Group of people protest in front of police headquarters in Detroit, Michigan against the department called S.T.R.E.S.S. (Stop the Robberies enjoy safe streets). ""In the anti-STRESS suit of 1972, plaintiffs detailed the circumstances leading to five civilian deaths at the hands of STRESS officers..."" from Whose Detroit: Politics, Labor and Race in a Modern American City, by Heather Ann Thompson.
Letter from "Mrs. George Sitck" regarding her desire to "protest the public meeting held in the Ford Auditorium, in which you supposedly heard charges of misconduct against the Detroit Police Dept."
Letter from "Mrs. George Sitck" regarding her desire to "protest the public meeting held in the Ford Auditorium, in which you supposedly heard charges of misconduct against the Detroit Police Dept."
A newsletter or handbill labelled "On the Issue of S.T.R.E.S.S." Under the headline "STOP ILLEGAL POLICE TACTICS" Page 3 includes a photograph of a police officer with a young Black man in a headlock.
A newsletter or handbill labelled "On the Issue of S.T.R.E.S.S." Under the headline "STOP ILLEGAL POLICE TACTICS" Page two offers statistics on specific officers' violent encounters with citizens.