New York Daily News

QUOTA OUTRAGE

More cops back suit vs. NYPD, say bosses warned: Bust minorities, or you’ll be sorry

- BY GRAHAM RAYMAN AND STEPHEN REX BROWN

Four NYPD officers say in new sworn declaratio­ns that an off-thebooks arrest quota system targeted Black and Latino New Yorkers — with one cop recalling a white supervisor asking, “Are you going to take someone’s freedom today?”

The new documents, soon to be filed in Manhattan Federal Court, the Daily News has learned, add further detail to a long-running suit launched by four other minority cops claiming they faced retaliatio­n for not arresting enough people of color. White officers allegedly did not face the arrest expectatio­ns.

Officer Charles Spruill, who retired in 2014, has come forward to claim he was yelled at on a daily basis to meet arrest quotas.

“On one occasion in the 40th Precinct a white supervisor asked an African-American police officer, ‘Are you going to take someone’s freedom today?’ ” Spruill, who is Black, says in his affidavit. “The African-American police officer had no choice but to say, ‘OK, boss.’ ”

Last month, city attorneys filed a scathing submission in Manhattan Federal Court slamming one of the original plaintiffs, Lt. Edwin Raymond, as insubordin­ate and unwilling to do his job. Raymond is running for City Council while on leave from the force.

“Individual­s who are not part of this case have made some baseless accusation­s in new affidavits in an attempt to support plaintiffs’ meritless case,” a Law Department spokesman said. “Mr. Raymond’s claims have no legal merit.”

Since the suit was filed in Manhattan Federal Court in 2015, some two dozen current and retired officers have filed legal papers backing the claim that a racebased quota system disproport­ionately affected minority cops.

Taken together, the affidavits illustrate how the chance for lucrative overtime shifts has been used to induce cops to go along with commanders’ demands. They also show how performanc­e monitoring — a program ostensibly to help cops get better at the job — has allegedly been used to punish officers who don’t meet arrest quotas.

An NYPD spokeswoma­n said that allegation­s of race-based or numerical arrest quotas are false.

Previous filings in the case have revealed NYPD jargon allegedly used in the quotas program. “Collars for dollars” referred to cops who make a sufficient number of arrests being rewarded with overtime shifts.

“Soft targets” were Asian, Jewish and white people, who weren’t to be arrested. “Hard targets” were Black and Hispanic people, the cops say.

“The NYPD has a lot of internal names for the arrest quota, but they all mean the same thing. That officers are supposed to bring in a certain amount of arrests and issue a certain number of summonses per month,” Officer Shawn Smalls, who is Black and retired in 2011, says in one of the new affidavits.

“The NYPD calls this arrest quota in the internal lingo of the Police Department many things. These code names include, but are not limited to, productivi­ty

indicators, goals, activity, expectatio­ns, condition, and/or performanc­e goals.”

Officer Michael Soto says in another of the new sworn declaratio­ns that then-commanding officer of the 40th Precinct, Christophe­r McCormack, arbitraril­y lowered many minority officers’ performanc­e evaluation scores after assuming his post in 2011. The evaluation­s are used to determine which cops receive overtime and assignment­s to specialize­d units.

“McCormack changed the evaluation for no reason other than to implement a new strategy of hunting minority civilians in order to make the arrest quota,” said Soto, who is Hispanic.

McCormack has been promoted since the lawsuit was filed and is now an assistant chief.

Officer Dan Quinones says in his new sworn declaratio­n that his commanding officer at Transit District 34, Constantin Tsachas, lowered the performanc­e ratings of officers who weren’t meeting the race-based quota.

“Basically, he would put you on the edge of performanc­e monitoring and then dangle the carrot of overtime in front of the officers. Those officers who needed the overtime to live would have no choice but to go out and manufactur­e as many arrests and summons as possible,” said Quinones, who is Hispanic. “The NYPD used overtime as a way to control its officers.”

Tsachas remains with the NYPD in Transit and has denied the allegation­s through his union.

“Minority officers who refuse to hunt Black and Hispanic civilians are stripped of overtime, negatively evaluated and placed on performanc­e monitoring,” said attorney John Scola, who represents the plaintiffs in the case.

“This toxic culture, which permeates the NYPD, forces officers to choose between standing up for what is right and being able to feed their families,” he said.

 ??  ?? Four more NYPD officers have made sworn declaratio­ns backing a suit claiming the Police Department uses an arrest quota system that targets people of color.
Four more NYPD officers have made sworn declaratio­ns backing a suit claiming the Police Department uses an arrest quota system that targets people of color.
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 ??  ?? In supporting suit by Lt. Edwin Raymond (below, center) against the NYPD, new declaratio­ns by cops say commanding officers Constantin Tsachas (below l.) and Christophe­r McCormack (below r.) pressured them to arrest more Blacks and Latinos.
In supporting suit by Lt. Edwin Raymond (below, center) against the NYPD, new declaratio­ns by cops say commanding officers Constantin Tsachas (below l.) and Christophe­r McCormack (below r.) pressured them to arrest more Blacks and Latinos.
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