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Curtis Johnson and Derek Turner
Published: 19 June 2012


On Father's Day, over 50,000 civil and human right advocates and outraged community members marched in silent solidarity down Fifth Avenue in New York City to bring attention to the racial profiling and to protest the city's abusive and discriminatory stop-and-frisk policing practice.

Convened by the NAACP, 1199SEIU, and the National Action Network (NAN), the silent march  was endorsed and supported by hundreds of rights advocates including the New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU), Communities United for Police Reform (CPR), and community organizations from across New York City.

"Today we are marching in silence to call for an end to racial profiling," said NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous.  "Stop-and-frisk is the most massive local racial profiling program in the country. All children, of every color, should feel protected by our police, not threatened, harassed or intimidated. Stop-and-frisk is a violation of NYPD policy, our constitution and the basic values of liberty and justice for all."

The silent march was first used in 1917 by the NAACP—then just eight years old—to draw attention to race riots that tore through communities in East St. Louis, Ill., and build national opposition to lynching. Now, 95 years later, the decision to hold a silent march was based on the seriousness of the need to put an end to racial profiling practices.

"Stop-and-frisk is a concern for all communities in the City as the young men who are targeted are our sons, brothers, nephews, future fathers and community leaders," said George Gresham, President of 1199 SEIU United Healthcare Workers East.  "That's why this diverse mobilization of civil rights, faith, labor and community groups marched today in silent protest of this failed policy.  New Yorkers of all backgrounds are sending a strong message that racial profiling endangers our children and the safety of our communities as a whole."

Police officers stopped nearly 700,000 people last year, 87 percent of them black or Latino. Of those stopped, nearly 90 percent were completely innocent.

"Stop-and-frisk policing violates our civil rights as citizens, humiliates our personhood, violates racial profiling laws, and violates our constitutional right to probable cause," stated Rev. Al Sharpton, President of National Action Network. "Therefore it is illegal, immoral, and must be ended. You cannot mend bias. You must end bias."

 "Protecting the safety of all New Yorkers and reducing crime in all parts of our city does not require turning any neighborhood or any block into a Constitution-free zone," said New York Civil Liberties Union Executive Director Donna Lieberman. "Contrary to the mayor and police commissioner's assertions, the NYPD's stop-and-frisk regime has done little to remove firearms from the streets. Instead, it has corroded the ability of communities of color to trust and respect the police."

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