zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Culture
/
The NYPD Is Trying To Prevent Officers Being Punished For Severe Misconduct
The NYPD Is Trying To Prevent Officers Being Punished For Severe Misconduct-February 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:12:10

Image for article titled The NYPD Is Trying To Prevent Officers Being Punished For Severe Misconduct

In 2019, writer Eric Umansky watched a New York City Police Department car hit a teenager before lining up a group of young Black boys against a wall, arresting them without provocation. The Civilian Complaint Review Board confirmed that the NYPD officers acted unlawfully. And yet the NYPD is still refusing to punish officers who engage in severe misconduct, a new article reports.

The police, of course, argued that they were in the right, even if their defense was ridiculous. The boy the NYPD car hit was said to have run across the hood of the cop car. And it only got worse from there.

From the article:

The police response that night started when some teenagers told officers they had been robbed at the local park. But the officers only had what investigators later described as “” of who they were looking for.

The officers stopped a group of boys a few blocks away. There was little about them that matched the description of the assailants other than that they were Black, young and walking together. Indeed, the CCRB’s report noted, one of the officers “.”

Some of the boys ran, including the one who was hit by the police car. (They told investigators that they ran because they were scared.)

The boys who were arrested — a 15-year-old, a 14-year-old and the 12-year-old — said that the officers never offered any explanation for why they were stopped. They were released without charges, after being held for hours. Their parents said they weren’t given any documentation on the arrests. The mother of one of the boys worked for the NYPD as a school safety officer, but even she couldn’t get any record of what happened.

It was as if the case was being pushed into a fog.

Umansky’s reporting is impeccable, if horrifying. The CCRB began an investigation into the case, but the NYPD were slow to cooperate — by which point the officers involved had little recollection of what happened. And, even worse, when the CCRB announced the outcome of its investigation, the NYPD said it was ending the case and wouldn’t be taking any disciplinary action. Instead, it would handle the case internally.

The only punishment that was doled out went to the officer who used offensive language and told one of the teens to stop filming him. That was it. The NYPD entirely overruled the civilian agency that was designed to keep the police in check.

And, as you can imagine, this isn’t an uncommon practice. Umansky reports on several other civilian investigations brought against the NYPD that ended in similar fashion. The CCRB can only fully do its job if the NYPD participates, and the NYPD has completely avoided doing so.

Umansky’s entire article is worth reading, but it highlights one of the big questions of our modern era: Should we really expect justice to be done by organizations that avoid all external oversight? Can we rely on vague ethical standards to dictate our policing? The answer to both questions has largely been “no,” and Umansky’s reporting highlights just what an insidious problem this can be.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Culture
Mercedes-Benz' Bertha Benz Tribute Film is Strangely Dark and Feels Like a Trailer for a Horror Movie
Mercedes-Benz' Bertha Benz Tribute Film is Strangely Dark and Feels Like a Trailer for a Horror Movie
Are you familiar with the ? She’s amazing. She was the wife of Karl Benz, who built the car that would start Diamler-Benz, a car that was one of the earliest successful internal-combustion gasoline automobiles. The problem was that he couldn’t bring himself to really try it out or promote...
Feb 15, 2026
Davey G. Johnson, Veteran of Car and Driver and Jalopnik, Missing on Motorcycle Trip (Updated)
Davey G. Johnson, Veteran of Car and Driver and Jalopnik, Missing on Motorcycle Trip (Updated)
Authorities are currently searching for automotive journalist Davey G. Johnson, a veteran of Car and Driver, Autoweek, Jalopnik and more, after he apparently went missing on a motorcycle ride somewhere along California State Route 49 earlier this week. The confirmed it does have a missing person case in progress....
Feb 15, 2026
Another Dyno Test Reveals The 2020 Toyota Supra Has More Power Than Advertised
Another Dyno Test Reveals The 2020 Toyota Supra Has More Power Than Advertised
BMW guts or not, I was adamant that the felt like it had more than the reported 335 horsepower and 365 lb-ft of torque. The car can seriously move, and when Car and Driver revealed we all started to wonder how much power it really put down. Now the...
Feb 15, 2026
Minivan Sales Are Plummeting Compared to SUVs Because We're a Nation of Fools
Minivan Sales Are Plummeting Compared to SUVs Because We're a Nation of Fools
There was an , um, today that noted the declining market share and sales of minivans as SUV sales have climbed. The article suggested a declining birth rate as one reason, but the real main reason seems to be that people are choosing SUVs over minivans. This certainly seems...
Feb 15, 2026
Here's a First Look at Toyota and Subaru's Electric Car Platform of the Future
Here's a First Look at Toyota and Subaru's Electric Car Platform of the Future
It was announced this week that and Subaru will work together on a new electric vehicle platform, one that will combine Subaru’s all-wheel drive expertise with Toyota’s electrification chops. Here’s a quick look at the new “e-TNGA” platform, which Toyota states will underpin future mid-size and large electric passenger...
Feb 15, 2026
Trump Says Hefty Tariffs on Cars and Other Goods From Mexico Are off the Table
Trump Says Hefty Tariffs on Cars and Other Goods From Mexico Are off the Table
A mere nine days ago, President Donald Trump was out there on The Twitter —including cars and trucks—that would be destabilizing to the auto industry, a new North American trade agreement and American consumers. Those tariffs, Trump said, would start at 5 percent and possibly rise to 25 percent...
Feb 15, 2026
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved