NYPD's Record of Restraint Improving
Posted: December 1st, 2006 03:04
PM EDT
By DAVID CRARY
AP National Writer
Critics of the New York Police Department have seized on the
killing of an man outside a strip club in a barrage of detectives'
bullets as proof of an undisciplined, gun-happy force.
But statistics give a different picture, backing the NYPD's
insistence that its officers, overall, are well-trained and prudent.
The shooting last weekend, killing an unarmed man who was to be
married later in the day, brought unwelcome attention to a
department that, for better and worse, is often in the headlines.
With more than 37,000 uniformed officers, the NYPD is by far the
country's biggest, best-known police force. Its sometimes notorious
abuses have become national news, yet its officers have killed fewer
people so far this year - 11 - than some police departments in far
smaller cities.
"There's always a spotlight on the NYPD," said Maki Haberfeld, a
professor at New York's John Jay College of Criminal Justice who
specializes in police training. "But in terms of actual numbers of
shootings, and their use of force, there's no doubt in my mind they
are one of the best departments (in) the country."
The NYPD's image has shifted dramatically in the past decade. It
was lionized in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks
and vilified before and since for various violent incidents,
including the jailhouse torture of Abner Louima in 1997 and the 1999
killing of unarmed African immigrant Amadou Diallo, who was struck
by 19 of the 41 bullets fired at him.
Many questions remain unanswered about the killing of 23-year-old
Sean Bell as he left his bachelor party at a Queens strip club.
Police officials say five officers fired 50 bullets at a car with
Bell and two other black men inside after it struck an undercover
officer and an unmarked NYPD minivan. The officers were white,
Hispanic and black.
The New York Civil Liberties Union, a frequent skeptic of the
NYPD's ability to police itself, has called for an independent
investigation of the shooting by the state attorney general's
office.
NYCLU executive director Donna Lieberman noted that citizen
complaints filed with a review board about alleged NPYD abuses had
increased by 60 percent from 2001 to 2005.
"The shooting has to be looked at in that context," she said.
"This is a time when the city should try to learn what went wrong -
not be defensive, but try to identify problems and solutions."
Other critics speaking out since the shooting include Amnesty
International, civil rights activists Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton,
and a local group of black officers seeking removal of a commander
overseeing the undercover unit involved in the shooting.
"This tragedy is not an isolated incident - it is part of a
pattern of questionable police tactics and abuse," said Larry Cox of
Amnesty International USA.
Yet statistics provided by the NYPD, and gathered by The
Associated Press from other police departments, show the New York
force in a relatively positive light in terms of shootings.
Though New York officers fatally shot 54 people in 1973 and 30 in
1996, last year's toll was nine people. According to the NYPD, that
was a rate of 0.25 killings per 1,000 officers, far lower than in
Los Angeles, Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia and other major cities.
So far this year, at least 19 people have been killed by police
in Philadelphia and 12 in Las Vegas, which has about 2,170 officers.
Police have fatally shot 12 people so far this year in suburban
Atlanta's DeKalb County, which with 700,000 residents is one-tenth
the size of the New York City.
The Miami police department - which overhauled its use-of-force
policies several years ago - says it has had no fatal shootings by
its officers this year.
For the NYPD, progress has come on several fronts. Its ranks have
diversified markedly with an influx of blacks, Hispanics and women;
its officers have been involved in 112 shooting incidents so far
this year, compared to 318 in 1996.
"Our officers have shown, I think, tremendous restraint over time
involving the use of force," Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said
this week.
One area of contention is the average number of shots fired per
incident - it has swung from 3.08 shots in 2004 to 5.02 last year to
3.8 so far this year. After both Saturday's shooting and the Diallo
killing, critics complained of what they considered to be barrages
fired by officers equipped with semiautomatic weapons.
Another concern is the deployment of special units, such as those
involved in the Diallo case and the Queens shooting.
Peter Moskos, a former Baltimore police officer who teaches
police studies at John Jay, said the NYPD's reputation is deservedly
high among most experts, but he also noted that special units had
been involved in several of New York's troubling incidents.
"They tend to be in more dangerous situations," Moskos said. "But
I don't think the local beat cops would have shot Diallo. They know
the area better. There's less fear."
He also said the suspected offenses being investigated at the
Queens strip club may not have warranted the fatal barrage of
gunfire.
At a news conference Thursday, Kelly announced the formation of a
committee to review policies governing undercover officers
throughout the NYPD.