New York Daily News

You ignored us, NYPD

Brooklynit­es, pol say they had no voice in choice of new precinct chief

- BY EMMA SEIWELL With Rocco Parascando­la

The appointmen­t of a new NYPD Brooklyn precinct commander makes a mockery of the city’s recently adopted policy of giving local residents a significan­t say in such appointmen­ts, some community members charge.

Capt. Krystin Suarez will take over Monday as the new commanding officer of the 72nd Precinct, covering Sunset Park and Windsor Terrace.

But some local residents complain they weren’t given a chance to properly vet Suarez for the job — leading their local City Council member to blast the process in an angry letter to NYPD Commission­er Keechant Sewell and Deputy Mayor Philip Banks.

“Not only has this process been a complete mockery of community engagement, but it has deeply insulted the very community members who volunteer their precious time and energy to liaise between the community and the precinct,” City Councilwom­an Alexa Aviles (D-Brooklyn) wrote in the fiery Jan. 10 letter.

In January 2021 then-Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that starting immediatel­y, precinct community councils, which are made up of local civilian volunteers, would have an advisory role in selecting new NYPD precinct commanders, including interviewi­ng candidates.

“This is unpreceden­ted in the history of the NYPD,” de Blasio said at the time. “We’re bringing the voices of the community forward to determine who would be the right leader.”

NYPD community councils, meant to serve as a bridge between precinct brass and local residents, have been around since the 1940s.

Aviles said a video community meeting was announced to interview candidates with only a few hours’ notice — and was attended by only 15 people. Local residents who joined the meeting found they were muted and the video chat feature was disabled.

NYPD brass gave the precinct council president a handful of prewritten interview questions to choose from, according to Aviles, and police did not allow followup or clarifying questions to candidates.

Leadership of the community council did not respond to requests for comment last week.

“This process was not fair,” said Ray Acevedo, a former NYPD sergeant and the leader of a local community nonprofit. “When you don’t allow the public to speak and then you put the questions in their mouths, what do you have here? It’s not a process. It’s a farce.”

The group submitted its votes privately to the Police Department, which did not disclose the results. The meeting ended without any clear idea how the council’s input would be taken into account.

Aviles wrote she was “deeply disturbed” when Brooklyn South Commanding Officer Chief Charles McEvoy told her the following day the community and internal process for the selection had concluded. In a followup meeting with McEvoy, Aviles and community members demanded a full redo of the community interviews. But by Friday, the 72nd Precinct’s web page was updated to show Suarez had been named to the top job.

Asked about the meeting, an NYPD spokesman said: “The NYPD adhered to the Commanding Officer Selection Process in accordance with City Council Resolution 1584.”

The resolution, passed by the City Council in March 2021, formalized de Blasio’s plan for the NYPD to allow community councils to interview precinct commander candidates and provide advisory feedback.

“Community engagement is not a box to be checked,” Aviles said. “It’s actually a process. And when you offend your greatest allies and you show them that this process was really not meant for them and their voices, it’s an offense and it’s a breaking of trust.”

When de Blasio first rolled out the policy, he credited then-Brooklyn Borough President

Eric Adams for the idea. As a mayoral candidate, Adams expressed his intent to expand the community’s influence by giving the community councils veto power via a supermajor­ity vote, but that idea has not come to pass.

The city’s website boasts that “the community preference” has been accepted in every precinct hiring since the plan launched in April 2021. But Aviles says attendees at the 72nd Precinct interview meeting polled one another afterward and found they preferred Capt. Tony Wong over Suarez.

Local residents had hoped to have input into the appointmen­t. “We were really looking forward to it,” said Julio Peña, chairman of Brooklyn Community Board 7.

“Lo and behold, when the process kind of happened, there was no process. You want to build trust with precincts and neighborho­ods. But you can’t really do that if you’re not building that collaborat­ion in the hiring processes.”

 ?? ?? Brooklyn City Councilwom­an Alexa Aviles (left) wrote an angry letter to NYPD Commission­er Keechant Sewell (above) and Deputy Mayor Philip Banks blasting the process of selecting a new commanding officer for the 72nd Precinct. “This process has been a complete mockery,” Aviles wrote.
Brooklyn City Councilwom­an Alexa Aviles (left) wrote an angry letter to NYPD Commission­er Keechant Sewell (above) and Deputy Mayor Philip Banks blasting the process of selecting a new commanding officer for the 72nd Precinct. “This process has been a complete mockery,” Aviles wrote.

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