City pays $121 million for police misconduct, the most in five years
Police misconduct settlements in New York City last year were driven to their highest level since 2018 by six payouts each more than $10 million, including one formuhammad Aziz, whose conviction in the assassination ofmalcolmx was thrown out after he spent two decades in prison.
Those cases, with a total value of about $73 million, accounted for about 60% of the settlements the police department paid last year, according to an analysis of city data released Tuesday by the Legal Aid Society, New York’s largest provider of criminal and civil services for indigent clients.
The $121 million in payouts last year was up from about $85 million in 2021.
“In recent years, district attorneys have moved to vacate manymore criminal cases going back dozens of years, which have led to an increase in the number of reverse conviction suits and related payouts,” said Nick Paolucci, a spokesperson for the city’s law department.
The city is “promptly reviewing” cases to keep litigation costs down and to provide a measure of justice to those who were convicted wrongfully, Paolucci added.
The increase in payouts also can be attributed partially to lawsuits filed after Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, said Jennvine Wong, a Legal Aid staff attorney with the organization’s Cop Accountability Project.
Last year, the city’s Civilian Complaint Review Board, the oversight body that examines police misconduct, recommended that 145 city police officers should be disciplined for misconduct during the demonstrations after the killing of George Floyd, a 46-year- old Black man who died in Minneapolis after his neck was pinned to the ground by Derek Chauvin, a white police officer, in 2020.
During the weeks of protest, police officers and demonstrators clashed throughout the city, resulting in injuries and hundreds of arrests.
The oversight body found evidence that supported 267 accusations of misconduct against the officers, recommending the highest level of discipline for about 60% of them.
Even outside the lawsuits that stemmed from the protests, the police department’s settlement amounts are “astronomically high,” Wong said. “They make the payouts, they settled the lawsuits, but then they don’t pursue discipline,” she said.
Police departments throughout the country have money set aside to settle lawsuits and often pay settlements to avoid lengthy litigation, said Maria Haberfeld, professor of police science at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Settling a lawsuit for police misconduct doesn’t mean that a department will punish officers, she said, adding that a payout “has no correlation to internal discipline.”
For the New York Police Department, a settlement “does not signify immediately, automatically that the officer needs to be brought on disciplinary charges,” she said.
When there are internal charges filed over a police officer’s conduct, administrative trials can take months to years to be decided.
“The systemic lack of police accountability for officers who kill and abuse people is a decades- old problem,” said Yul-san Liem, a representative of the Justice Committee, an organization that works with families in New York City whose relatives have been killed by police officers.
“All of those families have actively been campaigning and calling for the officers who killed their loved ones to be fired, and that still hasn’t happened,” she said.
A spokesperson for the police department said the “decision to settle a lawsuit and for how much remains with the Law Department and the comptroller.”
Patrick Lynch, president of the Police Benevolent Association, said the annual totals of settlements are “not a fair or accurate measure” of how police officers have performed in a given year.
“The city routinely settles cases in which police officers have done nothing wrong, and some of the largest payouts arise fromdecades-old cases that don’t involve a single cop who is still on the job today,” he said.