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Tag: new york police department

  • How The New York Times obtained 10,000 police disciplinary records

    In the immediate aftermath of George Floyd’s killing at the hands of Minneapolis police officers in 2020, New York State repealed a law that for decades kept the disciplinary records of its police officers secret.

    The New York Times and New York Focus, a nonprofit newsroom, have since gathered over 10,000 such files from around half of New York State’s nearly 500 law enforcement agencies. The documents, most of which are from the past 10 years, provide a window into how some officers at the state, county and local levels have avoided accountability in court despite relatively clear evidence that they broke the law.

    The files also highlight vast discrepancies in how departments have handled misconduct. Offenses considered fireable in some departments were handled with letters of reprimand in others. In some departments, officers who repeatedly committed misconduct were allowed to keep their jobs; in others, officers were fired or forced to resign.

    Thousands of officers who committed misconduct remain on the job today.

    While major New York news outlets have written about the records from larger agencies, including the New York Police Department, which began releasing its files in 2021, those from the State Police and local departments have received less scrutiny.

    The New York Times and New York Focus are examining cases and patterns from these records. The first article in our series, published Tuesday, explored cases of officers who drove drunk.

    What type of misconduct is included in these files?

    Infractions vary from mundane violations of department policy, such as arriving late to work or failing to register for a vacation day, to serious offenses such as using excessive force, inappropriate behavior and abuse of authority.

    Unlike some other states, New York has no statewide requirement mandating that outside agencies such as district attorneys’ offices or the state’s attorney general investigate allegations of misconduct. Though the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services maintains a public list of officers decertified for misconduct since 2016, the list tracks only officers who faced termination or resigned.

    These cases are rare, the files show, and in almost all other instances, allegations of misconduct were internally investigated by departments and then placed in personnel files and disciplinary logs.

    Departments have counseled, reprimanded, censured, suspended and even occasionally demoted their officers behind closed doors.

    How do departments conduct internal investigations?

    The files indicate that there are no statewide standards. Some departments conduct lengthy investigations and create hundreds of pages of files, while others confine the findings of disciplinary investigations to a few sentences on a single form.

    Some departments keep transcripts of disciplinary interviews with officers accused of misconduct; others do not document if any such interviews occur.

    Records also show that departments followed different practices when citizens filed complaints saying that officers had committed misconduct. In some departments, citizens were interviewed and notified of the outcome of cases. In others, citizens were asked to fill out forms describing their allegations but were never notified of the outcomes.

    Disciplinary investigations often occurred weeks or months after an incident. Information from disciplinary investigations is protected, meaning it cannot be used against officers in court.

    Why did it take years to obtain these files?

    Shortly after the law, known as 50-a, was repealed, reporters and civil rights groups filed requests for records with various police agencies. The New York Civil Liberties Union and the Legal Aid Society sued a number of large agencies who refused to release their records, including the New York Police Department, the Rochester Police Department and the New York State Police.

    Days after the law’s repeal, the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle became one of the first news outlets to request records from all of the state’s police departments. For this series, The New York Times and New York Focus began requesting these records in June 2023.

    More: Search D&C’s New York police disciplinary records database

    In September 2024, the state modified records laws to require agencies to notify current and former employees before the release of personnel records. Civil rights groups criticized the change, noting that departments may not have contact information for former officers and that already burdened records officers would now be forced to send hundreds of communications before fulfilling some basic requests.

    The change, along with staffing shortages in several departments, has led to lengthy delays in fulfilling some requests.

    Who provided files as part of this investigation?

    In addition to requesting files directly from police departments, The New York Times and New York Focus spent the past two years requesting records from county district attorneys’ offices. Many of these offices collected records to comply with the state’s expanded discovery laws, and in some cases, district attorneys’ offices provided records even when local departments denied they existed.

    In a number of instances, these requests uncovered records from smaller agencies — village and town police departments, and county sheriff’s offices — that were known to prosecutors but largely overlooked across the state.

    The New York Times and New York Focus filed more than 800 records requests over the past two years. Reporters for New York Focus have filed dozens of administrative appeals — the first step in challenging the denial of a request — and, in three instances, filed lawsuits to further challenge the failure of departments to provide the records. The New York Times has sued the Erie County Sheriff’s Office to force the disclosure of over a decade of misconduct records.

    Overall, our investigation has so far obtained records regarding 235 departments collectively containing over 8,000 sworn officers, according to state data.

    Why focus on the State Police?

    This investigation also focuses on the New York State Police, which, with over 5,000 sworn officers, is the second-biggest law enforcement agency in the state, behind the New York Police Department. The agency has yet to make its body of misconduct files public.

    Our reporting found that the agency routinely provided county district attorneys’ offices bulk access to records about current officers, sometimes providing files via compact disc. The New York Times and New York Focus uncovered thousands of the department’s records related to 1,200 officers in seven of the agency’s 11 divisions. (Records from one division, obtained from a district attorney’s office, were first reported by WKBW-TV in Buffalo.)

    New York Focus has worked with MuckRock, a nonprofit news organization focused on requesting and sharing public records, to make a body of records related to hundreds of State Police officers public, and they plan to continue making more records available to the public.

    If you’re interested in articles in this series, sign up for Staying Focused, a newsletter by New York Focus.Sammy Sussman is an investigative reporter who writes about police and policing in New York State as part of The New York Times’s Local Investigations Fellowship.

    This article originally appeared on Rochester Democrat and Chronicle: How The New York Times obtained 10,000 police disciplinary records

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  • Rare 4.8-magnitude earthquake leaves little damage after rattling Northeast

    Rare 4.8-magnitude earthquake leaves little damage after rattling Northeast

    New York (CNN) — A 4.8 magnitude earthquake rattled buildings across parts of the Northeast Friday morning, according to the US Geological Survey, with tremors felt from Washington, DC to New York City to Maine.

    It was the third largest earthquake recorded in the area in the last five decades and the strongest in New Jersey in more than 240 years, the USGS said. The rare quake was felt by millions of people across hundreds of miles, disrupting work and school life and jolting nerves momentarily before an early spring day seemed to return to normal.

    In a region unaccustomed to earthquakes, stunned residents across large swaths of the Northeast described initially thinking of a passing tractor trailer or freight train before realizing it was something more. With authorities reporting little or no damage, and minimal travel disruptions, people soon resumed their everyday lives.

    Ray Sanchez, Alaa Elassar and CNN

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  • Diddy Is Subject Of Secret NYPD Investigation – Are They Looking For MORE Alleged Sexual Assault Survivors? – Perez Hilton

    Diddy Is Subject Of Secret NYPD Investigation – Are They Looking For MORE Alleged Sexual Assault Survivors? – Perez Hilton

    [Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]

    It would seem Cassie Ventura is just the start of Sean “Diddy” Combs‘ problems.

    As we covered, the singer, who dated the rapper for a decade until 2018, filed a bombshell lawsuit on Thursday (obtained by The New York Times and other outlets), in which she claimed she’d been trapped in a “cycle of abuse, violence and sex trafficking” at the hands of the music mogul. The allegations are truly gruesome and include alleged rape, among other things.

    While Diddy’s rep was quick to deny the accusations made by his ex-girlfriend — claiming she was really just out for money — it would appear there’s more legal trouble for the Last Night artist.

    According to TMZ on Thursday night, the 54-year-old artist is apparently the subject of a secret New York Police Department criminal investigation. Law enforcement sources told them there is an open case at the department with the name “Sean Combs” on it. It’s unclear if Cassie or someone else made the criminal complaint, and details are incredibly hard to find since the active case file has been “locked” — meaning it’s a super sensitive investigation and access has been restricted.

    Related: Will Smith Believes He’s ‘Target Of A Smear Campaign’ Amid Rumors

    When pressed further about the investigation, the NYPD suggested it has tons of similarities to Cassie’s lawsuit, saying in a statement:

    “The NYPD takes sexual assault and rape cases extremely seriously, and urges anyone who has been a victim to file a police report so we can perform a comprehensive investigation, and offer support and services to survivors.”

    Whoa. It sure sounds like they are actively looking for other alleged victims of sexual assault. Maybe now that the 37-year-old model has gone public with her allegations, other alleged victims of the Grammy winner will speak out?

    Interestingly, TMZ went ahead and contacted other jurisdictions Cassie mentioned in her suit, like Miami, Beverly Hills, and Los Angeles. They all gave the same reply: no police report has been filed about Cassie or Diddy, and there’s no investigation. That said, back in 2016, per the outlet, Beverly Hills cops were called to the scene of a breakup argument between the couple. A domestic incident report was taken but there was never any legal action started.

    Because some of her accusations could rise to a federal crime, the outlet even checked with federal law enforcement sources, including the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Southern District of NY and the FBI, both of which turned up nothing. So for now, it would seem Diddy’s only been pulled into the one NYC case (plus Cassie’s filing).

    Diddy’s lawyer is still clapping back at the lawsuit, though, telling the outlet that most of Cassie’s claims would be barred from criminal prosecution based on the statute of limitations. Her rape claim could still be pursued in California, if she filed a complaint in the state — which she hasn’t so far. But this might not be entirely true…

    The singer-songwriter’s case is being brought under the Adult Survivors Act, a law in New York that allows sexual abuse victims to file civil suits even after the expiration of the statute of limitations. Per the NYT, the one-year window to bring cases under this law ends next week, and Cassie was very open that’s why they filed the suit in the nick of time, saying alongside the suit:

    “After years in silence and darkness, I am finally ready to tell my story, and to speak up on behalf of myself and for the benefit of other women who face violence and abuse in their relationships. With the expiration of New York’s Adult Survivors Act fast approaching, it became clear that this was an opportunity to speak up about the trauma I have experienced and that I will be recovering from for the rest of my life.”

    So, Diddy’s not getting out of this that easily. Thoughts, Perezcious readers? Let us know (below)…

    If you or someone you know has experienced sexual violence and would like to learn more about resources, consider checking out https://www.rainn.org/resources

    [Image via WENN & Jimmy Kimmel Live/YouTube]

    Perez Hilton

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  • Gunman shoots three people in Queens, NYPD says | CNN

    Gunman shoots three people in Queens, NYPD says | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    New York police are investigating a string of shootings in Queens that left at least three people injured Saturday morning, authorities say.

    Three people were shot at different locations within a 2-mile radius in Jamaica, a neighborhood in the Queens borough, a New York Police Department spokesperson told CNN.

    The shootings started at around 11:30 a.m. ET and the three separate incidents took place within 20 minutes of each other, police said.

    Police said all three victims were men.

    Authorities did not release any information about a suspect but are holding a news conference at 4:30 p.m. ET about the shootings.

    This is a developing story and will be updated.

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  • Man accused of attacking NYPD officers with machete wanted ‘to kill people and carry out jihad,’ prosecutors say | CNN

    Man accused of attacking NYPD officers with machete wanted ‘to kill people and carry out jihad,’ prosecutors say | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Trevor Bickford, the 19-year-old accused of attacking New York Police Department officers with a machete on New Year’s Eve, traveled to the city “in order to kill people and carry out jihad,” prosecutors say.

    Bickford allegedly went to the Times Square checkpoint just after 10 p.m., authorities have said. At the security area, he allegedly pulled out a machete, struck one officer with the blade and another officer in the head with the handle, and then swung the blade at a third officer, who shot Bickford in the shoulder, according to law enforcement sources and the NYPD.

    The three injured NYPD officers were hospitalized in stable condition and have been released, the department said.

    Speaking at Bickford’s arraignment Wednesday, prosecutors said the suspect tried to grab a gun from an officer during the attack, but couldn’t get it out of the holster.

    “The defendant admitted that he purposefully waited until he saw a moment when the officer was isolated and not near any civilian when he could attack him,” prosecutor Lucy Nicholas said in court.

    Bickford, according to a criminal complaint, told authorities during his interview that he said “(Allahu) Akbar” before he walked up and hit the officer over the head with the weapon.

    The suspect also allegedly said that all government officials were his target because in his mind, they “cannot be proper Muslims because the United States government supports Israel,” prosecutors said.

    Bickford appeared via video feed from his hospital bed at Bellevue Hospital, where sources previously said he was being treated for the gunshot wound.

    He was formally charged with three counts of attempted murder in the first degree, one count of assault in the first degree, two counts of attempted assault in the first degree and three counts of assault in the second degree.

    Bickford was remanded back into custody. No plea was entered.

    Rosemary Vassallo-Vellucci, Bickford’s attorney with the Legal Aid Society, said her client is “presumed innocent” and argued he should be released on his own recognizance, highlighting his age, that he’s been in custody for more than 24 hours and has no arrest record.

    Vassallo-Vellucci also mentioned the suspect’s alleged community ties, telling the judge he was living with his family in Maine and most recently worked at a golf course.

    The Legal Aid Society said the suspect “has no prior contact with the criminal legal system.” The group said it had recently received details of the case from the District Attorney’s office and will have “more to say … after a thorough review and investigation.”

    “For now, we ask the public to refrain from drawing hasty conclusions and to respect the privacy of our client’s family,” the group added.

    Bickford had been on the FBI’s radar even before the attack, and was interviewed by federal agents in Maine last month after he said he wanted to travel overseas to help fellow Muslims and was willing to die for his religion, multiple law enforcement sources previously said.

    Bickford’s mother and grandmother became concerned about his desire to travel to Afghanistan to join the Taliban and reported this to the Wells, Maine, police department on December 10, the sources said.

    When the FBI opened its wider investigation they also placed him on a terrorist watch list, according to sources.

    But because the Taliban is not designated a foreign terrorist entity, planning to travel to Afghanistan to join the group does not constitute the federal crime of “attempted material support of a terrorist group.”

    Multiple law enforcement sources told CNN that Bickford traveled to New York via Amtrak, so those travels would not have tripped any watch list databases.

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  • Suspect in New Year’s Eve machete attack on police near New York’s Times Square expressed desire in diary to join Taliban, die a martyr, sources say | CNN

    Suspect in New Year’s Eve machete attack on police near New York’s Times Square expressed desire in diary to join Taliban, die a martyr, sources say | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    The 19-year-old being held by New York City police as the suspect in a New Year’s Eve machete attack against three police officers just outside a Times Square security screening zone carried a handwritten diary that expressed his desire to join the Taliban in Afghanistan and die as a martyr, law enforcement sources said.

    Trevor Bickford remains in custody and under police guard at Bellevue Hospital, where he is being treated for a gunshot wound to the shoulder sustained during the attack, sources said.

    The three officers – injured at one of New York’s most high-profile events just a day after their department had warned of an “ISIS-Aligned” video calling for “Lone Offender Attacks” – have all been treated and released, according to the New York Police Department.

    On Sunday, federal authorities from the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, and the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office were discussing whether to charge Bickford federally or under state law or both in relation to the attack, the sources said.

    The suspect has not been charged, and it is unclear whether he has an attorney. The US Attorney’s office declined to comment. CNN has reached out to the Manhattan DA’s office for comment.

    Investigators believe Bickford arrived Thursday in New York and checked into a hotel on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, the sources said. Then Saturday, he went just after 10 p.m. to the Times Square checkpoint at West 52nd Street and 8th Avenue where officers would check bags for weapons or suspicious items, NYPD Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell and police said.

    Bickford pulled out a machete, striking one officer with the blade and another officer in the head with the handle before swinging the blade at a third officer, who then shot him in the shoulder, according to the sources and the NYPD.

    Investigators on Sunday were seeking search warrants for the suspect’s phone and online activities to determine if he had been viewing violent extremist propaganda, law enforcement sources said.

    The NYPD had sent a bulletin Friday to law enforcement partners across the country titled, “ISIS-Aligned Media Unit Releases Video Ahead of New Year’s Eve, Demanding Lone Offender Attacks,” according to the sources. The video, being circulated in online chat rooms, shows “selected video clips, suggesting various means of attack, including explosives, handguns, knives, and toxins,” according to the bulletin, obtained by CNN.

    It’s not clear if the checkpoint attack suspect has viewed terrorist propaganda. The tactics appear to follow a familiar model of prior attacks against New York City by lone offenders.

    If deemed a terrorist attack, it would be the first by a suspected terrorist on the event in Times Square, one of the world’s most watched New Year’s Eve celebrations.

    Bickford is from Wells, Maine, according to sources, a beach town with a population of just over 11,000 people.

    Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated when the NYPD sent a bulletin about a video released by ISIS-aligned media. It was Friday.

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  • A man in New York has been arrested and charged with hate crime after Jewish father and son were targeted in BB gun shooting, official says | CNN

    A man in New York has been arrested and charged with hate crime after Jewish father and son were targeted in BB gun shooting, official says | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Police in New York have arrested a man accused of firing a BB gun at a Jewish father and son who were out grocery shopping, a law enforcement official told CNN.

    The alleged shooter, a 25-year-old man, is charged with assault as a hate crime, endangering the welfare of a child, reckless endangerment and assault, according to the official.

    The BB gun shooter was driving on a main thoroughfare on Staten Island Sunday afternoon when he spotted the 32-year-old father and his 7-year-old son shopping in front of a Kosher grocery store wearing yarmulkes, the official said.

    That is when the assailant allegedly opened fire, striking the boy in the right ear and the father in the chest, the official said.

    He then sped off in a Black Ford Mustang that did not have a license plate, the official said.

    Paramedics arrived at the scene a short time later and treated the pair for their injuries at the scene, the official said.

    In a Tuesday news conference, Staten Island District Attorney Michael McMahon said his office will continue working with police to bring justice to the victims.

    “We want our Jewish brothers and sisters to know in this instance that we stand with them just as we do with anyone who is a victim of a hate crime for any reason whatsoever,” McMahon told reporters on Tuesday.

    New York Mayor Eric Adams, speaking at the same news conference, said: “We are not going to allow hate to run our city.”

    The mayor added that New York has the largest Jewish population outside of Israel and that hate crimes have been on the rise across the country.

    “We need to stop what’s happening on social media, we need to stop the spreading of this hate, we need to combat it in a very real way,” Adams said.

    The alleged hate crime is the latest in a string of incidents in the city.

    The New York Police Department has seen an increase in overall hate crimes, led by a sharp increase in anti-Semitic incidents for the month of November. The NYPD reported 45 incidents in November, which is up from 20 crimes reported on November 2021, according to NYPD statistics.

    The increase in anti-Semitic incidents comes as the NYPD, along with other federal law enforcement agencies, thwarted a potential attack on a New York area synagogue last month, arresting and arraigning two men in connection with online threats.

    NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell said investigators from the FBI/NYPD Joint Terrorism Task Force and the NYPD Counterterrorism and Intelligence Bureau, in collaboration with law enforcement partners, uncovered “a developing threat to the Jewish community.”

    Authorities said they seized a number of weapons from the pair, who were also in possession of a swastika arm patch, according to a statement from Manhattan’s district attorney.

    New York state leads the nation in anti-Semitic incidents, with at least 416 reported in 2021, including at least 51 assaults – the highest number ever recorded by the Anti-Defamation League in New York. There were 12 assaults reported in 2020, the ADL said in an audit last month.

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  • Good Samaritan and NYPD officers rescue man from subway tracks moments before train arrives | CNN

    Good Samaritan and NYPD officers rescue man from subway tracks moments before train arrives | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    A good Samaritan, who was at the right place at the right time, and a team of New York City officers who rushed on scene rescued a man who fell on the subway tracks just seconds before an incoming train arrived, police said.

    Two officers from the NYPD’s 25th Precinct were in the middle of a platform inspection Thursday evening on the 6 line at the East 116 Street and Lexington Avenue subway station when commuters informed them a man had fallen on the train tracks of another platform, the department told CNN in a statement.

    Bodycam video posted by New York Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell shows the officers rushing to the man’s aid. The clip shows another person already at the man’s side on the tracks when officers arrive. With the good Samaritan’s help, the officers were able to move the man from the tracks and onto the platform, the NYPD said.

    The bodycam video shows the rescue – and the oncoming train that arrived just moments after the man was removed from the tracks.

    A third officer who arrived “was able to use his prior medical training to render aid to the aided male while awaiting the response of medical personnel,” the NYPD said.

    EMS responded and took the man to a local hospital in stable condition, with minor injuries to his hand and back, police said. No other injuries were reported.

    “The heroics of NY’s Finest always amazes me,” Sewell said in a Twitter statement. “For the @NYPD25Pct officers who rescued a man from an oncoming train after he accidentally fell on the subway tracks yesterday in Manhattan — the courage is second nature.”

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  • 4 dead, including 10-month-old baby girl, in Bronx house fire, NYPD says | CNN

    4 dead, including 10-month-old baby girl, in Bronx house fire, NYPD says | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    Four people, including a 10-month-old baby girl, were killed in a fire at a home in the Bronx early Sunday morning, the New York Police Department said.

    New York Fire Department Assistant Chief Kevin Brennan said firefighters immediately began removing victims from the building after responding to a report of a fire at the residence just after 6 a.m ET.

    Two boys, aged 10 and 12, were declared dead at the scene by emergency service workers. The baby girl and a 22-year-old man were rushed to a nearby hospital where they were later pronounced dead, according to the NYPD

    Police have not publicly released the identities of those killed and the cause of the fire, which will be determined by the fire marshal, is under investigation, according to the NYPD.

    A 21-year-old woman and a 41-year-old man were seriously injured and are currently being treated at an area hospital, police said.

    Several firefighters also suffered minor injuries, the FDNY said.

    Due to the “heavy fire” on the first and second floor, the incident was upgraded to a second-alarm fire, prompting the response of more than 100 firefighters and EMS personnel, according to the FDNY.

    The fire comes months after New York Mayor Eric Adams signed an executive order in March on fire safety, after a separate fatal Bronx apartment building fire left 17 people dead in one of the deadliest fires in the city’s history.

    The executive order is designed to enhance fire safety enforcement, outreach efforts to educate New Yorkers, and identify safety violations, Adams announced in a news release at the time.

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