• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Catholic Review

Catholic Review

Inspiring the Archdiocese of Baltimore

Menu
  • Home
  • News
        • Local News
        • World News
        • Vatican News
        • Obituaries
        • Featured Video
        • En Español
        • Sports News
        • Official Clergy Assignments
        • Schools News
  • Commentary
        • Contributors
          • Question Corner
          • George Weigel
          • Elizabeth Scalia
          • Michael R. Heinlein
          • Effie Caldarola
          • Guest Commentary
        • CR Columnists
          • Archbishop William E. Lori
          • Rita Buettner
          • Christopher Gunty
          • George Matysek Jr.
          • Mark Viviano
          • Father Joseph Breighner
          • Father Collin Poston
          • Amen Columns
  • Entertainment
        • Events
        • Movie & Television Reviews
        • Arts & Culture
        • Books
        • Recipes
        • CR for Kids
  • About Us
        • Contact Us
        • Our History
        • Meet Our Staff
        • Photos to own
        • Shop
        • CR Media platforms
        • Electronic Edition
        • Subscribe
  • Advertising
  • Kids
  • Radio/Podcasts
        • Catholic Review Radio
        • Protagonistas de Fe
        • In God’s Image
        • “In Charity and Truth” with Archbishop William E. Lori
  • News Tips
  • Subscribe
Daisy Vargas, a historian and professor of religious studies at the University of Arizona, poses for a photo during a theology conference at the headquarters of the Latin American bishops' council, known as CELAM, in Bogotá, Colombia, Nov. 29, 2023. (CNS photo/Justin McLellan)

Wearing a rosary can make a Latino a target for police, historian says

December 3, 2023
By Justin McLellan
Catholic News Service
Filed Under: Immigration and Migration, News, Religious Freedom, World News

BOGOTÁ, Colombia (CNS) — Many law enforcement officers associate Catholic imagery and symbols with criminality in the U.S. Latino community, a historian researching the American Southwest said.

In court records, law enforcement officers testify to stopping drivers by establishing “reasonable suspicion” of criminal activity due to Catholic symbols or objects on their cars, Daisy Vargas, a historian and professor of religious studies at the University of Arizona, told Catholic News Service Nov. 29 during a three-day theology conference in Bogotá.

She said that possessing images of Catholic saints, clutching prayer cards or hanging rosaries from rear-view mirrors have been cited in legal disputes to justify vehicle searches and even arrests.

A 2011 federal case in New Mexico stated that the presence of a rosary in a car “aroused suspicion” and justified a vehicle search since the involved officer’s “training and experience indicates that contraband couriers often keep religious articles on their vehicles to appear law-abiding and religious.”

A 2019 case in Ohio included as cause for a vehicle search that the defendant was wearing a rosary as a necklace and that the officer, “as a practicing Catholic, found it odd because it is generally not done in his culture.” The officer “explained that this could be considered a ‘disclaimer’ or a sign used in an attempt to show that appellant was a good, law-abiding citizen.”

“We know criminality on the border is about identifying people that look a particular way,” Vargas told CNS; and that includes identifying the religious symbols that often tie people to certain racial groups. She said that such associations are reinforced through law enforcement training, which at the border is often conducted by private companies.

Vargas said that law enforcement officers “were taught that good Catholics don’t wear rosaries as necklaces,” so when they encounter Latinos with a rosaries around their necks it creates suspicion, since they see them as “pretending to be good people or pretending to be good moral citizens.”

In their testimony and in affidavits, law enforcement officers are repeatedly saying, “We were taught that these Catholic saints (or) that the use of the rosary in this particular way is enough for us to suspect criminal activity,” Vargas said.

But she noted that it is not only Catholics being targeted in traffic stops, rather “this is a process of attaching certain identifiers, of making connections that are then used to racialize, to create a racial category for a particular group of people.”

“The same way that we saw it with the hijab post 9/11, I would say is similarly happening with the rosary,” Vargas said.

She added that the tension is “intra-Catholic” as well, since it is not only non-Catholics that stop people in possession of Catholic imagery, but Catholics in law enforcement who target others for not practicing “the right kind of Catholicism.”

Vargas said that Catholic practices introduced to Latin America by Spaniards, such as penitential rites involving self-flagellation and Passion plays, made other groups of Catholics see Latino — and particularly Mexican — Catholics as “backward” and still tied to their sometimes-violent Indigenous rituals, which eventually led to the church banning such penitential practices in the United States.

Those differences led to a perception that “Mexicans have not been fully catechized, that the conversion was incomplete,” she said. “You still see those traces today in comparing certain types of Catholic practices, saint veneration and wearing of images to a past that should be left behind.”

Compared to other predominantly Catholic ethnic groups that migrated en masse to the United States and which became assimilated, Vargas asked: “What’s different about Latinx-identified Catholics?”

“Is it because they continue to speak the same language? Is it physical markers? Is it the proximity to Mexico and Latin America and the proximity to the U.S.?” she asked. “It’s racialized, and I think that’s the difference. It’s not just about religion.”

Latinos are estimated to make up more than a third of all Catholics in the United States. According to data from Pew Research Center, 43% of U.S. Latinos identified as Catholic in 2022 and Latinos remain twice as likely as U.S. adults overall to identify as Catholic.

Read More Immigration & Migration

Supreme Court strikes down some Trump priorities, but expands presidential power

On U.S. Independence Day, Pope Leo XIV honors migrants in Lampedusa

Vance calls the Vatican’s views on immigration ‘troubling’

Archdiocese of Baltimore responds to growing immigration enforcement

Prayer key to sister’s release from ICE detention, but foreign-born religious now on edge

Supreme Court finds Trump executive order on birthright citizenship unconstitutional

Copyright © 2023 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

Print Print

Primary Sidebar

Justin McLellan

Click here to view all posts from this author

For the latest news delivered twice a week via email or text message, sign up to receive our free enewsletter.

| MOST POPULAR |

  • Father Mark Logue, who transformed two parishes and touched many lives, dies at 78 
  • Sister Joan Bastress, I.H.M., served in multiple ministries in Archdiocese of Baltimore
  • Question Corner: How do I know if I’m excommunicated due to my past support of the SSPX?
  • Major relics of St. Margaret Mary Alacoque attract throngs of faithful to the Baltimore Basilica
  • In Independence Day Mass, Archbishop Lori calls for continued witness to human dignity

| Latest Local News |

Father Mark Logue, who transformed two parishes and touched many lives, dies at 78 

Sister Joan Bastress, I.H.M., served in multiple ministries in Archdiocese of Baltimore

Sister Patricia Anne Bossle, D.C., former president of Seton Keough High School, dies at 86

Archbishop Lori launches podcast on renewing civic life and the political culture

Major relics of St. Margaret Mary Alacoque attract throngs of faithful to the Baltimore Basilica

| Latest World News |

Women who say they experienced harm from abortion pill push Blanche to settle suit on FDA policy

El-Obeid: Brave witness of the Sudanese Church in a city under siege

Cause for novelist Sigrid Undset’s canonization expected to open in fall

Canada’s Catholics await high court decision on religious liberty and Bill 21

Popular podcaster Father Mike Schmitz unpacks Christ’s Gospel parables, offers fresh insights

| Catholic Review Radio |

Footer

Our Vision

Real Life. Real Faith. 

Catholic Review Media communicates the Gospel and its impact on people’s lives in the Archdiocese of Baltimore and beyond.

Our Mission

Catholic Review Media provides intergenerational communications that inform, teach, inspire and engage Catholics and all of good will in the mission of Christ through diverse forms of media.

Contact

Catholic Review
320 Cathedral Street
Baltimore, MD 21201
443-524-3150
mail@CatholicReview.org

 

Social Media

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Recent

  • Women who say they experienced harm from abortion pill push Blanche to settle suit on FDA policy
  • El-Obeid: Brave witness of the Sudanese Church in a city under siege
  • Cause for novelist Sigrid Undset’s canonization expected to open in fall
  • Canada’s Catholics await high court decision on religious liberty and Bill 21
  • Father Mark Logue, who transformed two parishes and touched many lives, dies at 78 
  • Popular podcaster Father Mike Schmitz unpacks Christ’s Gospel parables, offers fresh insights
  • Sister Joan Bastress, I.H.M., served in multiple ministries in Archdiocese of Baltimore
  • Cardinal: God is smiling on Washington Archdiocese ‘with intense love’ as auxiliaries ordained
  • Sister Patricia Anne Bossle, D.C., former president of Seton Keough High School, dies at 86

Search

Membership

Catholic Media Assocation

Maryland-Delaware-DC Press Association

The Associated Church Press

© 2026 CATHOLIC REVIEW MEDIA, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED