by W.A.T.E.R. 17
Special to the NNPA from the New York Amsterdam News

A number of people are exercising their civil and human rights and ensuring that the democratic system is being put to proper use. This past Sunday, volunteer activists across the city distributed informative literature to the masses in an effort to educate others and heighten awareness about their rights, while simultaneously endorsing a petition drive that supports this cause.
โThey have to allow us to move about peacefully in our streets; weโre not in South Africa under apartheid, where we have to show our IDs every five seconds,โ concurred the peopleโs councilman out of Brooklyn, Charles Barron. โThis is our basic human right and they are violating that.โ
Each U.S. citizen has the right to privacy as specified in the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution: โThe right of the people to be secure in their persons, homes, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrant shall be issued, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be searched.โ
But statistics reveal that Blacks and Hispanics, are disproportionately subjected to stops and frisks by the NYPD.
โLast year there were 740,000 people who were stopped and frisked; 87 percent of them were Black or Hispanic and 88 percent were innocent,โ revealed Raquel Irizarry, and organizer for Police Reform Organizing Project (PROP), who tabled at Brooklynโs Prospect Park with three volunteers.
โI know that police harass people, but I have never seen it like thisโnever, never. In 2002, when [Mayor Michael] Bloomberg first took office, there were only 97,000 stopsโthereโs been an increase by 600 percent! I was like, โWhoa!โ Thatโs when I knew I had to get involved.โ
Having accumulated over 11,000 signatures so far, PROP organizers are almost at the halfway point of reaching their goal of 25,000 supporters by next summer, to โdemonstrate to policy makers that a broad-based constituency of city residents are concerned about abusive police practices and are calling for meaningful change,โ one pamphlet read.
โWe spoke to many young Black and Brown men about their rights, getting them information about how to get involved in the movement to prevent stop-and-frisk and other abusive police tactics,โ commented organizer Frank Lopez, a coordinator from Brotherhood-Sister Sol. โItโs about educating the youth.โ
Organizers also recorded some local residents who shared their negative experiences with New Yorkโs finest.
โRacial profiling by the pigs criminalizes a whole generation,โ asserted one supporter. โThe real reason theyโre doing this is to have a file on as many young Black and Latino men as possible.โ
Although volunteers said they were well received, many interviewed said that they had also been victims of abusive police practices. Some recounted horrid tales of their encounters.
โWe, as American citizens who are living in a democracy, deserve accountability. Itโs not even just about stop-and-friskโthatโs a smaller issue in terms of a larger scope. Thereโs no accountability for the NYPD; they answer to no one,โ concurred PROP activist Ayisha Irfan.
She continued, โWe are promoting the community safety legislation that is in front of the City Council at this point. We deserve answersโฆwe deserve a transparent police department where we can see what the policies are and make changes. Bloomberg and [Police Commissioner Ray] Kelly continue to lie and distort data. We strongly feel that something needs to be done.โ
A recent conversation with an NYPD source disclosed, โStop-and-frisk is nothing newโฆbefore it primarily happened to Blacks and Latinos who went into white neighborhoods, but now itโs happening citywide because they want them to get frustrated and move out.โ
PROP director Bob Gangi said, โThe cityโs police should serve and protect people, rather than engage in stop-and-frisk and other tactics that harass and, in effect, criminalize them.โ
Some say fulfilling quotas seems to be the NYPDโs main priority. They say it cannot be done at the expense of those who donโt know their rights.
โWe cannot allow them to get us into a stop-and-frisk argument when the real question is racial profiling,โ stated Barron.
While the damaging emotional and psychological effects of the NYPDโs stop-and-frisk policy may never be properly measured, some say more and more that the Empire State is truly living up to its moniker.
โCommissioner Kelly must be fired! Kelly must go!โ determined Barron. โNot only has he allowed for racial profiling, which is against our human and constitutional rightsโyou canโt stop us because we are Blackโin addition to that, there have been more police killings and brutality under KellyโฆWe have lost our lives, our communities have been turned into police states and the police are off the hook and out of control!โ
He concluded, โOver 700,000 people were stopped, questioned and frisked, which led to only 12 percent actually getting arrested and less than 2-3 percent having a gun. That is based upon the statistics of the police officers who filled the forms out. Only one out of every 10, according to Elliot Spitzer when he was attorney general, and he did the investigation, which means millions of us are being stopped and frisked and itโs not bringing crime down!โ
For more information, visit policereformorganizingproject.org.

