75 Percent of Newark Police Stops Are Unconstitutional

The investigation was launched in 2011 following a complaint filed by the ACLU about the city’s policing tactics. As a result, the city’s police department will now be placed under federal supervision to ensure changes are made. “Under the agreement, the city has promised to train its officers on how to carry out stops and arrests that are constitutionally sound and develop improvements to policies for stopping, arresting and using force on citizens,” according to the Star-Ledger.

Here’s more of the troubling DOJ findings from the AP:

…the DOJ investigation found that over a six-year period, only one excessive force complaint was upheld by the police department, a figure [U.S. Attorney Paul] Fishman called “stunningly low” for a police department of its size…Theft by police department personnel is “more than an aberration limited to a few officers or incidents within the NPD,” the report concluded. The problem is particularly acute in the specialized units such as narcotics, gangs and prisoner processing. The department was aware of the problem but still didn’t sustain any theft complaints against the officers with the highest number of incidents, the report found.

Elliot Hannon is a writer in Washington, D.C. Follow him on Twitter.

Article Appeared @http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2014/07/22/newark_police_found_to_have_unconstitutional_practices.html

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