Members of an Iowa nonprofit organization are accusing two Des Moines police officers of racially profiling black men during a July traffic stop, adding that one of the officers has a history of targeting the African-American community.Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement, a grassroots community organizing group, posted dashcam video Wednesday showing officers Kyle Thies and Natalie Heinemann pulling over Montray Little, 23, and Jared Clinton, 21, both of Des Moines.Thies implied the car was stolen and accused the men of having weapons and drugs in the car, according to the group. Little denied the accusations but was handcuffed, while Clinton was taken out of the car as the officers searched the car, the group said. CCI said there were no drugs or weapons found during the “warrantless search.”"We can't let this style of policing continue," Bridget Fagan-Reidburn, an organizer with Iowa CCI, said in a statement. "Racial profiling can have lasting and devastating impacts on individuals and our communities -- from mental trauma, to being incarcerated and thrown into our judicial system, to economic impacts such as court and legal fees and loss of employment. We need a policing system that builds relationships with our communities, not tears them apart."Thies has a “record of targeting the black community,” and their findings expose a larger racial profiling problem within the Des Moines Police Department, the group said.