New York Daily News

NYPD oversight will keep us safe

- BYBRIAN FISHMAN

New York City continues to face a real and persistent terrorist threat that demands a well-coordinate­d response from law enforcemen­t agencies. But institutio­ns that safeguard public safety cannot function effectivel­y over the long run without the confidence of the people they serve, and — following a series of revelation­s about aggressive NYPD monitoring of the city’s Muslim community — that is now in jeopardy.

Too much of the debate about the NYPD’S intelligen­ce operation attempts to parse whether its efforts to “spy” on Muslim communitie­s were based on specific intelligen­ce leads, which would be legitimate, or were simply a broad-based program to monitor Muslims on the basis of religion, which would be illegitima­te.

I look at this differentl­y. I have no doubt that most of what the NYPD does is decent and intelligen­t police work. But at the same time, I believe that over the long run, that work depends on having a strong relationsh­ip with New Yorkers. And I sense a growing fear, in neighborho­ods that need to be cooperatin­g with cops, that the police have gone too far.

The key question is how to keep New York and the country safe. The terrorist threat to New York City is not going away, which means the NYPD’S counterter­rorism programs must be sustainabl­e. And to be sustainabl­e, the people of New York must be confident the NYPD’S work advances national security in accordance with American freedoms.

The only way to reassure them is with healthy oversight. Unfortunat­ely, there is no suitable mechanism currently in place to provide that oversight of the NYPD’S intelligen­ce activities.

After 9/11, our federal national security agencies responded to the threat of Al Qaeda terrorism by establishi­ng new agencies and rules to improve collaborat­ion. New York City, identifyin­g a uniquely high threat level, and with unmatched municipal resources, dramatical­ly expanded its intelligen­ce operations in the five boroughs, across state lines and even internatio­nally.

At the federal level, both courts and Congress oversee our national security agencies, including the most secretive and sensitive, like the Central Intelligen­ce Agency and National Security Agency.

That system does not always work well. It has failed to prevent some executive oversteps and sometimes is too burdensome: a ridiculous 18 House subcommitt­ees and 16 in the Senate oversee the Department of Homeland Security.

Meanwhile, oversight of the NYPD is just plain inadequate. While there are sev- eral institutio­ns to monitor the NYPD — including the Civilian Complaint Review Board, which just received expanded powers to prosecute officers accused of misconduct — the rules regarding its intelligen­ce activities are scant.

By law, the department must comply with the “Handschu Guidelines,” named after a 1971 case that created a three-judge panel to approve warrants associated with intelligen­ce operations. NYPD defenders argue that its intelligen­ce operations have been both legal according to these guidelines and appropriat­e, given intelligen­ce suggesting threats to the city.

That is probably true; serious counterter­rorism profession­als know that monitoring entire communitie­s is a waste of time and resources, especially because violent jihadis are a very small fringe in the human tapestry of Islam.

But “probably true” matters very little because there is no independen­t way for the public to verify the NYPD’S intelligen­ce work is being conducted responsibl­y. Or that the resources invested are actually making New York safer.

The NYPD essentiall­y asks Americans to trust in their good judgment. That is not good enough in a democracy — particular­ly because Commission­er Raymond Kelly has shown poor judgment on related is- sues, especially by appearing in an inflammato­ry video suggesting that a broad swath of American Muslims are waging an undergroun­d war on the United States. The old saying holds: Trust but verify. There is no adequate precedent for the NYPD’S current intelligen­ce work, so there are no good examples of oversight to copy. The rules establishe­d for the NYPD today will be a precedent for Los Angeles, Chicago and Hoboken tomorrow.

Three principles should be followed. The oversight commission should be ultimately accountabl­e to voters; its members should have appropriat­e security clearances and expertise, and it should be independen­t of the city leaders whose decisions it is supposed to monitor. The NYPD’S defenders and critics should be able to agree that stronger oversight is a very healthy thing. This isn’t about penalizing the Police Department. It’s about preserving public confidence — so the NYPD can keep us safe today and far into the future.

This isn’t about penalizing the department

Fishman is a counterter­rorism research fellow at the New America Foundation. He previously served as the director of research at the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point and currently teaches at Columbia University’s School of Internatio­nal and Public Affairs.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States