I grew up in the Bronx, and I welcome the recent court decision striking down New York's stop-and-frisk policy.
This policy discriminated against men of color and, in a blatantly un-American way, trampled on the presumption of innocence. U.S. District Judge Shira Scheindlin said the policy amounted to racial profiling and violated the Fourth Amendment right to privacy and the 14th Amendment right to due process under law.
I can attest to the fact that inner-city neighborhoods like mine have often been seen as war zones. Police perceive residents as instant suspects, so we are rarely afforded the same respect as people who live in other areas.
In places like the South Bronx the most innocent behavior could land a young man face down on a pavement in seconds.
I saw police harass pedestrians after leaving school.
I heard the sirens blaring as patrol vehicles swarmed a residential block because four black teenagers were congregated on a corner after hours.
I saw desperate mothers and grandmothers beg and plead with unmoved officers to let their sons go back to their homes in the early hours of nightfall and also in broad daylight.
When a police cruiser started its slow and watchful stroll down the main arteries in my childhood neighborhood, we walked slower, looked straight ahead, made no sudden movements or loud noises and said a quiet prayer that the patrol car would move on without disturbing our peace.
Stop-and-frisk policies have criminalized black and brown skin color. With this court decision, that ought to stop.
No one should be labeled a suspect because of skin color.
Juleyka Lantigua-Williams writes for Progressive Media Project, www.progressive.org.