A new report says the NYPD's use of stop-and-frisk is down, but that it still disproportionately targets black and Hispanic New Yorkers. 

The independent monitor overseeing the department's reforms says 80 percent of those stopped are black or Latino. 

It also shows blacks are more likely than whites to get frisked, but less likely than whites to have a weapon on them when it happens. 

"I think really at the end of the day, what we need to see in not only the New York City Police Department, but in police departments around the country is really a culture change, that we move away from a lot of the heavy handed tactics, the kind of broken windows philosophy, the order of maintenance policing philosophy, and more towards a more collaborative approach in terms of working with communities to fight crime," said Darius Charney, an attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights.

Back in 2013, a judge ruled the NYPD's stop-and-frisk practices were unconstitutional and discriminatory.