Texarkana Gazette

ProPublica posts NYPD records, bypassing judge’s blockade

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NEW YORK — Days after a federal judge paused the public release of New York City police disciplina­ry records, a news website has published a database containing complaint informatio­n for thousands of officers.

ProPublica posted the database Sunday, explaining in a note to readers that it isn't obligated to comply with Judge Katherine Polk Failla's temporary restrainin­g order because it is not a party to a union lawsuit challengin­g the release of such records.

Deputy Managing Editor Eric Umansky said ProPublica requested the informatio­n from the city’s police watchdog agency, the Civilian Complaint Review Board, soon after last month's repeal of state law that for decades had prevented the disclosure of disciplina­ry records.

Unions representi­ng police officers and other public safety workers sued the city on July 15 to block Mayor Bill de Blasio from making good on a pledge to start posting misconduct complaints on a government website. The unions argue that allowing the public to see unproven or false complaints could sully officers’ reputation­s and compromise their safety.

A state judge who first handled the case had issued a narrower restrainin­g order that temporaril­y blocked the public disclosure of records concerning unsubstant­iated and non-finalized allegation­s or settlement agreements.

ProPublica said it excluded allegation­s that investigat­ors deemed unfounded from the material it published. In all, the searchable database contains 12,056 complaints against 3,996 active NYPD officers.

“We understand the arguments against releasing this data. But we believe the public good it could do outweighs the potential harm,” ProPublica Editor-in-Chief Stephen Engelberg said. “The database gives the people of New York City a glimpse at how allegation­s involving police misconduct have been handled, and allows journalist­s and ordinary citizens alike to look more deeply at the records of particular officers.”

Failla's ruling Wednesday blocks the CCRB, the police department and other entities from disclosing disciplina­ry records until at least Aug. 18, when she’ll hear arguments in the case. In issuing the temporary restrainin­g order, Failla also barred the New York chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union from publicly releasing records it had already obtained.

The organizati­on said it requested officer misconduct complaints from the CCRB under the state’s open records law and received them before the union’s lawsuit was filed. Like ProPublica, the NYCLU argued it was not a party to the lawsuit.

“The federal court has no authority to bar us from making it public, and we will contest this unpreceden­ted order as quickly as possible,” NYLU legal director Christophe­r Dunn said.

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