Get the report here:
www.nyc.gov/assets/doi/reports/pdf/2024/OIGNYPD2024AR.Rpt.Release.03.28.2024.pdf
Get the report here:
www.nyc.gov/assets/doi/reports/pdf/2024/OIGNYPD2024AR.Rpt.Release.03.28.2024.pdf
Get the report here:
www.nyc.gov/assets/doi/press-releases/2024/April/17LL6.Rpt.Release.04.03.2024.pdf
Check out this website. There are a lot of interesting publications available on it.
It’s more left of center but I believe in promoting both sides of an argument.
We work to create a more effective and humane criminal justice system by performing original research and helping launch reforms around the world.
— Read on www.innovatingjustice.org/
The COVID pandemic and the police murder of George Floyd polarized views on policing. Rather than abolishing policing or maintaining its status quo, we need to make it better and more focused
— Read on www.scientificamerican.com/article/policing-works-when-it-is-done-right/
Introduction
New York City, enabled by state legislation, has long policed its roads with the help of cameras to catch vehicles running red lights and, more recently, breaking the speed limit. Such automated enforcement has helped the city reduce serious crashes by double-digit percentages, leading to a decline in fatal vehicle crashes from a modern high of 701 in 1990 to a modern low of 206 in 2018.
However, the city has not adequately used the data gleaned from red-light and speed camera tickets to help predict and thus prevent serious crashes. Reckless driving has increased since early 2020: by 2022, traffic deaths had risen to 261,2 27% above the low, thus reversing a decade of progress, before rising slightly in 2023, to 262. This increase in traffic deaths was part of a nationwide trend of reduced policing and spikes in antisocial behavior and violent deaths. The city sharply curtailed police traffic stops beginning in 2020, for example. That year, the city conducted only 510,000 stops—barely half the 985,000 stops recorded in 2019. Through November 2023, traffic stops had returned to just 70% of 2019 levels.
Get a .PDF copy here:
Ear Hustle launched in 2017 as the first podcast created and produced in prison, featuring stories of the daily realities of life inside California’s San Quentin State Prison, shared by those living it. Co-founded by Bay Area artist Nigel Poor alongside Earlonne Woods and Antwan Williams — who were incarcerated at the time — the podcast now tells stories from inside prison and from the outside, post-incarceration.
— Read more on what it is about here: www.earhustlesq.com/about
Get to the podcasts here:
The virtues of focused change and the uncertainties of systemic reform
— Read on www.vitalcitynyc.org/articles/the-precautionary-principle
A scan of changes to school policing in Chicago and nationwide following the 2020 murder of George Floyd and the protests that followed.
— Read on chicagojustice.org/2024/03/26/cops-in-schools-tracking-nationwide-changes-after-george-floyd/
All about Policing with a sprinkle of Criminal Justice - written by a Secret Contrarian
News and professional developments from the world of policing
A veteran police chief committed to improving police leadership, trust, effectiveness, and officer safety.