(Commentary) On April 28, Baton Rouge’s Metro Council agreed to pay $35,000 to Clarence Green. Green, a 23-year-old man, was stopped for an alleged traffic violation with his 16-year-old brother. That stop escalated, and police searched Green and his teen brother’s underwear and groped their genitals on a public street. Then, on May 25, Thomas Frampton, the Green family’s attorney and associate professor of law at the University of Virginia, released the body-worn camera video, with Green, his brother, and his mother’s consent. The case quickly gained national attention.