're frequently stopped by police for no legitimate reason. Republican Sen. Judy Burges of Sun City West is the sponsor.

The executive director of the state board that certifies police officers complained that the bill would prohibit some law enforcement action and make it more difficult to train officers.

Committee chairman Sen. Chester Crandell warned the cheering bikers that the bill still has a long way to go before it becomes law.

Associated Press,

share this story:
facebook

2 Comments   |   Join the conversation »
  • Add A Comment 
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Many of these same bikers support the
    illegal racial profiling of Hispanics. In the same manner that Arpaio's goons follow Hispanic motorists until some rinky dink infraction is observed, so to do the cops turn up the heat on the bikers whose unsavory reputations precede them.
  • Abuse
    bmnsd wrote...
    Assume much?
    Many of these guys *are* Hispanic. There are many MCs in the valley that are made up of law enforcement and civil service people. The unsavory reputation you refer to is from biker gangs. There is a difference. Wearing a patch does not make someone unsavory any more than being Hispanic makes someone illegal.
  • 1

World Class Arizona

  • Avnet

    World Class People. World Class Company. Here's information on a Fortune 500 company from Arizona.

Voice For A Better Arizona