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From 2004 to 2009, almost 3 million people were stopped and frisked; 90 percent of these people were not charged with a crime. [read post]
6 Aug 2009, 3:54 am
  Actually, as I mentioned both after oral argument and when the decision came down, the case was a victory of sorts for defendants, if only because the government was pushing for a holding decoupling a stop from a frisk:   the police could frisk anyone they believed was armed and dangerous, even if they had no basis for believing that they were engaged in criminal activity. [read post]
26 Jun 2011, 3:50 am by SHG
  The next, and fairly obvious step, is the right authority to frisk people walking down the street. [read post]
3 Nov 2010, 3:28 am by Russ Bensing
  They went to the bus stop, saw a young black male wearing a plaid shirt, frisked him, and found a gun. [read post]
8 Aug 2012, 5:04 am
 To be successful, such strategies require trust, where stop-and-frisk is built primarily on levels of distrust. [read post]
7 May 2010, 3:01 am by SHG
They reveal that precinct bosses threaten street cops if they don't make their quotas of arrests and stop-and-frisks, but also tell them not to take certain robbery reports in order to manipulate crime statistics. [read post]
30 Jan 2009, 11:47 pm
Defense lawyers say in many of these cases, officers are "testilying" and that the guns or drugs were actually discovered when their clients were unjustly frisked by officers. [read post]
23 Feb 2010, 3:29 am by Russ Bensing
  As I’ve noted on numerous occasions, and the 8th has taken pains to state, stop and frisk are two different things:  simply because the police have the right to stop someone does not automatically mean they have the right to frisk them for weapons, despite what every single policeman in this city apparently believes. [read post]
5 Mar 2017, 9:30 pm by Tracey Meares
In other words, stop-and-frisk is an ineffective and inefficient way to achieve its purported crime-control goals. [read post]
23 Feb 2010, 3:29 am by Russ Bensing
  As I’ve noted on numerous occasions, and the 8th has taken pains to state, stop and frisk are two different things:  simply because the police have the right to stop someone does not automatically mean they have the right to frisk them for weapons, despite what every single policeman in this city apparently believes. [read post]
1 Sep 2012, 7:03 am
A frisk is the patting down of a person’s outer garments without intruding into the interior clothing unless a suspicious article is felt in the frisk. [read post]
16 Dec 2009, 2:38 pm by Fabio Arcila
Unsurprisingly, the Court allowed such frisks based only upon reasonable suspicion of danger. [read post]
4 Jun 2020, 10:05 am by Christopher Tyner
  During that hearing, defense counsel expressed the view that the officer had the reasonable and articulable suspicion necessary to conduct a frisk upon seeing a bulge in the defendant’s pocket while arguing that the officer unlawfully had decided to conduct the frisk prior to seeing the bulge. [read post]
1 Feb 2012, 5:52 am
Defendant was lawfully “stopped” after he stopped his car at his mother’s house. [read post]
23 Nov 2007, 8:22 am
W.D.N.Y. suppresses a stop and patdown of a man on the street who vaguely matched a description of somebody "looking to break into cars. [read post]