By Alexander de la Torre Bueno and Catharine Debelle
Adelina Nicholls walks into a conference room in her Atlanta office. She is carrying a manila folder filled with so many papers that it looks more like a Webster dictionary. Nicholls lays the folder on the table and splits the stack of papers in two.
“We’ve got thousands more of these. I think there might be a hundred here,” she says to a visiting delegation member before reading from the first paper at the top of the left pile.
“Pulled over for taillight. Pulled over for slick tires. Pulled over for a traffic violation, “ she says listing off a series of traffic infractions that go on for pages.
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