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Get a link in your mailbox to your weekly NYPD Confidential column as soon as it is published! Click on the button above right on this page — or here — to sign up for this feature. Neighborhood Policing DoubtsOctober 21, 2019 Every police commissioner takes credit for the city’s 25-year crime decline that began under the mayoralty of Rudy Giuliani. Bill Bratton, his first police commissioner, attributed the declines to his get-tough policy of “broken windows,” arresting people for minor crimes to prevent more serious crimes. Under Michael Bloomberg, Ray Kelly attributed the declines to his policy of Stop and Frisk, which consisted of stopping virtually every young black and Hispanic male until the policy was ruled unconstitutional. Under O’Neill and de Blasio, precinct level specialized units have been disbanded, their cops reassigned to Neighborhood Policing. The hope is that, in bringing the police and communities closer, neighborhood folk would alert the police to criminal activity. Intertwined with Neighborhood Policing is the department’s attempt to strike a balance between addressing violent crime while turning a blind eye to lower level quality-of-life crimes such as public urination, street-corner drug deals, or trespassing: i.e., waking up and finding homeless guys sleeping on your doorstep. |
Chief of Patrol Rodney Harrison, who heads the department’s Neighborhood Policing policy, said that the gambling joint had not been reported to the police. “I need the community to work with us and stop these operations,” he said.
As the Crown Heights shooting suggests, Neighborhood Policing doesn’t appear to be any more effective in preventing crime than Community Policing was. Final results are not yet in but the indications are not good. |
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