New York Post

SVU remake major task

NYPD’s new chief urges ‘empathy’

- By TINA MOORE

The new head of the NYPD’s Special Victims Unit says he would like to bring “empathy and sympathy” to the beleaguere­d division — and will use his experience as a registered nurse to train patrol officers to deal with sexual-assault survivors more compassion­ately.

“I know there have been gray clouds over this division,” Michael King told The Post.

“I would like to bring special victims into a whole new era of investigat­ions, empathy, sympathy and policing. That’s my main goal. I want survivors to know we are a division of specialize­d profession­al people that you can come to at any time that you need help, you need services, you need support.

“This division is a place that is welcome — open arms — to everyone who needs it,” he said.

King, 45, is taking the reins from Assistant Chief Judith Harrison, who ran the embattled unit until she was promoted to borough commander of Brooklyn North last month, overseeing the safety and operations of 10 precincts.

King said one of his plans is to make the unit as victim-centered as possible.

“I want investigat­ions started with an open mind,” he said. “I don’t want anyone saying, ‘We don’t do that,’ or ‘I don’t think that could have happened.’ ”

As part of a new initiative, he even plans to train patrol cops to deal with victims more compassion­ately.

“I would also like to get patrol better trained in terms of handling and speaking, and interactin­g, with victims and survivors because I firmly believe the first impression that a survivor gets from a member of this department is long-lasting and can actually traverse right through their experience with the law-enforcemen­t system,” King said.

“We have specialize­d training here at SVU for our incoming white shield police officers who are going to at some point become detectives — and I would like to extend that training to patrol.”

The training, which is currently in the planning process, will be focused on getting patrol officers to understand why sexual-assault victims are considered special.

“The victims that you encounter here in SVD, they’re very different from those from a robbery or a burglary, or whatever it is, a carjacking,” King said.

“I try to instill that. When you have a person who is violated in a sexual manner, you have a certain rate of suicide among survivors. You don’t have people who have been robbed committing suicide, right? If someone’s car is stolen, they aren’t going to kill themselves.”

King said he plans to talk to Chief of Patrol Fausto Pichardo about how many officers could receive the training.

The division came under fire in 2018 when it was the subject of a scathing report by the Department of Investigat­ion, which said the unit was too understaff­ed and poorly trained to properly handle its caseload.

The DOI found that there were just 67 detectives to investigat­e 5,661 cases across all Special Victims squads, which handle adult sex-crime cases in the five boroughs.

One victim who testified at a City Council hearing in 2018 about the unit’s problems said she reported her rape to a detective who “was immediatel­y skeptical.”

“The police scoffed and told me, ‘He’s not going to jail for this,’ ” the woman wrote. “When I voiced my concerns to the NYPD, they told me, ‘This is just how things work.’ In other words, this was normal to them. That’s not OK.”

King, who has a 10-yearold daughter and a 16-yearold son, admitted he’s heard similar complaints.

“Even if one person has said that to me that’s one too many,” he said.

 ??  ?? KEY EXPERIENCE: Michael King, the new head of New York City’s sex-crimes unit, is a nurse who has conducted the physical exams that are vital to solving such cases.
KEY EXPERIENCE: Michael King, the new head of New York City’s sex-crimes unit, is a nurse who has conducted the physical exams that are vital to solving such cases.

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