The Daily News and the NYPD: Blinded By Love
October 18, 2010
What’s with the editorial page of the Daily News when it comes to the police department?
A real newspaper challenges authority, uncovers facts that officials want to hide from the public, and encourages its reporters to take the story wherever it leads.
Why, then, is the News a milksop and apologist for the New York City Police Department?
Take its Oct. 3rd editorial, lamenting 2010’s rise of 45 murders over the same period last year, which translates into a 13 per cent increase [a figure the News apparently found too disturbing to mention.]
Instead of decrying the department’s declining manpower or its leadership drift — a.k.a. Commissioner Ray Kelly — the News appeared to blame the increase in murders on two criminologists.
Or, as its editorial put it, “[T]he NYPD is under assault by self-styled activists and self-promoting academics. …
“They would force the department to curtail asking suspicious characters to account for themselves and frisking those who may be armed.
“They would enact legislation that would bar the police commissioner and precinct commanders from demanding that the troops make arrests and issue summonses rather than stand around as the blue flowerpots of old did.
“They would have the NYPD abandon perhaps the most effective public safety innovation in the history of policing: Compstat. Using real-time crime data, the system holds commanders accountable for responding to felonious outbreaks.”
O.K., now let’s get real.
First, it wasn’t these academics who raised the alarm over stop and frisks. It was Governor Paterson, the state legislature, the Civil Liberties Union, and God knows how many other New Yorkers disturbed by seemingly random police stops of some three million New Yorkers, 88 per cent of whom had done nothing wrong.
Second, nobody wants to handcuff the cops. The issue is that cops appear to avoid doing true police work, and instead are fudging crime statistics to make the city seem safer than it is. According to tape-recordings of roll call meetings at Brooklyn’s 81st precinct, for example, the police were arresting innocent people to make their quotas.
This burgeoning scandal is apparently growing too big for Kelly to ignore. Last week he leveled charges against five supervisors, including the 81st precinct’s former commander Steven Mauriello, for allegedly manipulating crime statistics.
Third, as for abandoning Compstat, no one has called for the end of this revolutionary and highly successful crime-tracking program, least of all the two academics scapegoated by the News, Eli Silverman and John Eterno, who happens to be a former NYPD captain.
Rather, their study, published last February, claimed that up to 25 per cent of the nearly 500 commanders they interviewed told them that Compstat crime figures were under-reported to make the city seem safer than it is.
As Silverman and Eterno recently wrote in the Village Voice — an article that appears to have prompted the News’ attack — “The ominous side [of Compstat] is that, in order to silence dissenters and deny any problems, the NYPD continues to close its doors to any non-sponsored outside scrutiny. Yet the evidence of data manipulation is, at this point, overwhelming.”
That’s the issue, readers. The lack of outside scrutiny and the lack of transparency within the police department. Especially when it comes to crime statistics.
To keep down the numbers of reported crimes, detectives even refuse to take complaints from civilians, as the News’s own police bureau chief Rocco Parascandola reported in 2005 when he worked for Newsday.
That’s what apparently happened six weeks ago in the 66th precinct in Brooklyn when officers refused to take a complaint — with tragic consequences — from a woman who spotted a flasher exposing himself outside her home during the last week of August, according to the Borough Park newspaper, Hamodia.
A week later, that flasher shot four members of a civilian patrol who had been chasing him after he, again, was seen exposing himself, this time in front of children.