NYPD officers mandated to report all street stops under new City Council bill

1 min read
Source: Gothamist
NYPD officers mandated to report all street stops under new City Council bill
Photo: Gothamist
TL;DR Summary

The New York City Council has passed the How Many Stops Act, requiring NYPD officers to report low-level encounters with citizens, including instances where officers ask for identification or consent to search. The goal is to gain a better understanding of policing practices in the city. The legislation also mandates the reporting of instances where individuals do not consent to an officer search. The NYPD will be required to post data on these stops quarterly on its website. While the police department and Mayor Eric Adams opposed the bill, citing administrative burdens, supporters argue that it will provide valuable data for informing public safety policy. Racial disparities in police stops persist, with a smaller percentage of white individuals being stopped compared to the stop-and-frisk era under former Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Share this article

Reading Insights

Total Reads

0

Unique Readers

1

Time Saved

1 min

vs 2 min read

Condensed

66%

378130 words

Want the full story? Read the original article

Read on Gothamist