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<h1>NYC stop-and-frisk data: Whites more likely to carry weapons and
drugs</h1>
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<span class="time"> Published time: May 23, 2013 03:56<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://rt.com/usa/stop-frisk-whites-drugs-weapons-667/">http://rt.com/usa/stop-frisk-whites-drugs-weapons-667/</a><br>
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<p>Data compiled by the New York Police Department as a result of the
city’s controversial focus on stop-and-frisk measures has shown that
those suspects who were white were more often to be found in possession
of weapons and drugs.</p>
<p>The analysis of 2012 statistics provided by the Public
Advocate’s office shows that the likelihood that an African
American detained for search would be found in possession of a
weapon was half that of a white person.<br>
<br>
Specifically, the New York Police Department uncovered a weapon in
one out of every 49 stops of white New Yorkers, while for Latinos a
weapon was found for every 71 stops, and for African Americans that
number was 93 stops.<br>
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Meanwhile, the likelihood that a stop of an African American New
Yorker would yield contraband was one-third less than that of white
New Yorkers stopped.<br>
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The NYPD uncovered contraband in one out every 43 stops of white
New Yorkers. By contrast, it took the Department 57 stops of
Latinos and 61 stops of African Americans to uncover
contraband.<br>
<br>
Recent testimony by several New York police officers in connection
to a lawsuit allege that the department regularly targets young
black men and other minorities, which are judged by an arbitrary
notion of “reasonable suspicion.”<br>
<br>
Further, the stop-and-frisk practice is allegedly tied to quotas by
which superiors measure success rates over the city’s police
precincts.<br>
<br>
In March, following evidence provided by a leaked recording,
Officer Pedro Serrano, an 8-year veteran of the New York Police
Department testified that during a meeting with Deputy Inspector
Christopher McCormick he was told in no uncertain terms what
individuals to focus his duties on.<br>
<br>
<i>“I don’t have any trouble telling you this: male blacks 14 to
20, 21,”</i> said McCormick. <br>
<br>
Serrano’s testimony was presented as part of Floyd v. City of New
York, in which four plaintiffs claim they were racially profiled by
the NYPD. Four other police officers presented evidence for the
prosecution.</p>
That trial concluded this week following two months of
testimony, while Judge Shira A. Scheindlin, who will provide a
ruling within a few months, seemed to indicate heavy skepticism
over the high error rate of New York police stops.
<p><i>“A lot of people are being frisked or searched on suspicion
of having a gun and nobody has a gun,”</i> said Judge Scheindlin on
Monday during closing arguments in the trial.</p>
<p><i>“So the point is: the suspicion turns out to be wrong in most
of the cases,”</i> she added.</p>
<p>This most recent analysis of the NYPD’s statistics may well add
more fuel to the fire over the stop-and-frisk controversy. The
report by the Public Advocate’s Office leaves little room to
interpret its findings after surveying the 2012 data.</p>
<p><i>“Despite the overall reduction in stops, the proportion
involving black and Latino New Yorkers has remained unchanged. They
continue to constitute 84 percent of all stops, despite comprising
only 54 percent of the general population. And the innocence rates
remain at the same level as 2011 – at nearly 89 percent.”</i></p>
<p>Meanwhile, in a separate analysis by the New York Civil
Liberties Union of these same statistics, the group revealed that
out of 532,911 stop-and-frisk searches in 2012, just 729 guns were
found.</p>
<p>On Monday, Judge Scheindlin referred to the <i>“high error
rate”</i> correlated with the stop-and-frisk practice, in which 88
per cent of stops yielded no evidence of criminality.</p>
<p><i>“You reasonably suspect something and you’re wrong 90 percent
of the time,”</i> said Scheindlin to a lawyer representing the
city. </p>
<p>For his part, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has taken an
unbending stance on city police’s stop-and-frisk policy.</p>
<p><i>"If you end street stops looking for guns, there will be more
guns on the streets, and more people will be killed. It’s that
simple,”</i> said Bloomberg during an April speech.</p>
Mayor Bloomberg has often aimed his defense of the policy at the
media, in particular the New York Times, for allegedly turning a
blind eye to the victims of the city's gun violence
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