Law.com: Judge, Counsel Tempers Flare at Stop-and-Frisk Trial

Law.com: Judge, Counsel Tempers Flare at Stop-and-Frisk Trial by Mark Hamblett, New York Law Journal:

Tempers flared on April 19 as Southern District Judge Shira Scheindlin (See Profile) demanded that the New York City Law Department produce two police officers for identification by a black plaintiff who claims he was stopped, questioned and frisked on the steps of his Staten Island home without reasonable suspicion.

Leroy Downs, testifying at the end of the fifth week of the litigation challenging the constitutionality of New York City Police Department’s practice of stopping hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers every year, said that on the night of Aug. 20, 2008, he was sitting on his front steps talking on a cell phone when two plainclothes officers got out of a Crown Victoria.

Downs told plaintiffs’ lawyer Sunita Patel of the Center for Constitutional Rights that one of the officers said, “Hey, buddy, it looks like you’re smoking weed” and then the other said, “Get up against the fucking fence.”

After being frisked in a search that uncovered nothing more than keys, a wallet and some cookies, Downs said he asked for the officers’ badge numbers and they refused. He was only able to identify them after going to the local precinct later that night. But Downs was unable to later pick the officers out of a photo array of officers in uniform shown to him at the Civilian Complaint Review Board.

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