New York Daily News

Group sees massive NYPD bias

- BY JOHN ANNESE With Thomas Tracy

A watchdog group blamed the “longstandi­ng problem of stark racial bias in NYPD tactics” for the vast disparity in minorities prosecuted by the city.

The Police Reform Organizing Project says its members sat in on more than 5,000 criminal court cases since 2014, and found nearly nine out of 10 cases involved people of color. There were 4,645 minority defendants in the 5,162 cases observed at arraignmen­t courts in all the boroughs except Staten Island, according to a report released Tuesday.

Most of those cases involved low-level charges like marijuana possession, driving with a suspended license and theft of services – and in nearly 90% of those cases, the suspects were released or made bail that day, “demonstrat­ing that neither the judges nor the district attorneys consider the defendants a threat to public safety,” the report said.

“New York's district attorneys aggressive­ly prosecute cases against black and brown people for engaging in mainly innocent or innocuous activities,” the report added. “On a regular basis, our city's courts devote their considerab­le resources to the administra­tion of injustice, applying sanctions in hundreds, if not thousands, of cases where the charges involve, at worst, petty infraction­s and where the defendants are almost always people of color, some of whom live on the margins of society.”

Project director Robert Gangi, who ran for mayor in the city's Democratic primary last year, said progressiv­e politician­s like Mayor de Blasio haven't followed through on their police reform promises.

“Every day that New York City's political leaders sidestep this issue, our so-called criminal justice system continues its abusive and discrimina­tory practices,” said Gangi, who garnered just 3% of the vote against de Blasio.

The NYPD rebutted Gangi's report, claiming that the department does not engage in racial profiling.

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