Officers approached Desmond Bryant when he was 18 asking “what set” he belonged to.
“If you’re not a gang member, why are you hanging around other gang members?” he remembers them asking. He said the police were referring to his brother and cousins.
That’s when Bryant first suspected he was being tracked as a gang member.
Wichita police wield the power to label anyone they deem suspicious as a gang member or associate. The Master Gang List, their confidential database, tracks the names of about 3,000 Wichita residents — even if they haven’t committed a crime.
Bryant, now 32 and a published author, said he was added to the list after police designated his relatives as gang affiliates.
Years after his police run-in at 18, Bryant and his friends were pulled over. Sitting on the curb, he listened to officers radio a signal 33 — a record check signifying that someone in the group was on the Gang List.
“The only reason you find out (your status) is to be in police contact,” Bryant said.
The Gang List is overwhelmingly comprised of Black and Latino community members, according to data provided by police to the ACLU of Kansas and Kansas Appleseed Center for Law and Justice.
The two statewide associations filed a class action lawsuit in April on behalf of Progeny, a juvenile justice advocacy group. Police refused to give a requested copy of the Gang List to the plaintiffs or The Wichita Beacon, instead providing limited data.
Police policy in Kansas liberally defines who qualifies as a gang member — citing locations an individual frequents and who they hang out with as valid signifiers — but doesn’t require a person to be charged with a criminal offense for a designation on the Gang List.
As stated in Wichita Police Department policy, a law enforcement officer can nominate an addition to the Gang List without requiring any notice be given to the alleged offender. Officers only “attempt to contact” juveniles who match the criteria to be added to the Gang List.
The list is composed of individuals listed as inactive or active gang associates — including names of those who are deceased.
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