Monday, January 25, 2021

NEW POLICE REFORMS

 

  The new MOU agreement applies to all discipline cases and confirms that the NYPD and CCRB will use the penalty guidelines to guide officer penalties for misconduct. It details the following reforms:

  • Commits CCRB and NYPD  to follow the guidelines in all cases to accomplish the mutual goal of consistent and fair discipline recommendations.
  • Requires a public, transparent memo by PD for all departures from the Discipline Matrix and CCRB recommendations.
  • Empowers CCRB by ensuring access to officer employment history for any substantiated allegations.

 

The Matrix, released earlier this month, outlines presumptive penalties for instances of officer misconduct, which may be adjusted up or down in a set window based on aggravating and mitigating factors. Penalties escalate with repeated offenses. The reforms aim to increase fairness in the disciplinary system, and increase trust in the system among both members of the NYPD and the public, by improving: 

  • Accountability with penalties that are fair and proportional to the misconduct 
  • Transparency, so that both members of service and the community know what discipline to expect when an officer breaks the rules. 
  • Consistency, so similar actions are treated similarly, and there is greater concurrence between the CCRB recommendations and NYPD decisions on penalties.

 

The discipline reforms are part of Mayor de Blasio’s plan to fulfill the Obama Foundation Reimagining Policing Pledge. The pledge, in partnership with the My Brother’s Keeper Alliance, calls for Mayors to review, engage, report and reform. That multi-step process allowed the City to bring true community input into the formation of the discipline guidelines. 

 

Beginning with the end of the stop-and-frisk era, the New York Police Department has continued to evolve, embarking on over seven years of reforms.  The City has worked to develop policies that focus on making the lives of both residents and their communities, as well as those of officers, safer.  

  

These reforms have led to tangible results. Between 2013 and 2019: 

  • Overall arrests fell 45%; misdemeanor arrests alone were more than cut in half 
  • Criminal summonses plummeted by 80%, from nearly 425,000 in 2013 to less than 86,000 in 2019. 
  • Stop-and-frisk encounters were down 93%, to less than 14,000 in 2019. 

 

As part of the larger New York State Police Reform and Reinvention Collaborative, the City undertook an extensive community engagement process last fall to develop a concrete set of additional, new reforms that will allow police to better serve residents. After receiving extensive feedback from City officials, the New York City Police Department, justice advocates, and other stakeholders, the City will publish its initial set of new reforms in the coming weeks for public comment before bringing to the City Council for ratification on or before April 1st. 

 

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