New York Daily News

Eric to pols: Ride with cops

Sez see what they’re going through before nixing ‘How Many Stops’ veto

- BY SHANT SHAHRIGIAN With Chris Sommerfeld­t

Mayor Adams is inviting City Council members and other elected officials to go on “ride-alongs” with cops, part of a lastditch effort to quash a bill requiring NYPD officers to document every investigat­ive encounter they have with civilians.

With the Council poised to override his Friday veto of the legislatio­n, which is intended to increase transparen­cy around police stops, Adams announced the offer on Sunday, apparently hoping to chip away at the bill’s strong support.

“This bill will force these officers to spend far too much time filling out paperwork,” the mayor said at a City Hall news conference, repeating his main criticism of the How Many Stops Act.

“We want them to ride with a police officer, go listen to these calls and these jobs that are coming over the radio, see what it is to respond to these jobs,” he said of Council members and citywide elected officials. “This is a moment when we must be on the ground and see the realizatio­n of any form of legislatio­n that’s coming out of our city government.”

The How Many Stops Act, which passed the Council last month, lays out three levels of police encounters for which cops would have to document their interactio­ns with the public. Supporters said the law would prevent the return of the kind of biased law enforcemen­t the city saw during the Bloomberg-era peak of stop-question-and-frisk policing.

Council leaders vowed Friday to quickly override the mayor, who vetoed both the How Many Stops Act and a ban on solitary confinemen­t in city jails.

In the Sunday invite, the Adams administra­tion said pols who take him up on his offer to go on police ride-alongs would receive bulletproo­f vests for the four-hourlong sessions.

At the end of the day, they’ll be invited to half-hour conversati­ons at Police Headquarte­rs, an “opportunit­y to reflect on their experience on the front lines with the NYPD,” the invite said.

City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, co-sponsor of the How Many Stops Act, slammed Adams’ news conference as “grotesque.”

“Mayor Adams is threatenin­g the long-term safety of our city every time he speaks about the imaginary legislatio­n he opposes,” Williams, a Democrat, said in a statement.

“Today’s press conference was a grotesque example of the mayor hiding behind the pain and fears of people he misinforms and manipulate­s. The weakness and shamelessn­ess on display is astonishin­g,” he added.

At the Sunday news conference, Adams said the “only part” of the How Many Stops Act he objected to was language about the lowest level of stops, Level 1, which he says would necessitat­e more documentat­ion than supporters of the legislatio­n have indicated.

Williams and Council spokesman Mandela Jones rejected the criticism.

“Nearly all of their feedback and suggested language changes were accepted, except for their repeated attempts to entirely exempt Level 1 encounters,” Jones said in a statement.

“We repeatedly told them we would not completely exempt Level 1 investigat­ive encounters, but were open to considerin­g specific exemptions and encouraged them to offer ones. They never did,” the spokesman added.

Adams, a Democrat who won office on a tough-on-crime platform, also doubled down on his opposition to the solitary-confinemen­t ban, insisting that the practice does not take place in city jails and noting that a federal monitor overseeing the jails previously came out against the legislatio­n.

Supporters of the ban say Adams’ claims about the use of solitary are false. Council Speaker Adrienne Adams (D-Queens) promised last week to override the mayoral veto on that bill, too.

 ?? ?? Mayor Adams is inviting Council members and other officials to “ride-alongs” with cops, part of bid to halt bill requiring officers to document every investigat­ive encounter they have with civilians. Council members have threatened to override his veto of the legislatio­n.
Mayor Adams is inviting Council members and other officials to “ride-alongs” with cops, part of bid to halt bill requiring officers to document every investigat­ive encounter they have with civilians. Council members have threatened to override his veto of the legislatio­n.

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