After a federal judge ordered the New York City Police Department to stop violating the rights of innocent people, all NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg could do was whine about the potential dangers of respecting the rights of the innocent.
For more than a decade, New York City police have randomly stopped pedestrians and questioned them, then frisked them for weapons. Bloomberg defends the program as saving lives, but he doesn’t understand that we have constitutional rights that protect us against unreasonable searches. He doesn’t get to decide when to ignore our rights.
Since 2004, NYC police have made 4.4 million stops and frisked 2.3 million people. Federal Judge Shira Scheindlin noted in her ruling that no weapons were found in 98.5 percent of the frisks. That means that nearly all of those 2.3 million people searched for weapons were innocent — and the searches took place without cause and without any guilt on their part.
Under the NYC program, there didn’t have to be any reason to suspect anyone. Police were encouraged to search more and more people — and the real-world results have been that the vast majority of those searched have been young black and Hispanic men. The judge called it a form of racial profiling.

We forget how to be happy, but children and animals remember
Lesson from U2: Rejection doesn’t necessarily mean it’s time to give up
How one woman’s grand gesture for love turned into a nightmare
A bully picked a fight that night — and now I’m dreaming about it
Shouldn’t standards be higher for those trusted to enforce our laws?
I never wanted to be ‘cool,’ but I wanted people to understand me
AUDIO: If we’ve experienced hurt, why do we keep trusting in love?
After 50 years of being alone and disappointed, boy finally gets girl