NYPD Slows Down Law Enforcement, Increases Citizen Complaints

from the six-sigma-black-belting dept

As an autonomous collective, let’s try (together!) to do a little NYPD math.

Here’s the beginning of the word problem:

How many cops does it take to choke someone to death?

One.

Officer Daniel Pantaleo. Pantaleo choked Eric Garner to death while “effecting an arrest.” The presumed crime was unlicensed cigarette sales, but no one really knows for sure why Pantaleo decided to escalate the situation by using a forbidden tactic to subdue the non-resistant Garner. And we’ll never know anything else about it because Officer Pantaleo has dodged everything but a firing over his decision to perform an illegal chokehold in the course of detaining Eric Garner to death.

Rather than rally against this illegal use of force, the NYPD union — headed by awful human being Pat Lynch — has decided to demonize everyone who isn’t a Police Benevolent Association (PBA) member. Citizens who are still alive in the Big Apple don’t know how well they have it, being presided over by a bunch of bad apples who labor under the scrutiny of a powerless populace.

“We are urging all New York City police officers to proceed with the utmost caution in this new reality, in which they may be deemed ‘reckless’ just for doing their job,” Patrick Lynch, the longtime president of the Police Benevolent Association, said Monday after veteran Officer Daniel Pantaleo was fired.

“We will uphold our oath, but we cannot and will not do so by needlessly jeopardizing our careers or personal safety,” he added.

The NYPD continues to come under fire water. Minor summertime humiliations, coupled with the firing of a bad cop has prompted the NYPD’s union head to call for a work slowdown.

Another union joined the PBA in its stupidity. Invoking the nonexistent “Ferguson Effect,” the Sergeants Benevolent Association tweeted “PANTALEO EFFECT” because pressing the CAPS LOCK key makes everything true. The threat of cops not doing their jobs doubled as both unions presented a unified front of “not earning paychecks.”

Would there be a slowdown? The police commissioner said “no.” Because no police commissioner is ever going to say “yes,” even if there is a perceivable slowdown.

[Commissioner James] O’Neill said cops are still plugging away.

“It bothers me, but NYPD cops are the best in the country,” O’Neill told ABC 7 on Sunday. “They are going to keep this city safe and they have to, no matter what happens… They are not going to stop doing what they do.”

O’Neill has confidence in officers represented by two unions declaring zero confidence. He says his officers are professionals. The stats say otherwise.

Arrests dropped 27% between Aug. 19 — the day Pantaleo was fired — and Aug. 25 compared to the same period in 2018, with police making 3,508 busts compared to 4,827.

The number of criminal summonses issued fell nearly 29% over the same period, going from 1,655 to 1,181, the figures show.

There was no “organized” slowdown… according to NYPD officers. I can believe that. I can also believe dozens of like-minded cops decided to stop working as hard enforcing the law because they’ve decided to see themselves as victims when one of their own actually gets punished for killing someone. Departments that have managed to turn public opinion against them seem to be filled with officers that think the real problem here is a lack of grateful citizens.

Everyone on the record says nothing has changed. The unions agitating for a slowdown are contradicted (but not very believably) by NYPD officers saying they’re still as dedicated to the job as ever.

The numbers don’t back up the official statements. NYPD officers are doing less than ever, according to the arrest records cited above. But the strangest thing has happened. First, crime has not increased.

Second, the downturn in enforcement has somehow resulted in an increase in complaints against the police.

Complaints against New York City police officers spiked in 2019, rising nearly 20 percent from last year — and new statistics released by the city suggest that cops and civilians cooperating to resolve those cases are having more trouble doing so.

The number of total complaints filed with the Civilian Complaint Review Board — which handles allegations of discourtesy, offensive language, excessive use of force and abuse of authority by uniformed police officers — rose by nearly 1,000 in fiscal year 2019, from 4,392 complaints last year to 5,236 this year, according to statistics released Tuesday in the annual Mayor’s Management Report.

Do less. Screw up more.

“Doing more with less” is an admirable goal. Unfortunately, coupling fewer enforcement efforts with a higher complaint rate suggests the NYPD is doing less stuff right and more stuff wrong. I understand cops may feel like people are out to get them after they kill a citizen, but actual professionals would would act professionally.

Residents don’t want to be paying for increased violations of rights, but that’s what the NYPD is providing instead of protection and service. New York’s Finest are barely New York’s Adequate, if this is how officers are getting work done these days. Any time accountability rears its ugly head, police unions — and the officers they represent — are there to punish the public for demanding these professionals act like professionals.

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Comments on “NYPD Slows Down Law Enforcement, Increases Citizen Complaints”

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34 Comments
That One Guy (profile) says:

Re:

The number of total complaints filed with the Civilian Complaint Review Board — which handles allegations of discourtesy, offensive language, excessive use of force and abuse of authority by uniformed police officers — rose by nearly 1,000 in fiscal year 2019, from 4,392 complaints last year to 5,236 this year,

Now now, just because they aren’t going to put as much work in doesn’t mean they won’t still enjoy the ‘perks’ of having a badge, and as the numbers would seem to indicate they really enjoy those perks.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

I survived a choking by swat, but not before this dick forced the blood backwards into my brain. Another hit me with the but of his rifle at the same time a third already had me cuffed! I was surrendering on my kitchen floor because my psycho ex girlfriend concocted a lie with her girlfriend who said I pushed her down and injured her leg at fireworks I was not even at all because four days earlier I told her I was leaving her.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
That One Guy (profile) says:

If THAT is the 'best', then...

“It bothers me, but NYPD cops are the best in the country,” O’Neill told ABC 7 on Sunday.

On the one hand I’d be curious as to what standard and metrics you’d have to use for that to be an accurate statement, yet at the same time I’m not sure if I’d want to see that standard/metrics as it would probably be Cthulhu-levels of madness and twisted thinking, with the only thing more horrifying being the possibility that it was right and what that would mean about all the other cops in the country.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: If THAT is the 'best', then...

"…I’m not sure if I’d want to see that standard/metrics as it would probably be Cthulhu-levels of madness and twisted thinking, with the only thing more horrifying being the possibility that it was right and what that would mean about all the other cops in the country."

More like Stephen King levels, I’d say. In Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos NYPD-style statistics are only found among the inbred cannibal cultists making up the bulk of the antagonists of stories set in rural podunk burghs.

As for the standards applied and metrics used, consider the source. As long as you sweep police infractions under the rug as default what comes out WILL be a rather flatering portrayal of the boys in blue…

A Guy says:

Huh

I actually think it’s fine as long as the normal incarceration rate doesn’t go up during this latest "Whaaa why don’t we get complete impunity to kill?" hissy fit.

Are they actually trying to address the issues around the Garner death with better training/community relations program or is it just the hissy fit thing?

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: That sounds like a rhetorical question to me

Are they actually trying to address the issues around the Garner death with better training/community relations program or is it just the hissy fit thing?

Well, given the response from the union…

"We are urging all New York City police officers to proceed with the utmost caution in this new reality, in which they may be deemed ‘reckless’ just for doing their job," Patrick Lynch, the longtime president of the Police Benevolent Association, said Monday after veteran Officer Daniel Pantaleo was fired.

… I’d say it’s very clearly the latter, a case of them throwing a fit because one of their buddies actually faced even a sliver of consequences for choking a man to death.

bob says:

The stats say otherwise

Do they though?

No doubt there was a significant change in stats. But we can’t rule out other reasons why the arrest number is lower yet. The arrest stats are from 2018 while the complaints are showing an increase in 2019.

I think your theroy for the stats is the most likely scenario but there could be other reasons too.

Anonymous Coward says:

Ferguson effect

I don’t know that the Ferguson effect can be dismissed out of hand. There were some studies that showed a correlation in an increase in crime after the events in Ferguson in some major cities. Even the New York Times said "The idea that the police have retreated under siege will not go away. But even if it’s true, is it necessarily bad?" Even the NYT is willing to admit it may be true…

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Ferguson effect

Even if we take a leave of reason and assume uncritically that the Ferguson effect is true it would still be their own damn fault and more reason to hold them accountable. That would make them liabilities twice over as not only did they cause the unrest but their malingering. Which implies the proper course of action is to purge the old screw ups and replace them with ones who won’t cause unrest and then tantrum after facing the consequences of their own actions.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Fire every cop, start over

Guys serious normally I have problems with how NYPD operates And this place is filled with examples of it but I’m going to say it:

Use of force is not one of them. In fact considering it’s New York I’m surprised it’s that low I have been to small towns with worse. And I’m not some fool who expects zero complaints from something.

anonymouse says:

Re: Fire every cop, start over

It is not just the officers themselves you have to purge but the union itself and hit them with the book – quite literally some would suggest – for every crime they supported, facilitated or covered up.
If even 0.1% of that goes through, the whole union administration will be filling exclusive blocks at the commercial state prisons for centuries to come. Need to keep those prisons full.

As for the judges who gave them a pass or facilitated their shenanigans, review and thorough investigation, including finances, with the appropriate consequences. There are more than enough lawyers out there salivating for a sweet sweet bench position. Judges, like diapers, need to be checked up on a regular basis, and changed when required, and all for the same reason.

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