More and more random police checks

Feb 26, 2025 - 16:19
More and more random police checks

It was a promise of the former traffic light federal government: a draft law was to tackle so-called racial profiling . In December 2023, the traffic light government agreed on a new Federal Police Act , which also tackled these random police checks that only target the skin color of those affected. But the law was not passed in the Bundestag. Yet police practice remains part of everyday life - and the trend is increasing.

Current figures show that the Federal Police carried out more than 4.7 million suspicion-independent checks last year. This is almost double the number of checks carried out in the previous year, when there were around 2.4 million checks. In 2022, there were 2.3 million checks. The figures come from a current response from the Federal Government to a request from the Left Party, which taz has received.

"Practice must be stopped"

However, the number of illegal entries discovered remained very manageable. In 2024, there were 17,900 cases - compared to 61,400 in the previous year. This means that the checks had a "hit rate" of less than one percent - the vast majority of people checked had a visa or residence permit. One reason for the low numbers, however, is likely to be the introduction of stationary border controls , which already record many cases of illegal entries.

Left Party MP Clara Bünger criticized the police practices and the high numbers. It cannot be that millions of people continue to be suspected and checked without any objective reason. "This has not changed in the slightest during the government of the self-proclaimed progressive coalition." Racist police checks have a stigmatizing effect and often lead to great uncertainty among those affected, Bünger told taz. They also violate the ban on discrimination in the Basic Law. "This harmful practice must be stopped."

Bünger is calling for the authority to carry out checks regardless of suspicion to be abolished without replacement. Police measures should only be taken if there is concrete suspicion and not because people are generally suspected of being dangerous based on their appearance.

In their manifesto for the federal election, the Greens renewed the plan: They wanted to "design police control powers in such a way that they can be applied in a legally secure manner," they said. This included a "ticket system for controls that explains the reasons for controls." In the SPD's election manifesto, the Federal Police Act only spoke of "clear powers" for the police.

The Union, on the other hand, explicitly stated in its election manifesto that the police should not issue inspection receipts. The police commissioner introduced by the traffic light coalition would also be abolished.