New York’s “stop-and-frisk” program is meant to get drugs and guns off the streets. But in practice, people of color–particularly young black and Hispanic men–have felt harassed and humiliated by the nation’s largest police force.Mayor Mike Bloomberg and police commissioner Raymond Kelly continue to defend and even celebrate the program despite allegations of racial profiling and proof of its ineffectiveness. The police department has withstood legislative and legal challenges aimed at ending “stop-and-frisk.” But a class-action suit known as Floyd, et. al. v. City of New York could halt the program for good if a federal judge rules it unconstitutional. Earlier this week, the NYPD settled a separate suit with the New York Civil Liberties Union lawsuit that will expunge hundreds of thousands of names collected during police stops.
WATCH: PoliticsNation reports Wednesday on the “stop-and-frisk” settlement, and Rev. Al Sharpton speaks to one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit.









