Monday, August 13, 2012

NYPD STOP-AND-FRISKS NOT RACIST

On the contrary, the excoriated stop-and-frisk tactics reduce minority-on-minority violence

There has been a loud chorus of critics excoriating NYPD stop-and-frisk tactics as being racist. In How to Return New York City to the Street Gangs, an op-ed in the August 11 Wall Street Journal, Heather Mac Donald, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute and author of ARE COPS RACIST?, shows that the stop-and-frisk tactics are not racist.

Here is an excerpt from Ms. Mac Donald’s WSJ op-ed:

Such proactive stops (or "stop-and-frisks") have averted countless crimes. But a chorus of critics, led by the New York Times, charges that the NYPD's policy is racist because the majority of those stopped are black and Hispanic. Every declared Democratic candidate for mayor in 2013 has vowed to eliminate stop-and-frisks or significantly reduce them. A federal judge overseeing a class-action lawsuit against the NYPD has already announced her conviction that the department's stop practices are unconstitutional, the prelude to putting the department under judicial control.

Omitted from these critics' complaints is any recognition of the demographics of crime. Blacks were 62% of the city's murder victims in 2011, even though they are only 23% of the population. They also made up a disproportionate share of criminals, committing 80% of all shootings, nearly 70% of all robberies and 66% of all violent crime, according to crime reports filed with the NYPD by victims and witnesses, usually minorities themselves.

Whites, by contrast, committed a little over 1% of all shootings, less than 5% of all robberies, and 5% of all violent crime in 2011, even though they are 35% of New York City's population. Given where crime is happening, the police cannot target their resources where they're needed without producing racially disparate stops and arrests.

Critics also contend, among other charges, that the absolute number of stops—680,000—is too high and demonstrates illegality. But there were nearly 900,000 arrests and summons last year under the far more exacting standard of probable cause. It is not surprising that a police force of 35,000 witnessed 680,000 instances of reasonably suspicious behavior among New York's 8.5 million residents. If 25,000 officers in enforcement commands made just one stop a week, there would be over a million stops a year.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

It should be obvious...Those statistics are racist.
_________
Centurion