NYPD Often Fails To Document Reason For Stop-and-Frisk: Report

WNYC News | Feb 16, 2016

More than a quarter of stop-and-frisk reports examined by the NYPD's internal auditors found officers failed to document reasonable suspicion for the encounter. Yet supervisors generally signed off.

That was among the findings in a court-appointed monitor's semi-annual report.

Darius Charney, a senior staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights, which brought one of the stop-and-frisk lawsuits that led to the monitor's appointment,  says the findings show it will take more than new training to change the culture of the NYPD. Sergeants and other front-line supervisors need to help.

“Unless and until they buy into these changes and reinforce them at the station-house level, these changes are not going to take hold,” he said.

The NYPD did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The head of the Sergeants Benevolent Association, Ed Mullins, says the department is understaffed at the supervisor level, making it difficult to oversee all the new requirements.

He also called it “unacceptable” that the department isn’t moving more quickly to equip officers with body cameras. As part of the settlement, the NYPD had agreed to test out body cameras. But according to the monitor’s report, the department hasn’t picked a camera vendor yet and won’t get the cameras until late summer 2016 at the earliest.

“We’re talking about body cameras that are in other parts of the country being used by many, many police departments, and we cannot figure out what body camera to use in a two-year period? I tend to think that the department is avoiding the expense of the storage of the data, of the purchase of the cameras,” Mullins said. “In the end, the price is much greater, in the sense that there’s a lack of public confidence in the NYPD and those body cameras will help to instill the public confidence and will also help to clear police officers of alleged wrongdoing.”

“So this is something that’s pretty important and to sit back and not know what vendor you’re using is pretty inexcusable,” he said.

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