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Thread: (YAY)New York City’s Stop and Frisk: 5 Million Served With a Side of Racism

  1. #1

    (YAY)New York City’s Stop and Frisk: 5 Million Served With a Side of Racism

    New York City passed a dubious civil rights milestone Thursday, March 14. According to the New York Civil Liberties Union, the New York Police Department recorded its five millionth stop-and-frisk search since statistics started being compiled in 2002.

    Of those five million, 86 percent searched were black or Latino. 88 percent of the searches, or 4.4 million, discovered absolutely no evidence of impropriety.

    These statistics are, of course, disturbing. Particularly so, says Jen Carnig, director of communications for the New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU), because the numbers show no real sign of abating under the leadership of New York’s three-term mayor, Michael Bloomberg.
    *
    “In 2002, Bloomberg’s first year in office, there were less than 100,000 of these stops,” Carnig tells TakePart. “By 2011, that number spiked to 685,724. Stop-and-frisk escalated 600 percent during the Bloomberg Administration.”
    In the face of international criticism over the policy, stop-and-frisk searches did drop to 533,042 last year. Still, the NYPD and the Bloomberg administration have shown no inclination they intend to voluntarily suspend or even amend the program.

    “I just don’t see that happening,” says Carnig, of the possibility of negotiating a civil end to the program.

    “How much will the NYPD save if, instead of having police officers take the time to do a stop and frisk of innocent people, we direct those police officers to go after, like, the real criminals?”

    New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly—one of stop-and-frisk’s most ardent proponents—all but confirmed Carnig’s sentiment in a New York city council meeting earlier in the week.

    During the meeting, Kelly was grilled by Washington Heights Councilman Ydanis Rodriguez: “How much will the NYPD save if, instead of having police officers take the time to do a stop and frisk of innocent people, we direct those police officers to go after, like, the real criminals?”

    Kelly offered this in response: “Well, let me say this: New York is by far the safest big city in America. What we are doing here are tactics and strategies that are working. Something is going right here.”

    According to a New York Times reporter at the meeting, Kelly was likely referring to New York’s historically low murder rate in 2012. Of course, murder rates were down in many major cities across America, even those that don’t rely on programs like stop-and-frisk. Los Angeles, for instance, has seen its murder rate drop for 10 straight years, without relying on a formalized, sanctioned policy of racial profiling.
    http://news.yahoo.com/york-city-stop...193518536.html
    "IF GOD DIDN'T WANT TO HELP AMERICA, THEN WE WOULD HAVE Hillary Clinton"!!
    "let them search you,touch you,violate your Rights,just don't be a dick!"~ cdc482
    "For Wales. Why Richard, it profits a man nothing to give his soul for the whole world. But for Wales?"
    All my life I've been at the mercy of men just following orders... Never again!~Erik Lehnsherr
    There's nothing wrong with stopping people randomly, especially near bars, restaurants etc.~Velho



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  3. #2
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013...isk-quota-race


    NYPD officers testify stop-and-frisk policy driven by quota system and race

    Officer secretly recorded conversation with his supervisor in which he is apparently told to target 'male blacks 14 to 21'






    Demonstrators hold signs during a silent march in New York to end the NYPD's stop-and-frisk program last summer. Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP


    The New York police department's controversial stop-and-frisk program is being driven by a high-pressure quota system imposed upon lower-ranking officers by their supervisors, two NYPD officers testified in court this week.

    The claims were made as part of a landmark class action lawsuit that began Monday. The suit seeks to prove that the nation's largest police department has demonstrated a widespread and systemic pattern of unconstitutional stops that disproportionately target minorities.
    Lawyers for the city have dismissed allegations of quotas and scrutinized the credibility of the suit's plaintiffs, including their allegations of racial bias on the part of the department.
    "The quota allegations are a sideshow," city attorney Heidi Grossman said in opening statements Monday. "Crime drives where police officers go," she added. "Not race."
    The trial represents a historic challenge to the legacies of NYPD commissioner Ray Kelly and mayor Michael Bloomberg, who have both vocally supported stop-and-frisk.
    The NYPD has stopped approximately 5 million people over the last decade. According to department data, the vast of majority of those stopped are African American or Latino, many of them young men. In recent years nearly nine out of 10 of those stopped by police have walked away from the stops without a summons or arrest.
    Darius Charney, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said in opening statements that the trial is about more than numbers. "It's about people," he said. The NYPD has "laid siege to black and Latino communities" through "arbitrary, unnecessary and unconstitutional harassment", Charney added.
    Supporters of stop-and-frisk, including Bloomberg and Kelly, maintain that it is an essential tool that save lives and removes guns from the streets. Without stop-and-frisk, New York City would descend into violence not seen in decades, they argue. Young men of color – the group most frequently cited as victims of the program – would bear the brunt of violent crime, they say.
    Both the mayor and the commissioner – as well as the city itself and several named and unnamed officers – are the defendants in the suit.
    By law, the NYPD is permitted to stop a person if it has a reasonable suspicion to believe the person is about to commit a crime, is in the process of committing a crime, or has just finished committing a crime. An officer can frisk a person – patting them outside the clothing – if they have reason to believe the person is an armed threat. An officer can search someone – reach inside clothing – if they have encountered an object they have reason to believe is a weapon.
    These conditions regularly go unmet, stop-and-frisk critics argue. They say the program has produced a sense of second-class citizenship in minority communities in which individuals – particularly young men – are routinely subjected to illegal and degrading stops.
    'We were handcuffing kids for no reason'

    The trial began Monday with two packed courtrooms; one where the actual proceedings are taking place and one for the overflow of spectators, activists and politicians. The first four witness were each African American men who described stops they had experienced. City attorneys worked to expose inconsistencies between the witnesses testimonies and depositions, prove bias against the police department and discredit their claims of racial profiling.
    By mid-week lawyers for the plaintiffs shifted focus from the experience of street stops to the internal NYPD incentive structure that allegedly motivates them.
    Officer Adhyl Polanco began his testimony Tuesday by saying "there's a difference between" the department's policies on paper and "what goes on out there", on the city's streets.
    Polanco testified that in 2009, officers in his Bronx precinct were expected to issue 20 summons and make one arrest per month. If they did not they would risk denied vacation, being separated from longtime partners, undesirable assignments and other consequences.
    Polcano claimed it was not uncommon for patrol officers who were not making quotas to be forced to "drive the sergeant" or "drive the supervisor", which meant driving around with a senior officer who would find individuals for the patrol officer to arrest or issue a summons to, at times for infractions the junior officer did not observe.
    "We were handcuffing kids for no reason," Polanco said. Claiming he was increasingly disturbed by what he was witnessing in his precinct, Polcanco began secretly recording his roll call meetings.
    In one recording played for the court, a man Polanco claimed was a NYPD captain told officers: "the summons is a money–generating machine for the city."
    Bronx police officer Pedro Serrano also secretly recorded comments made by supervisors at the same Bronx precinct. His recordings were also played for the court this week.
    On a track played Thursday, Deputy Inspector Christopher McCormack was heard telling Serrano he needed to stop "the right people, the right time, the right location". When asked what he believed McCormack meant Serrano told the court: "he meant blacks and Hispanics."
    Later in the tape McCormack says: "I have no problem telling you this … male blacks. And I told you at roll call, and I have no problem [to] tell you this, male blacks 14 to 21."
    Serrano claims his attempts to raise concerns about stop and frisk and the existence of quotas have been met with retaliation, including fellow officers vandalizing his locker with stickers of rats.
    He choked up on the witness stand Thursday, as he described his reason for joining the suit.
    "As a Hispanic living in the Bronx, I have been stopped many times," Serrano said. "I just want to do the right thing."



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  4. #3
    "This American Life" podcast ran a story related to this two years ago in which they featured secret audio recordings from an officer being told to harass people using a quota system.

    http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radi...-remain-silent

    One of the better episodes.

  5. #4
    I love my state.

    (No, I don't really.)

    Allow me to leave and then kick NYS out of the USA...
    This post represents only the opinions of Christian Liberty and not the rest of the forum. Use discretion when reading



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