New Yorks attorney general sued the New York Police Department on Thursday, calling the rough treatment of protesters against racial injustice last spring part of a longstanding pattern of abuse that stemmed from inadequate training, supervision and discipline.
Attorney General Letitia James lawsuit includes dozens of examples of alleged misconduct during the spring demonstrations in the wake of George Floyds police killing, including the use of pepper spray and batons on protesters, trapping demonstrators with a technique called kettling and arresting medics and legal observers.
We found a pattern of deeply concerning and unlawful practices that the NYPD utilized in response to these largely peaceful protests, James said at a news conference announcing the lawsuit.
James, a Democrat, was tasked by Gov. Andrew Cuomo with investigating whether NYPD officers used excessive force to quell unrest and enforce Mayor Bill de Blasios nightly curfew. She issued a preliminary report in July that cited a clear breakdown of trust between police and the public.
James is seeking reforms including the appointment of a federal monitor to oversee the NYPDs policing tactics at future protests and a court order declaring that the policies and practices the department used during the protests were unlawful.
The lawsuit in federal court named the city, de Blasio, police Commissioner Dermot Shea and Chief of Department Terence Monahan as defendants. James criticized de Blasio for saying the use of kettling was justified and Shea for saying that the NYPD had a plan which was executed nearly flawlessly when officers aggressive cracked down on protesters on June 4 in the Bronx.
In June, at the height of the protests, de Blasio was accused of misleading the city when he told reporters that he personally saw no use of force around peaceful protests, even after officers had been caught on video moving on demonstrators without provocation and bashing them with batons.
De Blasio said he met with James on Wednesday and that they share the goal of pushing for major police reforms, such as implementing recommendations in previous reports on the NYPDs protest response. De Blasio, also a Democrat, said however that he did not agree a lawsuit was the solution.
A court process and the added bureaucracy of a federal monitor will not speed up this work, de Blasio said. There is no time to waste and we will continue to press forward.
John Miller, the NYPDs deputy commissioner of intelligence and counterterrorism, said the department is committed to reform but that James lawsuit doesnt seem to meet the standard for a federal monitor, and it doesnt seem to illustrate a pattern and practice as required.
The head of the citys largest police union blamed a failure of New York Citys leadership for sending officers to police unprecedented protests and violent riots with no plan, no strategy and no support.
They should be forced to answer for the resulting chaos, instead of pointing fingers at cops on the streets and ignoring the criminals who attacked us with bricks and firebombs, Police Benevolent Association President Pat Lynch said.
James lawsuit is the second major legal action to stem from the NYPDs handling of the protests.
In October, the New York Civil Liberties Union and the Legal Aid Society sued the city on behalf of protesters who say they were assaulted and abused by police.
A civil rights organization and a city watchdog agency have also criticized the departments actions.
Human Rights Watch issued a report in November on the Bronx crackdown and the citys inspector general issued a report in December that found that the NYPD was caught off guard by the size of the protests and resorted to aggressive tactics that stoked tensions and stifled free speech.
Mark Winston Griffith, a spokesperson for the advocacy group Communities United for Police Reform applauded the lawsuit, saying: NYPD violence against protesters is a long-standing problem and its a credit to Attorney General James that shes using the power of her office to challenge the systemic lack of accountability for this violence.
In a joint statement, the NYCLU and Legal Aid Society said: We hope this will be the beginning of a serious reckoning over police violence and militarized use of force against protesters, especially people of color, and a check on the impunity many officers have come to see as their right.
(AP)
6 Responses
A radical black leftist
one city agency to sue another city agency and for what?
not allowing enough crime!
this beast of a woman will riot with the rest of them in gehinom
What about all the officers that were killed? what about thousands of businesses demolished?
So… is this picture from one of these extremely ‘peaceful protests’?
So, mozee, which is worst: radical, black, or leftist?
Is this lady really incharge of our State Justice system??? doesn’t anyone think that even if it was mostly peaceful it was still very very dangerous for all of us and had to be stopped before more people lost their life???