If you're young and poor but wearing designer clothes, Rotterdam police are out to get you. 

Police in the Dutch city will soon begin a pilot program targeting youths believed to be wearing clothes they cannot afford legally, from Rolex watches to Gucci jackets. 

“We know they have clothes that are too expensive to wear with the money they get,” a Rotterdam police spokesperson said. “We’re going to look at how they get those clothes, where did they buy them, from where the money came that they buy them.”

Police say they will confiscate items of clothing if youths cannot provide a clear explanation for how they paid for them. 

"We'll undress them in the street," Rotterdam police chief Frank Paauw told De Telegraaf.

Although the program has yet to begin, it has already come under fire. Rotterdam's ombudsman warned that it was a "slippery slope" towards racial profiling by police officers, with minorities more readily targeted by officers. 

Others say the program will just increase resentment towards police in some communities. 

"Most young people can’t prove on the spot how they got their clothes. A measure like this is just going to cause more resentment between the community and the police," a 19-year-old local told Vice.  

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