watch. however, the police side of this is she was speeding, she didn't heed the sirens, she didn't heed the blue heights and oftentimes, when officers see that kind of reaction, they think that they are up to something, that there's something nefarious going on, that there is something potentially dangerous going on. and so, you saw this heightened response from them. but stephanie bottom says once they discovered who she was, and what -- didn't ever ask her what she was doing. she just felt like she got yanked out of the car. she didn't understand. she was confused. she says the treatment of herself and -- and many other folks, she believes, had something to do with her skin color, not just some of the things that she did wrong, don. >> well, let's talk about that because, look, i mean, still, you should treat people with dignity or, you know, at least as human beings when you are pulling them over but what do the numbers tell us about whether racial profiling is prevalent where she was pulled over? >> they tell us that what you see in that area of north carolina, um, and across the state is that, generally