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It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted. | |
< < | Deconstructing Stop and Frisk | > > | Violence in Urban Communities | | -- By ChrisMendez - 13 Mar 2015 | |
< < | I. The Reasonable Suspicion Standard | > > | I. Gangs as a Form of Social Control | | | |
< < | The United States Supreme Court in Terry v. Ohio | > > | Donald Black argues that law is one form of social control. He suggests that there exists an inverse relationship between law and other types of social control. The presence of elevated levels of violence in underprivileged communities in the inner city seems to suggest the lack of social control in such areas. Such an argument overlooks the complexities stemming from the heavy gang presence in many urban communities. The form of social control exercised by gangs oftentimes includes particular rules related to permissible attire, regulating access to particular blocks and alleys, and territorial markers via graffiti. The forms of social control exerted by gangs are oftentimes enforced by violence or by the threat of violence. | | | |
> > | This is not to suggest that the law is nonexistent in communities with a large gang presence. Many cities have dedicated substantial resources, including additional police officers, to these communities. Many have also turned to surveillance technology to monitor gang activity and drug trafficking. Beginning in 2003, for instance, Chicago began installing “Police Observation Devices” (PODs) in intersections experiencing high rates of violence. On one hand, these devices may exemplify the introduction of more law in underprivileged communities because they allow the police to monitor the activity of individuals passing by the cameras for twenty-four hours a day. On the other hand, the cameras do not necessarily decrease gangs’ level of social control because gangs can simply conduct illicit activities, which are oftentimes linked to violence, in a more clandestine matter. For instance, gangs can move drug operations to another block and they can refrain from wearing gang colors. Overall, violent crime has not decreased much in Chicago since 2004 and many of the areas in close proximity to PODs experience elevated levels of violence. | | | |
< < |
Why don't you provide a link to this case that doesn't use a commercial service behind a paywall? Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968) is a more informative citation, and no one has to pay Westlaw to read the case. Do you see why the services want you to learn to do it wrong? Why do you let them?
| > > | II. Transitioning Cities, More of the Same | | | |
< < | affirmed the constitutionality, under the Fourth Amendment, of stop and frisk encounters where a police officer “observes unusual conduct which leads him to reasonably to conclude in light of his experience” that dangerous criminal conduct may be in progress. | > > | Many cities have responded to the violence that is far too common in underserved communities through policies of urban renewal. Between the late 1990s and the late 2000s the vast majority of the high-rise housing projects in Chicago were torn down. Lower-income Chicagoans were offered Section 8 vouchers to live either in mixed-income apartment buildings to be built where the housing projects previously stood or in other neighborhoods. Given the time it would take to build sufficient mixed-income housing for tens of thousands of people, most residents moved to affordable areas elsewhere in Chicago. | | | |
> > | Around the same time, a large number of Chicago gang leaders were prosecuted and sentenced to long prison terms. As the hierarchy was incarcerated, many large gangs split into smaller factions. As a result, the social control that gangs exercised over communities fundamentally changed. While the crime rates dramatically decreased in some neighborhoods as they gentrified, the rates of violence in other communities increased. Many members of decentralized gangs moved to different neighborhoods in Chicago where there was already a gang presence. This may help explain why violent crime rates have worsened in parts of the South Side, West Side, and Northwest Side as overall crime rates have remained stagnant in Chicago for the past decade. | | | |
< < | Is that what the case
says? I thought the point was that "Where a reasonably prudent
officer is warranted in the circumstances of a given case in
believing that his safety or that of others is endangered, he may
make a reasonable search for weapons of the person believed by him
to be armed and dangerous regardless of whether he has probable
cause to arrest that individual for crime or the absolute certainty
that the individual is armed." 392 U.S. at 2-3 (syllabus). The
crucial point is that the search extends no further than that
necessary to protect the safety of the officer or others on the
street. The constitutional logic is that this is a search incident
to seizure, because a seizure occurs whenever someone is stopped on
the street, and a pat-down is a search. The case is about whether
the exclusionary rule bars the introduction of evidence resulting
from the pat-down, which is always a question of whether the search
was reasonable. The holding says that a search without probable
cause to arrest is reasonable if it is an exterior pat-down for
weapons given an "articulable suspicion" that the party stopped
poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officer or others.
Could a nation with 300 million handguns in circulation among its
inhabitants not have such a rule? | > > | III. Guns | | | |
> > | The fracture of formerly hierarchical gangs is especially worrisome given how easily members of gangs are able to access guns. Even though Chicago has very restrictive gun laws, they are nonetheless abundant in the city due to its close proximity to areas that have much more lax gun laws. For instance, more than 1,300 guns confiscated in Chicago between 2008 and 2013 were traced to Chuck’s Gun Shop, which is located only a few miles south of the city limits. Like many other cities, Chicago has stringent gun laws yet guns are far too common as they are easily accessible throughout the Chicagoland region. | | | |
< < | The officer is entitled to conduct a “limited search of the outer clothing of such persons in an attempt to discover weapons” if his or her reasonable fear is not dispelled quickly during the encounter. New York City is one of several cities in the United States to adopt a stop and frisk program. Per the New York City Police Department Patrol Guide in 1999, some of the factors used to establish the required reasonable suspicion to conduct a stop have included the time of day, the suspect’s demeanor, and the area where the stop occurs.
This is not about who gets searched, but rather about who gets stopped, which is not the subject of Terry, right?
The reasonable suspicion standard, which makes no overt reference to the race, ethnicity, or the individual’s background, plays out in ways that disproportionately affect minorities. Officers’ subconscious, and even conscious, biases are seemingly validated through the reliance on the officers’ personal experience and his or her fear. The data published in "‘Stop-and-Frisk’ Is All but Gone From New York" demonstrates that, as of 2010, 83% of the people stopped are African American or Latino even these
groups only represent 51% of the population in New York City. Given the vacuous nature of the reasonable suspicious
standard,
Why "vacuous"? Unless we find ourselves unable to trust the testimony of police—which is again another subject—a rule saying that "we will admit evidence arising from a street-encounter pat-down if the officer can articulate the reasons why she believed from her observations leading to the stop that the person she was stopping had a weapon and posed a threat" hardly seems "vacuous." We will get, as the Court had in the record in Terry, micronarratives of police experience. They will become stereotyped, as all testimony by repeat witness becomes stereotyped, but that isn't necessarily unfavorable to the task imposed on the courts by the Fourth Amendment, which is to decide what searching behavior at the point where the rubber meets the road for police trying to do their jobs and secure their safety is "reasonable."
it is essential that we turn to the social realities of stop and frisk to better deconstruct the program.
Would it not be
sufficient to say "What this rule means is determined by who
actually gets searched?" What does the rest of the paragraph, bar
the cite, contribute, except the same confusion between stopping and
searching?
II. Breading Resentment in Predominately Minority Communities
A recent study by the New York Times indicates that minority respondents believe that non-minorities are substantially favored in police interactions. “Stop and Frisk in Brownsville, Brooklyn” is demonstrative of the effects that the program has in minority communities. Even though the residents interviewed generally supported the police presence in the community, they felt that the police officers go too far in their stops. Residents are oftentimes stopped for petty offenses such was discarding a cigarette or spitting on a sidewalk. One resident received a ticket for trespass before actually entering the building where his cousin resided. Furthermore, officers routinely enter the lobbies of public housing buildings and stop residents for entering without a key even though the vast majority of the locks are broken.
This is not about who gets searched but about who gets stopped. That's exactly what Terry is not about, correct? This confusion is the central problem for the reader of the essay. You say you are discussing one matter, but you present the reader, paragraph after paragraph, with another.
The net effect of these stops is that minorities are discriminately
burdened with arrests and citations for offenses that go unnoticed in the more privileged areas of New York City, especially when perpetrated by non-minorities.
Arrests and citations aren't perpetrated. This is a third topic, not about who gets stopped, or who gets searched, but about who gets arrested. Here the point seems to be that if a joint is found when someone is patted down for weapons, what might result is either an arrest or no arrest, but an arrest would have to be predicated on the admissibility of the joint, which in turn would depend on the articulable suspicion that the person who had only a joint and no weapon was armed and dangerous. It seems to me that if we had a large number of such cases in our courts (which would also require the assistance of prosecutors willing to move such things through the system), our problem would be that Terry is no longer the law, and that some other principle has displaced it in actuality. Otherwise it is hard to see how such evidence could be routinely admitted. So are we really talking about Terry at all?
The individuals least able to seek adequate representation and pay citations for trivial offenses, particularly those who reside in public housing, are being used as a funding mechanism to support the government’s inefficient use of resources.
This requires another set of facts to be shown, namely that the forms of enforcement being discussed are "revenue-positive" to a significant degree. This is probably proven about Ferguson, Mo. That it is even arguable, let alone not ludicrously backwards, with respect to New York or any other major city in the US requires at least some evidence. I have no reason to think it is in any way true. Do you?
Furthermore, these searches have a deep psychological impact on the individuals being searched. Former Mayor Michael Bloomberg has argued that “Scaring the kids not to carry guns is one of the integral parts” of stop and frisk. Mayor Bloomberg overlooks the fact that the vast majority of stops do not result in the discovery of illegal objects. Rather then leading teenagers and young adults to believe that the police are present to protect them, they are subjected to humiliating interactions with officers where they are treated as criminals.
Is what the former mayor of New York says about policing law? If so, the collection of things said over the years by Rudy Giuliani eclipses in offensiveness and stupidity the remarks of Chairman Bloomberg by some hundreds to one, and makes one really big pile of unconstitutional you know what. But I'm not sure what either of them has to do with anything.
III. Creating Feelings of Security Through the “Other”
"The New York Police: A Dangerous Moment" describes a scene where dozens of tourists stepped out of their luxury buses to attend the Abyssinian Baptist Church in a gentrifying Harlem. Supporters of the stop and frisk program argue that police tactics have resulted in the decrease in crime in neighborhoods such as Harlem. In defense of the program, Mayor Bloomberg pointed out that minorities are disproportionately stopped because they are more likely to commit crimes.
This would not admit a toothpick, or a lump of heroin as large as a canteloupe, into evidence if Terry is the relevant law, right? Once again, we are depending on stuff someone says who isn't a lawyer or a policeman. (In arguing against social privilege, it's odd that you seem to think we should care about things Chairman Bloomberg says, when his primary argument for either running or commenting on New York City matters is that he is rich and competent and we should let him.)
Many individuals are stopped and frisked on the basis of petty violations at an enormous expenditure of resources.
Once more, just for the variety, may I point out that they cannot be frisked on the basis of petty violations unless you are talking about law that isn't Terry? Now we are in the world of search incident to arrest, with probable cause. Terry is out of the picture. The admissibility of evidence produced by a search incident to an arrest supported by probable cause is still constitutionally limited. Riley v. California shows us that those limits—to the zone of objects under the immediate control of the defendant, for the dual purposes of securing the safety of the arresting officer and to prevent destruction of evidence—remain practically meaningful.
Rather than being aimed at confiscating guns, which are seized in only 0.15% of stops, the purpose of these stops is to create and perpetuate a feeling of safety in New York City where the “Other” is being kept in control. Perhaps this feeling of security created through controlling the “Other” is why the tourists were willing to visit a late 1990s Harlem in luxury buses. As Gilberto Gerena Valentin, president of the Congress of Puerto Rican Home Towns commented in 1964, “The police do not protect us. They try to keep us in line. They run the West Side like a plantation.” In this matter, stop and frisk serves as a mechanism of social control aimed at minorities.
"Stop and frisk" is now a synonym for "policing." That's the tendency towards which the draft's diffuse argumentation has been leading, but it's not the right place to go.
| > > | To address the violence plaguing many underprivileged urban communities, one option is to address the availability of guns. One approach is to advocate for uniform gun laws across the nation that would limit the flow of guns into cities from the surrounding areas. Unfortunately, given that there are approximately 300 million guns in the United States and the current political climate regarding gun laws, this does not seem to be a realistic option at the moment. Another possibility is to continue with the patchwork of laws that we currently have which led to situations akin to that present in Chicago. The third potential approach is to loosen gun control laws in cities to make it easier for city residents to legally obtain firearms. To a certain degree, the latter two approaches entail letting gun violence play out. These approaches overlook the likelihood that acts of violence are manifestations of underlying societal issues played out through the use of guns. | | IV. Looking Forward | |
< < | The assumption underlying stop and frisk, along with other forms of broken windows policy, is a dangerous one: incredibly minor transgressions from individuals pertaining to an underserved segment of the population must be ruthlessly pursued to prevent future criminality.
Can it seriously be
argued that any police department and prosecutorial service believe
themselves legally justified (or, in a city of millions, materially
capable) of implementing such a strategy? I can imagine an agitator
making this statement from atop a soap box, or on some "social
media" equivalent, but it's a flagrantly false description of how a
police commissioner, a mayor, or the district attorney of New York,
Kings or Bronx counties actually goes about her job. Why would you
predicate your credibility with the reader on her willingness to
grant you this assertion?
The effect of such programs is that young individuals from underprivileged backgrounds are burdened with arrest records and citations for the same behavior that is overlooked in more prosperous areas.
This is "the effect" of a particular policing style? I think this is a social universal, true of all societies at all times, which Donald Black, in The Behavior of Law (1976), from which we're going to do some reading shortly, perfectly describes. Whether these "programs" do or don't exist, whether we are talking about US policing under the Bill of Rights or any other system, place and time, an equivalent inequality will be present. If that's right, what is your actual argument?
Even though the number of stops has dropped in New York City from 337,410 during the first six months of 2012 to 33,699 stops during the last half of 2013, stop and frisk is representative of the far-too-common leveraging of the criminal justice system to prevent society from learning about crime. Rather, the system is being used to perpetuate feelings of security through acts of social control against the “Other.”
Society is not arranged into the dichotomy of "Self" and "Other." Social stratification and morphology are complex. A reader likely to be sympathetic to your social position is also likely to be aware of that complexity, and is therefore precisely the reader most likely to be chafed by the oversimplification. Both the legal and the sociological analyses suffer from the same tendency to drift away from precision towards breadth of gesture. An essay succeeds in the end not by being loud, but by being clear.
This is the stage where the route to improvement lies through better editing. At the idea level, you haven't been asking the skeptical questions sentence by sentence and paragraph by paragraph. At the word level, you haven't made sure every word was in place, correctly spelled, and that unnecessary words or words unwashed have been dismissed. The looseness in the argument needs to be treated by reconstruction rather than revision. Is this about Terry, about searches, about arrest patterns, about the philosophy of community policing? Whatever the core idea of the essay turns out to be in the next draft, it should be clearly stated in the introduction, carefully developed through the body of the draft, with due attention to the most important questions or objections the skeptical reader will have, sentence by sentence, as she passes through. The conclusion should give that reader a chance to take your idea further, under her own steam: you should show her the implications of the idea and give her what it takes to explore them for herself.
| > > | A better option to address violence in underprivileged communities is to address the deep socioeconomic inequalities entrenched in many cities throughout the United States. The acts of violence that are far too common in underserved areas are ultimately manifestations of inequality in extremely segregated cities.. While there are compelling benefits in attacking the social control exercised by gangs, revitalizing neighborhoods through urban renewal, and regulating access to firearms, these strategies do not address the socioeconomic inequalities that are the root of the problem. As the socioeconomic conditions improve in underserved communities, fewer youth will be attracted to joining gangs, residents will have improved opportunities, and the levels of violence may decrease. By strategizing to comprehensively address underlying socioeconomic inequalities, it is likely that there will be a reduction in the forms of social control that far too often lend themselves to violence in urban communities. | | |
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