Police officers face tremendous pressure to meet arrest quotas, leading them to "hunt" the very citizens they're supposed to protect.
Press Room
For years, police departments across the country have played a numbers game that encourages quantitative, rather than qualitative policing. Our cops face tremendous pressure to meet arrest quotas, leading them to “hunt” unsuspecting citizens—namely young, black males—for trivial write-ups. Backed by laws like stop-and-frisk, officers turn to baiting harassment, as seen in Ross Tuttle’s short documentary for The Nation. Tuttle joined HuffPost Live to talk about stop-and-frisk and the larger, systemic problems in our nation’s police departments.
Watch Ross Tuttle’s documentary, which includes the only known audio of a stop-and-frisk encounter.
—Steven Hsieh
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