Is the NYPD Engaged in a Massive Temper Tantrum, Refusing to Write Tickets As Payback Against the Mayor?
by Nick Chiles
Are NYPD officers in Brooklyn
in the midst of a massive temper tantrum to show their displeasure with Mayor
Bill de Blasio?
Officers in the two precincts
connected to murdered Officers Winjian Liu and Rafael Ramos have virtually
stopped issuing tickets, according to a story in the New York Daily News,
basically conducting an enormous work stoppage.
The precincts are the 84th,
where Liu and Ramos worked, and the 79th, where they were murdered. The News
said just one summons was issued in the 84th in the seek since they were
killed. There were no summonses written in the 79th. In the previous week leading
up to their death, the precincts issued a total of 626 parking, moving and
criminal summonses.
In fact, the entire force of
34,000 cops appears to be engaged in the work stoppage, according to News
figures. Across the entire city, just 2,128 summons were issued in the past
week, compared to 26,512 for the previous week.
Arrests also have plummeted—115
in the past week for drugs, compared to 523 the previous week. Transit arrests
have dropped from 662 to 20 and housing arrests fell from 258 to 65.
“Guys are on edge,” an
unidentified police supervisor told the newspaper. “They’re still angry at the
mayor and they’re not about to do anything they don’t absolutely have to do.”
If the numbers are telling a
true story, it is a massive case of insubordination, affecting city revenue and
ultimately affecting all city residents. It is, in effect, a paid
strike—officers receiving their salaries without doing the jobs they are paid
for.
The police force is
demonstrating its extreme disrespect for the mayor of the city, showing him
that he dare not express sympathy for the darker residents in their midst—even
if some of those darker residents happen to be his children.
The city has not seen this
level of disrespect since the mayoralty of David Dinkins, the city’s first
African-American mayor, who was often at odds with the force in the 1990s after
controversial shootings when he would visit the families of victims—taking
sides with the enemy, in the eyes of many police officers.
It is also showing disrespect
to city residents, who have every right to expect their police force to do its
job. If the force feels such little compunction about exhibiting such massive
levels of misbehavior, one wonders what kind of message they are getting from
the police commissioner. He said he didn’t approve of the turning of their
backs on the mayor during Ramos’ funeral. What does he think about them
forgetting that they are police officers for the past two weeks?
Perhaps there is a silver
lining in a city where the force stopped and frisked millions of Black and
Hispanic males over the course of a decade: Black and brown boys could finally
walk the streets in a small measure of peace.