Back to All Press Release

Court Orders NYPD to Produce Stop-and-Frisk Database to NYCLU

The NYPD must disclose its electronic database detailing police stops of hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers, most of whom were black and Latino, thanks to a New York Civil Liberties Union legal victory.

The NYPD must disclose its electronic database detailing police stops of hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers, most of whom were black and Latino, thanks to a New York Civil Liberties Union legal victory.

“Our justice system today rejected the NYPD’s pattern of withholding information from the public,” said NYCLU Executive Director Donna Lieberman. “This victory is about more than government secrecy, though. Every year hundreds of thousands of innocent New Yorkers are stopped, searched and interrogated by the police for doing nothing more than walking down the street. With the release of this database and the public scrutiny that will follow, the police will finally be held accountable to New Yorkers who want to know if the NYPD is targeting people because of the color of their skin.”

Last summer, the NYCLU served the NYPD with a formal legal request to turn over the database under the state’s Freedom of Information Law. The department rejected the request at the end of August and denied the NYCLU’s administrative appeal on October 15. In November, the NYCLU filed a lawsuit in State Supreme Court challenging the NYPD’s refusal to disclose its database.

“The NYPD’s decision to give the database to organizations in California and Michigan while refusing to make it available to New Yorkers was outrageous, and today’s ruling recognizes that that decision also was illegal,” said NYCLU Associate Legal Director Christopher Dunn, the lead counsel on the case. “We now expect the Police Department to produce the database without further delay so there can be a full and independent review of stop-and-frisk practices.”

The NYCLU requested the information to allow for an independent analysis of the department’s stop-and-frisk practices, which have been the subject of enormous controversy since the 1999 shooting death of Amadou Diallo. According to printed reports released earlier this month, New York City police officers stopped more people on the streets during the first three months of 2008 than during any quarter in the six years the Department has reported the data.

Printed reports also show that in 2007, the NYPD stopped about 469,000 New Yorkers – almost 1,300 people every day. Eighty-eight percent were completely innocent. Though they make up only a quarter of the City’s population, more than half of those stopped were black. Another 30 percent were Latino. Though whites make up more than 35 percent of New York City’s population, they were only 11 percent of those stopped. In 2006 and 2007, blacks and Latinos were the target of about 90 percent of the nearly one million stop-and-frisk encounters.

While the printed reports released by the department provide important information, any sophisticated analysis of the role of race in police stops requires access to the database. With today’s ruling, the NYPD must turn over the electronic database within 60 days.

Supporting the NYCLU’s lawsuit with friend of the court briefs were a group of 21 academics from across the country, the New York City Bar Association and The New York Times.

Serving as co-counsel on the case are Rebecca Bers, Meredith Laitner and Samantha Marks, students from New York University Law School’s Civil Rights Clinic, and Professor Claudia Angelos, who teaches in the clinic.

As bold as the spirit of New York, we are the NYCLU.
Donate
© 2024 New York
Civil Liberties Union