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Alabama Supreme Court Expands Police Power to Demand Physical ID During Stops

The Alabama Supreme Court, ruling in the case of Black pastor Michael Jennings’ 2022 arrest while watering a neighbor’s flowers, has held 6–3 that officers may require a person to produce physical identification during an otherwise valid stop if they deem verbal answers 'incomplete or unsatisfactory.' The court answered a certified question from a federal judge overseeing Jennings’ false‑arrest lawsuit, finding that Alabama’s stop‑and‑identify statute allows police not only to ask for a name, address and explanation of conduct, but also to demand documents like a driver’s license or passport when they are not satisfied with those responses. Jennings was arrested in Childersburg after declining to show ID despite explaining he was a pastor who lived across the street and was caring for neighbors’ plants, and the underlying obstruction charge was later dismissed. Civil‑liberties groups including the Cato Institute and ACLU, which had argued the law did not authorize demands for physical ID, say the ruling is a significant expansion of government power that effectively forces Alabamians to carry papers or risk arrest whenever an officer disputes their explanation. The decision comes amid ongoing national scrutiny of stop‑and‑frisk, racial profiling and so‑called stop‑and‑identify laws, and may be cited as federal courts and other states wrestle with how far police authority should extend during brief investigative encounters.

Courts and Policing DEI and Race

📌 Key Facts

  • The Alabama Supreme Court issued a 6–3 ruling last week in a case arising from Pastor Michael Jennings’ 2022 arrest in Childersburg.
  • Justice Will Sellers wrote that Alabama’s stop‑and‑identify law permits officers to demand physical identification if they find a person’s verbal answers incomplete or unsatisfactory.
  • Jennings, a Black pastor, was arrested for obstructing governmental operations after refusing to show ID while watering a neighbor’s flowers; the criminal charge was later dismissed.
  • A federal judge in Jennings’ civil lawsuit certified a question to the state high court asking whether the statute allows demands for physical ID, prompting this decision.
  • Cato Institute criminal‑justice director Matthew Cavedon called the ruling a 'significant expansion of government power,' warning Alabamians may now need to carry ID whenever interacting with police.

📊 Relevant Data

In Alabama in 2022, Black people were arrested for violent crimes at a rate 3.8 times higher than White people, with rates of approximately 750-1,000 per 100,000 for Black residents compared to 200-250 per 100,000 for White residents.

Alabama Criminal Justice Data Snapshot — CSG South

In Alabama in 2022, Black people were arrested for violent offenses 2.2 times more often than their share of the state population, where Black residents comprise about 27% of the population.

Alabama Criminal Justice Data Snapshot — CSG South

In Alabama in 2022, the Black violent victimization rate was 3.5 times higher than the White rate, with rates of approximately 500-750 per 100,000 for Black residents compared to 150-200 per 100,000 for White residents.

Alabama Criminal Justice Data Snapshot — CSG South

In Alabama in 2022, 82% of victims of violent crime were of the same race as the perpetrator.

Alabama Criminal Justice Data Snapshot — CSG South

In Alabama in 2023, the Black unemployment rate was 1.5 times higher than the White rate, with 27% of Black people having incomes below the federal poverty level in 2022.

Alabama Criminal Justice Data Snapshot — CSG South

In Childersburg, Alabama, in 2024, White (Non-Hispanic) residents comprised approximately 68.9% of the population, while Black or African American (Non-Hispanic) residents comprised approximately 25.3%.

Childersburg, AL | Data USA — Data USA

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