The Oklahoman

Report finds NYC police misconduct in protests

- Dave Collins

Nearly 150 New York City police officers committed misconduct, including using excessive force, while responding to the 2020 protests over the killing of George Floyd, according to a report released Monday by a civilian review board.

The city’s Civilian Complaint Review Board, or CCRB, also found many officers discipline­d by the police department received punishment that was less than the panel recommende­d, and in some cases officers found to have committed misconduct were not discipline­d at all.

Investigat­ions into more than 600 complaints about police conduct during the protests had to be closed because officers could not be identified. In many cases that was because police purposely wore mourning bands over their badges or refused to provide their names, or because the department failed to track where officers were deployed, the 590-page report says.

The board received 321 complaints during the protests that were determined to be within its jurisdicti­on and 226 were investigat­ed.

The document describes, for example, police actions during one protest in Brooklyn on May 30, 2020, that drew numerous complaints.

An officer drove a police vehicle into the crowd and knocked protesters to the ground. Another officer pulled down a demonstrat­or’s coronaviru­sprotectin­g mask and pepper sprayed him in the face. On the Brooklyn Bridge that day, officers tackled protesters and hit them in the head with batons, the report says.

The panel substantia­ted 269 allegation­s of misconduct against 146 officers, including 140 allegation­s of excessive force and 72 claims of abuse of authority, including officers refusing to provide their names or obstructin­g their badges. The allegation­s that were sustained included 34 for improperly striking people with batons and 28 for improperly using pepper spray.

The document includes recommenda­tions for change.

The NYPD said it objects to many of the board’s characteri­zations. In a statement, it said many, if not all, of the review board’s recommenda­tions already have been implemente­d in response to the department’s own review and proposals by other agencies.

The agency also said the 226 complaints reviewed by the board contained 1,800 allegation­s, and only 15% of those were substantia­ted. The number of officers found to have committed misconduct was only a fraction of the more than 20,000 on duty daily at the height of the protests. Some demonstrat­ors were looting, setting fires and destroying property, the department noted. The NYPD said more than 400 officers were injured during the protests, including 250 who were hospitaliz­ed.

The board recommende­d charges and other discipline against 89 officers. It made a series of recommenda­tions including that all officers get updated training on crowd control tactics. The board also said police should not interfere with members of the press, that officers’ names and shield numbers should be visible at all times and that the department should assess how it uses various tactics and tools during protests.

 ?? Floyd. JOHN MINCHILLO/AP FILE ?? A protester is arrested by NYPD officers during a march on June 4, 2020, following the death of George
Floyd. JOHN MINCHILLO/AP FILE A protester is arrested by NYPD officers during a march on June 4, 2020, following the death of George

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