FORUM ON MINORITY ISSUES
1-2 December 2022
Statement of Lisa Borden
Senior Policy Counsel
Southern Poverty Law Center
During this forum, my colleague Lecia Brooks is speaking about urgent threats posed by
the rise in and mainstreaming of hate and extremist ideologies, especially those based on the
notion of the white superiority. These threats exist in many countries around the world. I want
to briefly highlight one aspect of this threat – the persistent presence of those holding and
practicing such ideologies in law enforcement. In the US, where 65% of law enforcement officers
are white, police have killed 1054 people so far this year, half of them non-white. Black people,
in particular, are more than three times more likely to be killed by police and are more likely to
have been unarmed when they were killed. Migrants, mostly non-white, continue to die in US
immigration custody. More than half of US immigration enforcement officers are white.
US intelligence and federal law enforcement agencies have long recognized that domestic
extremists pose the greatest threat of violent attacks, and earlier this year Congress passed the
Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act to try to address that threat. Although the law contains
requirements for federal law enforcement agencies to conduct internal investigations to identify
and address the presence of members of white supremacist and other extremist organizations in
their ranks, far right conservatives in the Senate have opposed providing funding for these
investigations, contending that there’s no problem to investigate. But investigations by civil
society organizations and journalists have found that a significant number of police officers have
ties to extremist groups. SPLC has documented militia groups patrolling the southern US border
and capturing and interrogating migrants, sometimes with the knowledge and even cooperation
of federal border agents.
Now, the threat posed by racism and extremism in law enforcement is further
exacerbated by a frightening movement to use lethal remote technology – killer robots – in
policing. Just this week, San Francisco California’s board of supervisors voted to allow the city’s