Watchdog groups are growing increasingly concerned by pedestrian stop data from the New York Police Department. Earlier this week, a federal monitor released a report accusing a controversial unit within the department of engaging in unlawful stop-and-frisk tactics. The anti-crime unit was disbanded under former Mayor Bill de Blasio in 2020, but revived by Mayor Eric Adams when he took office. And a broader set of data, recently obtained by the New York Civil Liberties Union and provided to POLITICO, shows the NYPD as a whole is stopping more New Yorkers than in years past — most of them Black and brown — and turning up fewer results. During the first quarter of 2023, police stopped 4,193 people — a 14 percent increase from the year prior and the highest tally since the fourth quarter of 2015. Out of the people who were stopped, 6 percent were white, a slightly lower percentage than during the height of stop and frisk, when the share was around 9 percent. The first quarter data also showed 70 percent of stops ended with neither a summons nor an arrest, an uptick from the previous quarter and pre-pandemic norm. “What is alarming about these new numbers is how quickly stops are reverting to what we saw years ago: marked racial profiling and rampant stopping of people who have done nothing wrong,” Christopher Dunn, legal director for the NYCLU, said in a statement. “And we know from 15 years of data that increasing stops does almost nothing to address crime; instead, it just poisons police-community relationships.” NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell said in response that more stops have helped the administration lower crime after coming into office facing double-digit spikes in several categories. Shootings and murders along with rapes, robberies and theft are down citywide. “We know that there’s still work to be done, but our officers are more engaged and focused than ever,” Sewell said in a statement. “They’ve increased the numbers of arrests by focusing on the drivers of crime, which has resulted in historically high gun arrests and the corresponding seizure of firearms off our city streets.” On Tuesday, Adams addressed the findings in the report and sought to focus on victims of gun violence. He noted the latest stats are an order of magnitude lower than the height of the stop-and-frisk era, when police conducted nearly 686,000 stops annually. Adams highlighted his own advocacy against the abuse of the practice when he was in the NYPD, and that 90 percent of both gun violence victims and people carrying illegal guns are Black and brown. “So when the monitor writes her report, we should also talk about how many of the almost 10,000 illegal guns we removed off our streets,” Adams said. IT’S WEDNESDAY. WHERE’S KATHY? In Albany and New York City, delivering remarks at the investiture of Court of Appeals Judge Caitlin Halligan and at opening night of the Tribeca Film Festival. WHERE’S ERIC? In New York City, holding a press briefing on the smoke from Canada's wildfires. Later, he will deliver remarks at the city’s inaugural “Commissioner for a Day” event and make an announcement at the Tribeca Film Festival with Robert De Niro.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment