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NYS Lawmakers Compare NYPD Frisk Policy To Arizona’s New Immigration Law


Two state lawmakers kicked off a legislative attack on the NYPD’s controversial stop-and-frisk policy on Sunday and compared it to Arizona’s new immigration law.

Assemblyman Hakeem Jeffries and state Sen. Eric Adams plan to introduce bills in Albany Monday to ban the NYPD’s practice of saving personal data of people who are stopped and questioned but not charged with a crime or issued a violation.

“Since the NYPD will not end this practice, the state Legislature must step in to protect the people,” Jeffries said at a City Hall press conference.

The bills are the first legislative challenge to the stop-and-frisk database compiled by the NYPD, which stopped and questioned people in record numbers last year.

The NYPD maintains the confidential database has proven helpful to detectives in solving crimes.

But two key City Council leaders have argued the policy violates privacy rights.

And just last week, the New York Civil Liberties Union sued the NYPD to end the practice.

Joined yesterday by civil libertarians and other lawmakers, Jeffries and Adams, both Brooklyn Democrats, argued that the NYPD is stopping and questioning blacks and Latinos in disproportionate numbers.

Saving the information of those who are innocent is a civil rights violation, they said, and appears similar in spirit to the controversial Arizona law, which allows cops to demand immigration papers from any citizen deemed suspicious.

“We are not the northern Arizona,” Adams said.

The NYPD said it does not stop and question people based on census data, but instead focuses its efforts in crime-plagued neighborhoods.

(Source: NY Daily News)



3 Responses

  1. In communist Russia there was also no crime, just because something reduces crime doesnt make it constitutional you cant just search someone for no reason its unconstitutional. this is nothing like the az law, the az. law only lets a cop question the status if there was another infraction and the cop has reasonable suspicion (like driving a car with Pa. plates in Az.) in N.Y they are frisking people even with out reasonable suspicion they can just pick on you and frisk you. i’d rather be more unsafe and have more freedom then more safe and less freedom

  2. eric55, your conclusion is foolish. I would rather live with a little less freedom than have my life put in danger because the American Criminal Liberties Union decided that someone’s privacy is worth more than my safety. Oh, puhleazzzzzeeee……….

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