"NYC Council Overrides Mayor Adams' Vetoes on Policing and Transparency Laws"

The New York City Council has overridden Mayor Eric Adams' vetoes on a solitary confinement ban and a bill to document police stops, with the council emphasizing the need for transparency and accountability in policing. Mayor Adams criticized the decision, arguing that the bills would make New Yorkers less safe and burden police officers with additional paperwork. The bills aim to limit solitary confinement in city custody and require the NYPD to publicly report on police-civilian investigative stops and consent searches, as well as expand reporting on vehicle stops. Legislators supporting the bills believe they will reduce violence and create transparency in policing, while the mayor contends they will hinder law enforcement efforts and increase costs.
- New York City Council overrides Mayor Eric Adams' vetoes on solitary confinement ban, police transparency bill ABC News
- New York City's pro-cop mayor loses high-profile fight over policing legislation POLITICO
- New York City Council votes to override Mayor Eric Adams' How Many Stops Act veto WABC-TV
- NYPD officers will have to record race of people they question under new police transparency law The Associated Press
- How Many Stops Act NYC: Eric Adams veto override expected today NBC New York
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