Either you worked in an area which was exclusively white - or you're talking bollocks...
I know which one my money's on.
In West Central Scotland, even now, black people are definitely a tiny, tiny minority when compared to, say, the south of England. Growing up, seeing a black person was a novelty, they only ever existed in films and the TV (If people are offended by that, tough, it was true)!
Now, there are, however, quite a few asians here, like Indians and Pakistanis, but I do not know how the Police *supposedly* treat them (well, until recent years anyway).
I am suggesting that *maybe* Brandane has forgotten about the odd one or two, but on the other hand, in somewhere like Greenock, with the type of people he was following, the numbers of non white would be so vanishingly small that maybe, just maybe, he is right, and lets face it, he would be more likely to remember them anyway.
I'm afraid you're misinterpreting the chart. Where a region has, for example, a figure of "3 x more likely", this means that if non-white people make up 10% of the population they receive 30% of the total stop and searches. If they make up 3% of the population they receive 9% of the total stop and searches
So if you take practically every region, the % of stop and searches performed on non-white people is higher than their % of the overall population. In many cases massively so. So you cannot say that police don't target their stop and search at least partly based on skin colour. Because they do
Yes, 'practically every region' as you say. What you are saying is all very well, but every region is different demographically, and, well, you are not including Scotland!