New York, NY - Nearly five dozen New York City police
officers have been sued more than 10 times in the past decade, according to a newspaper
report published Sunday.
The review published by the New York Daily News said the suits against the 55 officers range
from allegations of false arrest to pets getting shot during police raids.
The Daily News reported the number of claims brought against
the NYPD has more than doubled over the last decade to a high of 9,570 in 2012.
It is unclear how many of those suits were settled, thrown out or adjudicated
in favor of the plaintiff.
Michael Palladino, president of the Detectives Endowment
Association, notes that the claims do not indicate wrongdoing.
He says they
could be a result of an officer being more active and therefore more likely to
be sued and complained that the city has been quick to settle cases, a practice
he said creates incentive for plaintiffs to make claims for easy money.
Last September, then-Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly
established a civil lawsuit monitoring program, as well as a separate risk
assessment unit.
Police officials looked at the number of lawsuits filed
against an officer, their nature and an officer’s specific role in an incident.
NYPD spokesman Stephen Davis told the Daily News that such an approach allows
the department to differentiate between an officer doing his job properly and
an officer with a potential problem.
The risk assessment unit looks at patterns and trends in the
lawsuits that could warrant further review.
Current Police Commissioner Bill Bratton, appointed by Mayor
Bill de Blasio, is “taking a hard look” at ways to improve both the monitoring
program and the risk assessment unit, according to Davis.
During his mayoral campaign last fall, de Blasio also called
for better scrutiny of suits against police.
As commissioner of the Los Angeles Police Department from
2002 to 2009, Bratton started a program to assess lawsuits that allowed the
department to target problem crews for additional training. In 2001, the LAPD
was sued 828 times, and the city paid out $58 million, according to the News.
In 2012, the department was sued 223 times, and paid out $20 million in
settlements.
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