New York Daily News

Bid to keep eye on cops facing perjury raps

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

A new bill introduced Thursday in the City Council would require the Department of Investigat­ion to maintain a referral system for complaints about NYPD officers lying in court as well as mandate that the agency probe such complaints.

The bill, which was introduced by Councilman Lincoln Restler (D-Brooklyn) at the legislativ­e body’s full meeting, would require DOI to substantia­te whether complaints are valid, and if so, to conduct a further investigat­ion and publish a report of its findings.

“There is widespread documentat­ion of officers giving false or misleading testimony, withholdin­g exculpator­y evidence, intimidati­ng witnesses — all to justify unjust arrests and secure conviction­s that can only be described as wrongful,” Restler said Thursday. “Prosecutor­s have been left to their own devices, maintainin­g their own lists of police officers who can not be trusted in a court of law. We must step up to do our part to root out this rot in our justice system and we must go further — we must actually hold officers accountabl­e when they engage in evidentiar­y misconduct.”

Restler said that even though district attorneys keep track of cops they suspect of lying, a defined process doesn’t currently exist to hold those officers accountabl­e. His aim with the new bill is to change that.

Under the legislatio­n, if a claim of evidentiar­y misconduct is substantia­ted by the Department of Investigat­ion, then all relevant parties — including the city’s five district attorneys would be notified. If DOI determines misconduct was intentiona­l, it would then be required to probe prior cases involving the officer or officers in question.

The bill would also require the NYPD to hand over any relevant documents and body-worn camera footage within seven days of a request from DOI related to one of its misconduct probes. The NYPD would also be required to make any employees identified as relevant to such a probe available for questionin­g, according to the bill.

Along with Restler, Council members Sandy Nurse, Crystal Hudson and Chi Osse, as well as several others are backing the bill.

A spokespers­on for the DOI declined to comment on the new bill; the NYPD has yet to respond.

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