The Day

Data says Black motorists more likely to be pulled over by NYPD

- By ELIZABETH KEOGH

New York — Black motorists are more likely to be pulled over by police than members of the city’s other racial groups, New York Police Department data released Friday show.

During the first three months of 2022, NYPD officers stopped 51,373 Black motorists — accounting for 29% of all the vehicle stops made in the five boroughs, the data shows.

That 29% pullover rate for black motorists contrasts with city government data that show Blacks make up about 20% of the city’s population.

Whites and Latinos were proportion­ally less likely to be stopped, the data show.

Whites accounted for about 25% of motor vehicle stops, and make up about 31% of the city’s population. Latino people accounted for 25% of the vehicle stops, and account for about 28% of the city’s population.

In a news release, the NYPD said the races of motorists pulled over by police are “roughly proportion­al to the city’s overall racial demographi­cs.”

The data were released under the requiremen­ts of a law passed last year by the City Council.

Of the 176,753 traffic stops reported by NYPD officers in the first three months of this year, just 4,222 — or 2% — resulted in arrests, the department said. Those 4,222 arrests required officers to use “some level of force” 88 times, said the news release.

The department did not elaborate on where these incidents occurred, but said they predominan­tly took place in the city’s most crime-stricken areas.

Patrolling officers in highcrime areas are focused on “identifyin­g the drivers of violence,” stopping vehicles with illegal, paper license plates and pulling over reckless, speeding drivers, the NYPD says.

Traffic stops are an important part of NYPD law enforcemen­t efforts, the news release said.

“We often say that traffic safety is public safety – we have no tolerance for even one criminal motorist,” Police Commission­er Keechant Sewell said in a statement.

“In a city made more vibrant by the free-flow of automobile­s, a robust vehicle-safety strategy is a fundamenta­l tool in assuring everyone’s right to safe travel,” Sewell said. “The transparen­cy of this data helps serve that mission.”

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