nypd

NYPD Use of Force Complaints

Below, a visualization of use of force complaints against NYPD officers to the Civilian Complaint Review Board in 2016, via:


Flashlight as club: 6

Flashlight as club Flashlight as club Flashlight as club Flashlight as club Flashlight as club Flashlight as club

Gun fired: 10

Gun fired Gun fired Gun fired Gun fired Gun fired Gun fired Gun fired Gun fired Gun fired Gun fired

Gun as club: 12

Gun as club Gun as club Gun as club Gun as club Gun as club Gun as club Gun as club Gun as club Gun as club Gun as club Gun as club Gun as club

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>  6 June 2017 | LINK | Filed in ,
Of 4,624 NYPD arrests for skipping subway fare in the first 43 days of 2017, 90.2% of arrestees were either black or Latino.
Twitter  23 May 2017 | LINK | Filed in ,
Retired NYPD officer accused of stealing bees finds 70,000 bees in his bedroom wall.
Twitter  12 May 2017 | LINK | Filed in ,

First Responders

First Responders

Funny to see police and firefighters making their case with street posters (and with such an ‘oppositional’ style) — considering its the police who enforce the vandalism laws. I guess the streets are it when you feel the government has abandoned you.

>  15 April 2007 | LINK | Filed in , ,

NYPD Trackback

Yesterday saw a hit to this entry in my referer log from ‘ombpxy.nyc.gov’ using a Google Blog search for ‘nypd.’ Is that the NYC Office of Management and Budget?

Given the petty things friends have been arrested for lately, I should probably be more paranoid than I am, but I think this is a good thing.

Not quite eDemocracy (and who knows how the information will be used) but it’s nice to know at least someone’s checking the comments and complaints box.

At least amongst bloggers.

>  28 October 2005 | LINK | Filed in , , ,

NYPD v. FDNY

One of the failures of the emergency response on September 11, 2001 was the inability of the New York Police Department and Fire Department to coordinate their activities.

So as a new policy for emergency response was debated, I’d assumed the battle for control in a disaster was one of power between two muscular (mostly) white, male institutions* (mostly) immune from external accountability. Or to put it to a kinder scenario, one of two long-standing, insular city bureaucracies unwilling to bend to the other.

Who would you want in control? One has experience with hazardous materials, the other with crowd control. One carries axes, the other guns.

So what does this have to do with design?

A friend who works for the city put it differently. She cast the dispute in terms of the departments’ relationships to the built environment:

The first response of the NYPD is to quarantine and preserve the evidence at the scene of the crime.

The response of FDNY is to enter forcefully and tear up the scene looking for survivors and hidden fire.

How exactly should they work together?


* As of 2005, FDNY was 92% white and only 28 of the department’s 8,700 firefighters were women. [source] As of 1999, NYPD was 67.4% white and in 2001, 17 percent of sworn personnel were women. [source, source]

>  23 October 2005 | LINK | Filed in ,