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Wikipedia

Civilian Complaint Review Board

The NYC Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB) is the oversight agency of the New York City Police Department (NYPD), the largest police force in the United States. A board of the Government of New York City, the CCRB is tasked with investigating, mediating and prosecuting complaints of misconduct on the part of the NYPD.[1][2][3] Its regulations are compiled in Title 38-A[4] of the New York City Rules.

Civilian Complaint Review Board
Board overview
JurisdictionNew York City
Headquarters100 Church Street,
Manhattan, NY 10017
Board executives
  • Frederick Davie, chairperson
  • Jonathan Darche, executive director
Key document
Websitenyc.gov/ccrb

Structure

The CCRB exists today as a fully independent civil department, staffed with 142 civilian investigators and about a dozen miscellaneous employees. Additionally, three officers from the NYPD's Monitoring and Analysis Section of the Department Advocate's Office work with the CCRB at their office at 100 Church Street, whose role is to provide the Investigators with access to certain restricted NYPD documentation.

The agency is headed by the 15 member board, 5 appointed by the city council, 5 by the mayor, 1 by the public advocate, 3 designated by the Police Commissioner, and finally, the Chair, jointly appointed by the speaker and the mayor; none may be current public employees. Rev. Frederick Davie served as Chair until January 2022, at which point Arva Rice was appointed Interim Chair. Jonathan Darche, after having served as Interim Executive Director and Chief Prosecutor, was appointed Executive Director in May 2017.[5]

The agency is divided into several divisions, the largest being the Investigations Division. The Investigations Division is headed by two chiefs of investigations who oversee 16 investigative squads.

The agency also contains an Administrative Division, which includes Human Resources, Information Management Unit and the Case Management Unit (which stores all records of past cases), among others, which is led by the deputy executive director of administration.[6] There are then four other directorships, including the new "Research and Strategic Initiatives Director", as well as the Mediation Unit Director. There is also legal counsel. These units complement and serve the Investigations Unit, which acts as the main focal point of the Agency.[6]

Handling complaints

Investigation

Jurisdiction

Each complaint the agency receives is assessed by one of the investigative managers on a daily rotating basis and has its merits checked for proper jurisdiction. Jurisdiction is first assessed by type of allegations. Only allegations that fall under the jurisdiction of the CCRB are investigated by the CCRB. They include Force (whether use of force was justified), Abuse of Authority[7] (which includes unauthorized searches and seizures, inappropriate entry onto property, refusal to provide name and shield number, etc.), Discourtesy (using foul language, acting in a rude and unprofessional manner, flashing rude and offensive gestures, etc.) and Offensive Language, which is more specific than Discourtesy, and includes slurs based on race, religion, ethnicity, sex, gender, and LGBTQ status.[2] Jurisdiction is also determined by the officers involved. As many types of officers work in the City of New York (such as the MTA Police, the Port Authority Police and the New York State Police), complainants encounter all of these officers in their day-to-day lives. Only incidents involving members of the NYPD are investigated by the CCRB. Cases that do not fall within the CCRB's jurisdiction are then forwarded to the respective jurisdiction (usually, the NYPD Internal Affairs Bureau, the Office of the Chief of Department or the respective organization in question, such as another police department).[8]

Civilian contact

The cases are then assigned to one of 142 civilian investigators, who are members of one of 16 squads, who then attempts to contact the civilian who initially complained. After initial assignment, there are four dispositions that result only from a full investigation: Substantiated, Unsubstantiated, Exonerated, and Unfounded. There are five other "miscellaneous", or inconclusive dispositions: Complainant Uncooperative, Complainant Unavailable, Officer Unidentified, Miscellaneous (i.e. the MOS has retired since the incident occurred) and Mediated.[9] If contact with the civilian complainant is not achieved after five contact attempts by telephone and two letters by mail, and the contact information is confirmed the case is automatically closed with a disposition of, "Complainant Uncooperative". If the civilian cannot be located after a diligent search and/or did not provide accurate or correct contact information, the case is closed as "Complainant Unavailable". These types of cases are not considered "full investigations", but are tallied together with the total number of complaints for statistical purposes.[citation needed]

If the civilian is contacted, a statement is initially taken over the phone by the investigator to further ensure proper jurisdiction and to gain a basic understanding of the broad facts within the complaint. An in-person interview is then scheduled at the CCRB's office at 100 Church Street, at which point, the investigator meets with the civilian and any witnesses s/he brings with them that were present at the time of the incident and interviews each person separately. The investigator then transcribes the interview, submits a "case plan" to one of their three supervisors (each team having an Assistant Supervising Investigator, a Supervising Investigator and an Investigative Manager).[9]

Officer contact

Once the case plan is approved, the investigator must then begin their investigation, which involves identifying all subject and witness officers involved. If the investigator fails to identify the officers, the case is closed as "Officers Unidentified". Once the officers are identified, which is done by obtaining a variety of NYPD documents, including SPRINTS/911 tapes to identify which officer(s) responded to the call in question, roll calls from specific commands, to see which officers were working in the area of question during the time of the incident, Command Logs from respective commands, to determine if the incident was logged and which officer logged it, Memo Books of Officers or DD5s of Detectives, to search for possible notes about the incident, along with arrest records, court records, photographs, Complaint Reports, Accident Reports, AIDED reports, Stop, Question and Possibly Frisk Reports (UF-250s), to name only a few.[9]

Once the officer is identified, s/he is then scheduled to give a statement to the investigator and must attend, according to Patrol Guide 211.13. An officer failing to appear or lying to an investigator is, in itself, a violation that could result in severe discipline up to and including suspension and possibly termination. Each officer and their partner at the time, along with any witness officers are interviewed and questioned about the incident by the investigator. This interview is also taped and transcribed, and based upon the officer's testimony, further information is obtained by the investigator, including subpoenaed medical records, further department documentation, field canvasses and their resulting information, and so on.[9]

Mediation

Mediation is an option for certain complaints provided the officer does not have an extensive CCRB or NYPD disciplinary history, there was no arrest made and severe force or abuse of authority were not involved. In mediation, the officer and civilian both voluntarily bypass the investigative process and meet each other one-on-one with a third-party mediator to discuss the incident. This results in no disciplinary action being taken against the officer and often results in a more satisfied civilian as an outcome.[10]

Recommendation

After all the civilians and members of service are interviewed and all possible relevant documentation has been received and analyzed, the investigator then collects any relevant case law and begins their "recommendation", which is their report, averaging about 10-12 pages, on the case in question. The report is broken down into relatively strict (each team has their own "style", dictated by the Team Managers and Supervisors, and even then, can and often does vary between internal team supervision), template of investigative analysis. The report includes a summary of all complaints made, an explanation of the circumstances of the case, a summation of the statements by the officers and civilians, a credibility assessment of the officers and the civilians (at which point, the investigator is supposed to weigh in criminal history of civilians and CCRB history of officers, as well as inconsistencies between accounts, motivation of the civilian and the overall possibility of an incident occurring), a summation of criminal and CCRB history of the civilians and officers respectively and finally a recommendation for disposition on each complaint.

A recommendation for disposition on each complaint breaks down into four main categories (beyond the technical variants mentioned in part earlier): Substantiated, meaning the officer committed the act in question and it consisted of misconduct; Unsubstantiated, meaning that there is not a preponderance of evidence, either way, to determine if the incident occurred as described and/or the incident consisted of misconduct; Exonerated meaning that the incident occurred but did not consist of misconduct, either because the officers actions were justified or did not actually consist of misconduct; Unfounded meaning that the incident did not occur as described and no misconduct occurred.[8]

Board action

The recommendations are then reviewed by at least two team level supervisors who then approve or instruct the investigator to "correct" their findings, and upon approval submit the case to the Board. Once the Board receives the complaint, either as a full board, or, more likely, as a three-member sub-unit, they meet to discuss the case and then vote on the recommendations of the investigator.

Public meetings are held to communicate recent statistics and "snapshots", of some of the more straightforward cases are published as examples for the public's understanding and announced at the meeting.[11][12]

Prosecution

Historically, when the board substantiated a complaint and found that an officer committed misconduct, it forwarded the case to the New York City Police Department (NYPD), in most cases with a disciplinary recommendation. While the CCRB has the authority to investigate complaints and to determine if misconduct occurred, under the law only the police commissioner has the authority to impose discipline and decide the appropriate penalty.[13]

However, on April 2, 2012, the NYPD and the CCRB signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) which conferred on the CCRB the power to prosecute substantiated cases where the board recommended "charges and specifications," the most serious discipline.[14]

As a result, the CCRB's Administrative Prosecution Unit (APU) now prosecutes nearly all the cases where the Board recommended the subject officer receive charges and specifications, with limited exceptions. The trials are almost always held at the police department, before an administrative law judge, either the Deputy Commissioner for Trials or an Assistant Deputy Commissioner of Trials. If an officer is found guilty, the penalty can be a warning and admonishment, loss of vacation days, suspension without pay, dismissal probation, or termination from the NYPD. The police commissioner retains the authority to decide whether the discipline is imposed, what level of discipline is imposed, and the penalty imposed.[13]

Number of complaints

In 2006, the CCRB received 7,669 complaints from civilians, and closed 7,399 cases, of which 2,680 were full investigations (meaning that the civilian participated, the officer(s) were identified and an investigation was closed after a full investigation).[15] Approximately 6% of the full investigations resulted in a Substantiated disposition.[8] 262 cases were mediated.

The CCRB remains the only completely civilian oversight of the New York Police Department in the city, and is complemented by the NYPD's Internal Affairs Bureau, and the Mayor's Task Force on Police Corruption, each charged with investigating different types of allegations. The CCRB and its acronym FADO (for the first letter of the allegations it investigates) has permeated all ranks of the NYPD and is part of all officers' training at the Police Academy. Additionally, the number of complaints has risen steadily since 2002 [8] as the 311 system was implemented and public awareness of the program grew.

History

Over the years, NYPD officers have come under public scrutiny with allegations of corruption, brutality, excessive use of force, and poor firearm discipline.[16] Individual incidents have tended to receive more publicity; a portion of which have been substantiated while others have not (e.g. Lt. Charles Becker, the only NYPD officer sentenced to death by electric chair). Citizens have wanted participation in reviewing complaints against the police as early as the Progressive Era.[3] However, little progress was achieved in the first half of the twentieth century. When citizens do make a complaint, they may face reprisal from the police. Citizens might be arrested, accused of falsifying charges against them, and there was no oversight to substantiate any complaints or accusations of police misconduct.[3]

During 1953, the Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB) was created.[17][18][19] In 1950, eighteen organizations formed the "Permanent Coordination Committee on Police and Minority Groups" to lobby the city to address overall police misconduct and "police misconduct in their relations with Puerto Ricans and Negros specifically."[17][2] The NYPD established the CCRB in response to the coalition's demands. A committee of three deputy police commissioners was tasked to investigate into civilian complaints. The board was given greater authority under Mayor Robert Wagner in 1955, but the board remained governed within the NYPD; police officers investigated into the complaints and the deputy commissioners decided upon recommendation of discipline based on the investigation. The CCRB remained under NYPD jurisdiction without civilian oversight.[17][2]

In 1965, Mayor John Lindsay appointed former federal judge Lawrence E. Walsh to investigate and consult with the NYPD to make improvements to the department.[17][2] He recommended that members of the general public, non-police officers, be given substantial authority in any new civilian complaint review board. Walsh’s work had a focus on modernization of the NYPD, but also encouraged the board to have civilian representation to instill public confidence that civilian complaints will be managed impartially. Lindsay eventually formed a search committee, headed by former Attorney General Herbert Brownell, to find civilian candidates to serve on the CCRB. John Cassese (president of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association), did not welcome civilian presence on the board. Cassese said, "I’m sick and tired of giving in to minority groups with their whims and their gripes and shouting."[17][20] After much debate-and opposition to the proposal from the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association—Mayor Lindsay decided to appoint four civilians to the reconstituted board. Eventually the committee found four candidates and appointed them as part of the board. It is the first time in NYC’s history that people not involved with the NYPD reviewed the investigations of complaints against officers. It would not last long.[17]

Cassese along with other police was against civilians within the CCRB.[3] With the aid of the PBA, he collected enough signatures to press a ballot measure to remove civilians from having oversight of police complaints.[17] The PBA argued that with civilian oversight, the NYPD can’t do their job correctly. However, the people who favored civilian participation accused the opposition as bigots and racists. The campaign was hard fought on both sides, but Cassese’s side won the ballot, restoring the board to an all-police committee. Civilian board members wouldn’t return until the Koch Administration.[17]

The Knapp Commission (in the 1970s) and the Mollen Commission (in 1994) led to reforms within the NYPD aimed to improve police accountability. However, in recent years,[when?] possible causes such as low salaries and declining morale, many more off-duty NYPD officers are being arrested and charged in and outside the city for crimes ranging from drunk driving to homicide.[21] During the Knapp Commission, the investigation didn't involve the CCRB as they independently investigated into matters. However, the commission did review the CCRB complaints and used it to verify certain information into police corruption.[2]

Between 1986 and 1987, the New York City Council enacted a piece of legislation that called for imposing some degree of civilian oversight once again. The CCRB was restructured to have private citizens work alongside non-uniformed police officers.[17] Legislation was passed in 1986 by the city council. With the consent and advisement of the city council, Mayor Koch appointed six members and the police commissioner appointed six for them to work as a team in investigating civilian complaints; the hired civilians were supervised with the oversight of police department investigators and employees.[17] However, the return of civilian members wasn’t satisfactory to public opinion as they demanded greater civilian control the following year.[17]

In 1988, the NYPD responded to complaints of drug trafficking, vagrants, squatters, and unlawful groups in Tompkins Square Park by enforcing a pre-existing 1:00 A.M. curfew that wasn’t enforced previously.[22] The curfew wasn’t welcomed and resulted in public animosity against the police as vocal anger and objects (like glass) were thrown against them. On July 31, a rally protesting the curfew resulted in a confrontation between police and civilians. Four civilians were arrested and four police injured. On August 6, police violently forced demonstrators from the park.[22] Caught on video, police were shown to use their riot gear to strike people with their nightsticks, randomly assaulting nearby bystanders unrelated to the protest, and using their riot shields to cover themselves from identification.[23][24] After the incident, the CCRB commissioned a special report on the matter, "there is no evidence that any effort was made to limit the use of force . . . Force was used for its own sake."[17] Although the report was critical of the NYPD, it event gained support for an all-civilian CCRB. That would come to pass during the Dinkins administration.[17]

During September 1992, Mayor David Dinkins supported an independent CCRB; it was met with political and police resistance. Police protested violently and engaged in actions that were described as "unruly, mean-spirited and perhaps criminal."[25] Sponsored by the police union, an officers' protest was staged that involved thousands of officers demonstrating at City Hall. They blocked traffic to the Brooklyn Bridge and shouted racial slurs. Before serving as mayor, Rudolph Giuliani participated in the protest.[26][27]

By 1993, after much debate and public opinion, Mayor Dinkins and the city council created its current, all-civilian board.[17][28] The CCRB was granted subpoena power and authority to recommend discipline in cases the board reviewed and substantiated. Subpoena power was given because the CCRB didn’t have the authority to obtain filmed footage from local media outlets that recorded evidence to substantiate their cases. The board was underfunded at its infancy and wasn’t able to handle at the level of complaints it received.[citation needed] Proper funding wouldn’t come until the Giuliani administration in 1997.[17] In the aftermath of the Abner Louima incident (where he was assaulted, brutalized, and sodomized with a broken-off broom handle by NYPD), the CCRB's budget was steadily increased to all the agency to hire additional investigators and experienced managers to oversee complaint investigations; it has led to great improvement in the board's investigative work. Currently the CCRB is the largest civilian oversight agency in the country, investigating over 10,000 complaints and resulting in the discipline for thousands of police officers over their misconduct.[17]

Even though it has only existed in its current form for a little over a decade, the conception of a board delegated power to investigate complaints about potential police misconduct predates the administration of Robert Wagner, who was responsible for investing the nascent Civilian Complaint Review Board-which was then composed solely of three deputy police commissioners-with new powers in 1955. However, it remained a province of the NYPD, with all investigations being conducted by police officers, and their findings forwarded to the deputy commissioners for recommendation. Because the CCRB has no authority over the police they investigate, their recommendation(s) are at best a consideration and can't be used to define the fate of the accused officer.[29] The Police Commissioner has final authority of the law.[30]

In the CCRB's Annual Report of 2017, the agency received 4,487 complaints from civilians in allegations of Force, Abuse of Authority, Discourtesy, or Offensive Language by members of the NYPD (a 5% increase since 2016). About 58% were allegations of abuse of authority (e.g. unlawful searches of premises, refusals to provide a name or shield number, and threats to arrest a civilian). Through the Data Transparency Initiative (DTI), they are making data (about the complaints and investigations) accessible. Due to body-worn cameras or video evidence, the CCRB was able to make definitive determination of complaints and allegations.[31] As of 2018, the CCRB's chairman is Fred Davie.[32][33]

In 2020, ProPublica published a searchable database containing records of public allegations against police officers from the CCRB.[34]

See also

References

  1. ^ New York City Charter chapter 18-A, § 440 et seq.
  2. ^ a b c d e f GILBERT, STEVEN V. POLICE CORRUPTION IN THE NYPD: from Knapp to Mollen. CRC PRESS, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d Roberg, et al. Police & Society 6th Edition. Oxford University Press, 2014.
  4. ^ "Title 30-A: Civilian Complaint Review Board" (PDF). Retrieved November 1, 2021.
  5. ^ "Jonathan Darche Release - CCRB". www1.nyc.gov. Retrieved January 8, 2021.
  6. ^ a b . Archived from the original on February 20, 2009. Retrieved February 15, 2009.
  7. ^ "CCRB Annual Report 2017" (PDF). NYC.GOV.
  8. ^ a b c d (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 15, 2009. Retrieved February 15, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ a b c d "New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board". Nyc.gov. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
  10. ^ "New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board". Nyc.gov. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
  11. ^ "New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board". Nyc.gov. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
  12. ^ "New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board". Nyc.gov. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
  13. ^ a b "Prosecution". Civilian Complaint Review Board. Retrieved May 24, 2017.
  14. ^ "Memorandum of Understanding Between the Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB) and the Police Department (NYPD) of the City of New York Concerning the Processing of Substantiated Complaints" (PDF). Retrieved May 14, 2018.
  15. ^ "New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board". Nyc.gov. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
  16. ^ Gabriel J. Chin ed., New York City Police Corruption Investigation Commissions, 1894-1994 (William S. Hein 1997) ISBN 978-1-57588-211-6
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "History - CCRB". www1.nyc.gov. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  18. ^ Rosenbloom, Jonathan. "Police Misconduct Cases - Prosecuted By Civilians, But Still Judged By Police". Gotham Gazette. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  19. ^ "Police precincts in Astoria and south Queens neighborhoods among those with most complaints in borough". QNS.com. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  20. ^ Potts, Monica (August 13, 2014). "What Policing Looks Like To A Former Investigator Of Misconduct". NPR. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  21. ^ Walker, Samuel (2005). The New World of Police Accountability. Sage. p. 17.
  22. ^ a b "Mayor Ed Koch on the Tompkins Square Park Police Riot of 1988". The Daily Beast. November 30, 2010. Archived from the original on December 17, 2021. Retrieved August 22, 2018.
  23. ^ telengardc64 (March 13, 2007). "Tompkins Square Park Riot". Archived from the original on December 17, 2021. Retrieved March 3, 2019 – via YouTube.
  24. ^ Civilian Complaint Review Board, City of New York (April 1989). REPORT OF THE CIVILIAN COMPLAINT REVIEW BOARD ON THE DISPOSITION OF CIVILIANS* COMPLAINTS ARISING FROM POLICE DEPARTMENT ACTION OCCURRING AT TOMPKINS SQUARE PARK ON AUGUST 6-7, 1988 (report). LaGuardia Community College/CUNY: La Guardia and Wagner Archives, Edward I. Koch Collection, Koch Collection Subject Files.
  25. ^ "Shielded from Justice: New York: Civilian Complaint Review Board". www.hrw.org. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
  26. ^ "Shielded from Justice: New York: Civilian Complaint Review Board". www.hrw.org. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  27. ^ "Opinion | More on the time Rudy Giuliani helped incite a riot of racist cops - The Washington Post". The Washington Post.
  28. ^ https://scholars.law.unlv.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1505&context=facpub[bare URL PDF]
  29. ^ Mueller, Benjamin (September 8, 2017). "Review Board Recommends Stiffest Punishment for Officer in Garner Case". The New York Times. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  30. ^ "News Closeup: How the Civilian Complaint Review Board works; new Alzheimer's treatments". pix11.com. July 29, 2018. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  31. ^ https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/ccrb/downloads/pdf/about_pdf/news/press-releases/2018/20181204_annualreport_release.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  32. ^ "Fredrick Davie - CCRB". www1.nyc.gov. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  33. ^ "Frederick A. Davie". utsnyc.edu. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
  34. ^ Umansky, Eric (July 26, 2020). "We're Publishing Thousands of Police Discipline Records That New York Kept Secret for Decades". ProPublica. Pro Publica.

Further reading

External links

  • Official website
  • Civilian Complaint Review Board in the Rules of the City of New York
  • New York City Policing Roundtable (NYCPR) - an advocacy organization

civilian, complaint, review, board, ccrb, redirects, here, basketball, club, champagne, châlons, reims, basket, ccrb, oversight, agency, york, city, police, department, nypd, largest, police, force, united, states, board, government, york, city, ccrb, tasked, . CCRB redirects here For the basketball club see Champagne Chalons Reims Basket The NYC Civilian Complaint Review Board CCRB is the oversight agency of the New York City Police Department NYPD the largest police force in the United States A board of the Government of New York City the CCRB is tasked with investigating mediating and prosecuting complaints of misconduct on the part of the NYPD 1 2 3 Its regulations are compiled in Title 38 A 4 of the New York City Rules Civilian Complaint Review BoardBoard overviewJurisdictionNew York CityHeadquarters100 Church Street Manhattan NY 10017Board executivesFrederick Davie chairpersonJonathan Darche executive directorKey documentNew York City CharterWebsitenyc gov ccrb Contents 1 Structure 2 Handling complaints 2 1 Investigation 2 1 1 Jurisdiction 2 1 2 Civilian contact 2 1 3 Officer contact 2 2 Mediation 2 3 Recommendation 2 4 Board action 2 5 Prosecution 3 Number of complaints 4 History 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksStructure EditThe CCRB exists today as a fully independent civil department staffed with 142 civilian investigators and about a dozen miscellaneous employees Additionally three officers from the NYPD s Monitoring and Analysis Section of the Department Advocate s Office work with the CCRB at their office at 100 Church Street whose role is to provide the Investigators with access to certain restricted NYPD documentation The agency is headed by the 15 member board 5 appointed by the city council 5 by the mayor 1 by the public advocate 3 designated by the Police Commissioner and finally the Chair jointly appointed by the speaker and the mayor none may be current public employees Rev Frederick Davie served as Chair until January 2022 at which point Arva Rice was appointed Interim Chair Jonathan Darche after having served as Interim Executive Director and Chief Prosecutor was appointed Executive Director in May 2017 5 The agency is divided into several divisions the largest being the Investigations Division The Investigations Division is headed by two chiefs of investigations who oversee 16 investigative squads The agency also contains an Administrative Division which includes Human Resources Information Management Unit and the Case Management Unit which stores all records of past cases among others which is led by the deputy executive director of administration 6 There are then four other directorships including the new Research and Strategic Initiatives Director as well as the Mediation Unit Director There is also legal counsel These units complement and serve the Investigations Unit which acts as the main focal point of the Agency 6 Handling complaints EditInvestigation Edit Jurisdiction Edit Each complaint the agency receives is assessed by one of the investigative managers on a daily rotating basis and has its merits checked for proper jurisdiction Jurisdiction is first assessed by type of allegations Only allegations that fall under the jurisdiction of the CCRB are investigated by the CCRB They include Force whether use of force was justified Abuse of Authority 7 which includes unauthorized searches and seizures inappropriate entry onto property refusal to provide name and shield number etc Discourtesy using foul language acting in a rude and unprofessional manner flashing rude and offensive gestures etc and Offensive Language which is more specific than Discourtesy and includes slurs based on race religion ethnicity sex gender and LGBTQ status 2 Jurisdiction is also determined by the officers involved As many types of officers work in the City of New York such as the MTA Police the Port Authority Police and the New York State Police complainants encounter all of these officers in their day to day lives Only incidents involving members of the NYPD are investigated by the CCRB Cases that do not fall within the CCRB s jurisdiction are then forwarded to the respective jurisdiction usually the NYPD Internal Affairs Bureau the Office of the Chief of Department or the respective organization in question such as another police department 8 Civilian contact Edit The cases are then assigned to one of 142 civilian investigators who are members of one of 16 squads who then attempts to contact the civilian who initially complained After initial assignment there are four dispositions that result only from a full investigation Substantiated Unsubstantiated Exonerated and Unfounded There are five other miscellaneous or inconclusive dispositions Complainant Uncooperative Complainant Unavailable Officer Unidentified Miscellaneous i e the MOS has retired since the incident occurred and Mediated 9 If contact with the civilian complainant is not achieved after five contact attempts by telephone and two letters by mail and the contact information is confirmed the case is automatically closed with a disposition of Complainant Uncooperative If the civilian cannot be located after a diligent search and or did not provide accurate or correct contact information the case is closed as Complainant Unavailable These types of cases are not considered full investigations but are tallied together with the total number of complaints for statistical purposes citation needed If the civilian is contacted a statement is initially taken over the phone by the investigator to further ensure proper jurisdiction and to gain a basic understanding of the broad facts within the complaint An in person interview is then scheduled at the CCRB s office at 100 Church Street at which point the investigator meets with the civilian and any witnesses s he brings with them that were present at the time of the incident and interviews each person separately The investigator then transcribes the interview submits a case plan to one of their three supervisors each team having an Assistant Supervising Investigator a Supervising Investigator and an Investigative Manager 9 Officer contact Edit Once the case plan is approved the investigator must then begin their investigation which involves identifying all subject and witness officers involved If the investigator fails to identify the officers the case is closed as Officers Unidentified Once the officers are identified which is done by obtaining a variety of NYPD documents including SPRINTS 911 tapes to identify which officer s responded to the call in question roll calls from specific commands to see which officers were working in the area of question during the time of the incident Command Logs from respective commands to determine if the incident was logged and which officer logged it Memo Books of Officers or DD5s of Detectives to search for possible notes about the incident along with arrest records court records photographs Complaint Reports Accident Reports AIDED reports Stop Question and Possibly Frisk Reports UF 250s to name only a few 9 Once the officer is identified s he is then scheduled to give a statement to the investigator and must attend according to Patrol Guide 211 13 An officer failing to appear or lying to an investigator is in itself a violation that could result in severe discipline up to and including suspension and possibly termination Each officer and their partner at the time along with any witness officers are interviewed and questioned about the incident by the investigator This interview is also taped and transcribed and based upon the officer s testimony further information is obtained by the investigator including subpoenaed medical records further department documentation field canvasses and their resulting information and so on 9 Mediation Edit Mediation is an option for certain complaints provided the officer does not have an extensive CCRB or NYPD disciplinary history there was no arrest made and severe force or abuse of authority were not involved In mediation the officer and civilian both voluntarily bypass the investigative process and meet each other one on one with a third party mediator to discuss the incident This results in no disciplinary action being taken against the officer and often results in a more satisfied civilian as an outcome 10 Recommendation Edit After all the civilians and members of service are interviewed and all possible relevant documentation has been received and analyzed the investigator then collects any relevant case law and begins their recommendation which is their report averaging about 10 12 pages on the case in question The report is broken down into relatively strict each team has their own style dictated by the Team Managers and Supervisors and even then can and often does vary between internal team supervision template of investigative analysis The report includes a summary of all complaints made an explanation of the circumstances of the case a summation of the statements by the officers and civilians a credibility assessment of the officers and the civilians at which point the investigator is supposed to weigh in criminal history of civilians and CCRB history of officers as well as inconsistencies between accounts motivation of the civilian and the overall possibility of an incident occurring a summation of criminal and CCRB history of the civilians and officers respectively and finally a recommendation for disposition on each complaint A recommendation for disposition on each complaint breaks down into four main categories beyond the technical variants mentioned in part earlier Substantiated meaning the officer committed the act in question and it consisted of misconduct Unsubstantiated meaning that there is not a preponderance of evidence either way to determine if the incident occurred as described and or the incident consisted of misconduct Exonerated meaning that the incident occurred but did not consist of misconduct either because the officers actions were justified or did not actually consist of misconduct Unfounded meaning that the incident did not occur as described and no misconduct occurred 8 Board action Edit The recommendations are then reviewed by at least two team level supervisors who then approve or instruct the investigator to correct their findings and upon approval submit the case to the Board Once the Board receives the complaint either as a full board or more likely as a three member sub unit they meet to discuss the case and then vote on the recommendations of the investigator Public meetings are held to communicate recent statistics and snapshots of some of the more straightforward cases are published as examples for the public s understanding and announced at the meeting 11 12 Prosecution Edit Historically when the board substantiated a complaint and found that an officer committed misconduct it forwarded the case to the New York City Police Department NYPD in most cases with a disciplinary recommendation While the CCRB has the authority to investigate complaints and to determine if misconduct occurred under the law only the police commissioner has the authority to impose discipline and decide the appropriate penalty 13 However on April 2 2012 the NYPD and the CCRB signed a Memorandum of Understanding MOU which conferred on the CCRB the power to prosecute substantiated cases where the board recommended charges and specifications the most serious discipline 14 As a result the CCRB s Administrative Prosecution Unit APU now prosecutes nearly all the cases where the Board recommended the subject officer receive charges and specifications with limited exceptions The trials are almost always held at the police department before an administrative law judge either the Deputy Commissioner for Trials or an Assistant Deputy Commissioner of Trials If an officer is found guilty the penalty can be a warning and admonishment loss of vacation days suspension without pay dismissal probation or termination from the NYPD The police commissioner retains the authority to decide whether the discipline is imposed what level of discipline is imposed and the penalty imposed 13 Number of complaints EditIn 2006 the CCRB received 7 669 complaints from civilians and closed 7 399 cases of which 2 680 were full investigations meaning that the civilian participated the officer s were identified and an investigation was closed after a full investigation 15 Approximately 6 of the full investigations resulted in a Substantiated disposition 8 262 cases were mediated The CCRB remains the only completely civilian oversight of the New York Police Department in the city and is complemented by the NYPD s Internal Affairs Bureau and the Mayor s Task Force on Police Corruption each charged with investigating different types of allegations The CCRB and its acronym FADO for the first letter of the allegations it investigates has permeated all ranks of the NYPD and is part of all officers training at the Police Academy Additionally the number of complaints has risen steadily since 2002 8 as the 311 system was implemented and public awareness of the program grew History EditOver the years NYPD officers have come under public scrutiny with allegations of corruption brutality excessive use of force and poor firearm discipline 16 Individual incidents have tended to receive more publicity a portion of which have been substantiated while others have not e g Lt Charles Becker the only NYPD officer sentenced to death by electric chair Citizens have wanted participation in reviewing complaints against the police as early as the Progressive Era 3 However little progress was achieved in the first half of the twentieth century When citizens do make a complaint they may face reprisal from the police Citizens might be arrested accused of falsifying charges against them and there was no oversight to substantiate any complaints or accusations of police misconduct 3 During 1953 the Civilian Complaint Review Board CCRB was created 17 18 19 In 1950 eighteen organizations formed the Permanent Coordination Committee on Police and Minority Groups to lobby the city to address overall police misconduct and police misconduct in their relations with Puerto Ricans and Negros specifically 17 2 The NYPD established the CCRB in response to the coalition s demands A committee of three deputy police commissioners was tasked to investigate into civilian complaints The board was given greater authority under Mayor Robert Wagner in 1955 but the board remained governed within the NYPD police officers investigated into the complaints and the deputy commissioners decided upon recommendation of discipline based on the investigation The CCRB remained under NYPD jurisdiction without civilian oversight 17 2 In 1965 Mayor John Lindsay appointed former federal judge Lawrence E Walsh to investigate and consult with the NYPD to make improvements to the department 17 2 He recommended that members of the general public non police officers be given substantial authority in any new civilian complaint review board Walsh s work had a focus on modernization of the NYPD but also encouraged the board to have civilian representation to instill public confidence that civilian complaints will be managed impartially Lindsay eventually formed a search committee headed by former Attorney General Herbert Brownell to find civilian candidates to serve on the CCRB John Cassese president of the Patrolmen s Benevolent Association did not welcome civilian presence on the board Cassese said I m sick and tired of giving in to minority groups with their whims and their gripes and shouting 17 20 After much debate and opposition to the proposal from the Patrolmen s Benevolent Association Mayor Lindsay decided to appoint four civilians to the reconstituted board Eventually the committee found four candidates and appointed them as part of the board It is the first time in NYC s history that people not involved with the NYPD reviewed the investigations of complaints against officers It would not last long 17 Cassese along with other police was against civilians within the CCRB 3 With the aid of the PBA he collected enough signatures to press a ballot measure to remove civilians from having oversight of police complaints 17 The PBA argued that with civilian oversight the NYPD can t do their job correctly However the people who favored civilian participation accused the opposition as bigots and racists The campaign was hard fought on both sides but Cassese s side won the ballot restoring the board to an all police committee Civilian board members wouldn t return until the Koch Administration 17 The Knapp Commission in the 1970s and the Mollen Commission in 1994 led to reforms within the NYPD aimed to improve police accountability However in recent years when possible causes such as low salaries and declining morale many more off duty NYPD officers are being arrested and charged in and outside the city for crimes ranging from drunk driving to homicide 21 During the Knapp Commission the investigation didn t involve the CCRB as they independently investigated into matters However the commission did review the CCRB complaints and used it to verify certain information into police corruption 2 Between 1986 and 1987 the New York City Council enacted a piece of legislation that called for imposing some degree of civilian oversight once again The CCRB was restructured to have private citizens work alongside non uniformed police officers 17 Legislation was passed in 1986 by the city council With the consent and advisement of the city council Mayor Koch appointed six members and the police commissioner appointed six for them to work as a team in investigating civilian complaints the hired civilians were supervised with the oversight of police department investigators and employees 17 However the return of civilian members wasn t satisfactory to public opinion as they demanded greater civilian control the following year 17 In 1988 the NYPD responded to complaints of drug trafficking vagrants squatters and unlawful groups in Tompkins Square Park by enforcing a pre existing 1 00 A M curfew that wasn t enforced previously 22 The curfew wasn t welcomed and resulted in public animosity against the police as vocal anger and objects like glass were thrown against them On July 31 a rally protesting the curfew resulted in a confrontation between police and civilians Four civilians were arrested and four police injured On August 6 police violently forced demonstrators from the park 22 Caught on video police were shown to use their riot gear to strike people with their nightsticks randomly assaulting nearby bystanders unrelated to the protest and using their riot shields to cover themselves from identification 23 24 After the incident the CCRB commissioned a special report on the matter there is no evidence that any effort was made to limit the use of force Force was used for its own sake 17 Although the report was critical of the NYPD it event gained support for an all civilian CCRB That would come to pass during the Dinkins administration 17 During September 1992 Mayor David Dinkins supported an independent CCRB it was met with political and police resistance Police protested violently and engaged in actions that were described as unruly mean spirited and perhaps criminal 25 Sponsored by the police union an officers protest was staged that involved thousands of officers demonstrating at City Hall They blocked traffic to the Brooklyn Bridge and shouted racial slurs Before serving as mayor Rudolph Giuliani participated in the protest 26 27 By 1993 after much debate and public opinion Mayor Dinkins and the city council created its current all civilian board 17 28 The CCRB was granted subpoena power and authority to recommend discipline in cases the board reviewed and substantiated Subpoena power was given because the CCRB didn t have the authority to obtain filmed footage from local media outlets that recorded evidence to substantiate their cases The board was underfunded at its infancy and wasn t able to handle at the level of complaints it received citation needed Proper funding wouldn t come until the Giuliani administration in 1997 17 In the aftermath of the Abner Louima incident where he was assaulted brutalized and sodomized with a broken off broom handle by NYPD the CCRB s budget was steadily increased to all the agency to hire additional investigators and experienced managers to oversee complaint investigations it has led to great improvement in the board s investigative work Currently the CCRB is the largest civilian oversight agency in the country investigating over 10 000 complaints and resulting in the discipline for thousands of police officers over their misconduct 17 Even though it has only existed in its current form for a little over a decade the conception of a board delegated power to investigate complaints about potential police misconduct predates the administration of Robert Wagner who was responsible for investing the nascent Civilian Complaint Review Board which was then composed solely of three deputy police commissioners with new powers in 1955 However it remained a province of the NYPD with all investigations being conducted by police officers and their findings forwarded to the deputy commissioners for recommendation Because the CCRB has no authority over the police they investigate their recommendation s are at best a consideration and can t be used to define the fate of the accused officer 29 The Police Commissioner has final authority of the law 30 In the CCRB s Annual Report of 2017 the agency received 4 487 complaints from civilians in allegations of Force Abuse of Authority Discourtesy or Offensive Language by members of the NYPD a 5 increase since 2016 About 58 were allegations of abuse of authority e g unlawful searches of premises refusals to provide a name or shield number and threats to arrest a civilian Through the Data Transparency Initiative DTI they are making data about the complaints and investigations accessible Due to body worn cameras or video evidence the CCRB was able to make definitive determination of complaints and allegations 31 As of 2018 the CCRB s chairman is Fred Davie 32 33 In 2020 ProPublica published a searchable database containing records of public allegations against police officers from the CCRB 34 See also EditNew York City Office of Administrative Trials and HearingsReferences Edit New York City Charter chapter 18 A 440 et seq a b c d e f GILBERT STEVEN V POLICE CORRUPTION IN THE NYPD from Knapp to Mollen CRC PRESS 2017 a b c d Roberg et al Police amp Society 6th Edition Oxford University Press 2014 Title 30 A Civilian Complaint Review Board PDF Retrieved November 1 2021 Jonathan Darche Release CCRB www1 nyc gov Retrieved January 8 2021 a b NYC Civilian Complaint Review Board Agency Structure Archived from the original on February 20 2009 Retrieved February 15 2009 CCRB Annual Report 2017 PDF NYC GOV a b c d Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 15 2009 Retrieved February 15 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c d New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board Nyc gov Retrieved June 1 2016 New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board Nyc gov Retrieved June 1 2016 New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board Nyc gov Retrieved June 1 2016 New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board Nyc gov Retrieved June 1 2016 a b Prosecution Civilian Complaint Review Board Retrieved May 24 2017 Memorandum of Understanding Between the Civilian Complaint Review Board CCRB and the Police Department NYPD of the City of New York Concerning the Processing of Substantiated Complaints PDF Retrieved May 14 2018 New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board Nyc gov Retrieved June 1 2016 Gabriel J Chin ed New York City Police Corruption Investigation Commissions 1894 1994 William S Hein 1997 ISBN 978 1 57588 211 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p History CCRB www1 nyc gov Retrieved March 3 2019 Rosenbloom Jonathan Police Misconduct Cases Prosecuted By Civilians But Still Judged By Police Gotham Gazette Retrieved March 3 2019 Police precincts in Astoria and south Queens neighborhoods among those with most complaints in borough QNS com Retrieved March 3 2019 Potts Monica August 13 2014 What Policing Looks Like To A Former Investigator Of Misconduct NPR Retrieved March 3 2019 Walker Samuel 2005 The New World of Police Accountability Sage p 17 a b Mayor Ed Koch on the Tompkins Square Park Police Riot of 1988 The Daily Beast November 30 2010 Archived from the original on December 17 2021 Retrieved August 22 2018 telengardc64 March 13 2007 Tompkins Square Park Riot Archived from the original on December 17 2021 Retrieved March 3 2019 via YouTube Civilian Complaint Review Board City of New York April 1989 REPORT OF THE CIVILIAN COMPLAINT REVIEW BOARD ON THE DISPOSITION OF CIVILIANS COMPLAINTS ARISING FROM POLICE DEPARTMENT ACTION OCCURRING AT TOMPKINS SQUARE PARK ON AUGUST 6 7 1988 report LaGuardia Community College CUNY La Guardia and Wagner Archives Edward I Koch Collection Koch Collection Subject Files Shielded from Justice New York Civilian Complaint Review Board www hrw org Retrieved August 25 2019 Shielded from Justice New York Civilian Complaint Review Board www hrw org Retrieved March 3 2019 Opinion More on the time Rudy Giuliani helped incite a riot of racist cops The Washington Post The Washington Post https scholars law unlv edu cgi viewcontent cgi article 1505 amp context facpub bare URL PDF Mueller Benjamin September 8 2017 Review Board Recommends Stiffest Punishment for Officer in Garner Case The New York Times Retrieved March 3 2019 News Closeup How the Civilian Complaint Review Board works new Alzheimer s treatments pix11 com July 29 2018 Retrieved March 3 2019 https www1 nyc gov assets ccrb downloads pdf about pdf news press releases 2018 20181204 annualreport release pdf bare URL PDF Fredrick Davie CCRB www1 nyc gov Retrieved March 3 2019 Frederick A Davie utsnyc edu Retrieved March 3 2019 Umansky Eric July 26 2020 We re Publishing Thousands of Police Discipline Records That New York Kept Secret for Decades ProPublica Pro Publica Further reading Edit New York Civilian Complaint Review Board Shielded from Justice Police Brutality and Accountability in the United States Human Rights Watch 1998 ISBN 1 56432 183 5 LCCN 98 86155 Gotham Gazette Staff January 12 2003 Civilian Complaint Review Boards Gotham Gazette Archived from the original on February 12 2010 Fox Margalit October 3 2004 Edward Silver Dies at 83 Led Police Review Panel The New York Times Mission Failure Civilian Review of Policing in NYC New York Civil Liberties Union 2007 Mac Donald Heather August 28 2004 NYPD Bashers Too Welcome The New York Post Archived from the original on September 10 2013 Retrieved August 25 2015 U S Commission on Civil Rights 2000 Police Practices and Civil Rights in New York City Hope Bradley June 30 2006 Complaints Spike But Police Punish Fewer Officers The New York Sun External links EditOfficial website Civilian Complaint Review Board in the Rules of the City of New York New York City Policing Roundtable NYCPR an advocacy organization Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Civilian Complaint Review Board amp oldid 1121154422, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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