Washington - A majority of blacks in the United States, more than 3 out of 5 say they or a family member have personal experience with being treated unfairly by the police, and their race is the reason why.
This information, from a survey conducted by the Associated Press-NORC Centre for Public Affairs Research, comes as the Michael Brown shooting in Ferguson, Missouri, approaches its first anniversary and the nation continues to grapple with police-related deaths of black Americans.
African-Americans said they felt especially targeted by the police. Half of black respondents, including 6 in 10 black men, said they personally had been treated unfairly by police because of their race, compared to 3% of whites. Another 15% said they knew of a family member who had been treated unfairly by the police because of their race.
White Americans who live in more diverse communities, those where census data show at least 25% of the population is non-white were more likely than other whites to say police in their communities sometimes treat minorities more roughly, 58% to 42%. And they're more likely to see the police as too quick to use deadly force, 42% to 29%.
Larry Washington, aged 30, of Merriville, Indiana, described his encounter with a white police officer when he was arrested for theft in Burbank, Illinois, as a teenager. "When I got to the police station, the officer who arrested me told me that I looked like I wanted to do something about it," Washington said, adding, "And he kept calling me 'nigger.'"
"It's been like this for a long time," Washington said. "It's just now that everybody starting to record it and stuff, it's just hitting the spotlight. Most Caucasians, they think it's just starting to go on when it's been like this."
The AP-NORC poll shows stark differences between whites and blacks when it came to attitudes toward law enforcement:
More than two-thirds of blacks, 71% thought police are treated too leniently by the criminal justice system when they hurt or kill people.
Deadly force
A third of whites say police are getting away with it, while nearly half, 46% say the police are treated fairly by the criminal justice system.
When asked why police violence happens, 62% of whites said a major reason is that civilians confront the police, rather than co-operate, when they are stopped.
Three out of 4 blacks, or 75%, said it is because the consequences of police misconduct are minimal, and few officers are prosecuted for excessive use of force. More than 7 in 10 blacks identified problems with race relations, along with poor relations between police and the public that they serve, as major reasons for police violence.
Whites and blacks disagreed over whether police are more likely to use deadly force against blacks.
Nearly 3 out of 4 whites thought race had nothing to do with how police in their communities decide to use deadly force. Among blacks, 71% thought police were more likely to use deadly force against black people in their communities, and 85% said the same thing applied generally across the country.
Fifty-eight percent of whites thought race had nothing to do with police decisions in most communities on use of deadly force.
Seventy-two percent of whites said they always or often trust police to do what is right for them and their community, while 66% of blacks said they only sometimes, rarely or never trust the police to do what is right.
The AP-NORC Poll of 1 223 adults, including 311 black adults, was conducted online and by phone in July, using a sample drawn from NORC's probability-based AmeriSpeak panel, which is designed to be representative of the US population.