New York City’s controversial use of the police tactic known as “stop-and-frisk” can continue without outside oversight or changes until a legal challenge can be heard by a new judge, a circuit court ruled Thursday.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit stayed the remedies ordered by Judge Shira Scheindlin until the city’s appeal of her decision can be heard. The New York Police Department will be able to continue stopping, questioning and frisking individuals they deem to be suspicious, a tactic that has affected millions of black and Latino men and women in the city.
Scheindlin ruled in August that the policy violated the constitutional rights of those who were stopped because the police targeted black and Latino men and women on purpose. She had ordered the NYPD to create a pilot program in which officers wore cameras and that an independent monitor be appointed.
The Circuit also ordered judge Scheindlin removed from the case, citing interviews she did with media outlets as proof of bias against the city.









