Attorney to announce suit against BART for alleged racial profiling against man detained for eating sandwich

Bay City News
Thursday, November 14, 2019
Lawsuit to be failed against BART after man detained eating sandwich
An attorney is filing a lawsuit on behalf of a man who was allegedly racially profiled by BART police in Walnut Creek last week, the attorney for the man said Wednesday.

OAKLAND, Calif. -- An attorney is filing a lawsuit on behalf of a man who was allegedly racially profiled by BART police in Walnut Creek last week, the attorney for the man said Wednesday.

RELATED: BART leaders divided after controversial encounter with man eating sandwich

The suit will be announced by attorney John Burris at 2 p.m. at his offices in Oakland on behalf of Steve Foster. Foster was stopped by BART police for eating on the platform at the Pleasant Hill/Contra Costa Centre Station at 8 a.m. Nov. 4. Foster is black.

State law prohibits eating in the paid area of the BART system.

"These BART officers engaged in racial profiling, and selective

RELATED: BART GM apologizes to man handcuffed after eating sandwich; more protests expected

Law enforcement in that BART patrons routinely eat sandwiches and other food on the platform and BART trains without any law enforcement intervention, chastisements or other admonishments by police," Burris said in a statement.

Foster was stopped by BART police Officer D. McCormick at the station at 1365 Treat Blvd. in Walnut Creek. Burris said BART police typically do not enforce the "no eating" rule.

ORIGINAL REPORT: BART police handcuff, cite man for eating sandwich on platform

"I was just up there eating my sandwich waiting for the train to come." Caught on camera, BART police handcuff and cite man for eating a sandwich on the platform of the Pleasant Hill BART station.

See more stories and videos related to BART here.