The NYPD Tapes Confirmed - Page 1 - News - New York - Village Voice

In 2010, The Village Voice produced a five-part series, the "NYPD Tapes,"
about a cop who secretly taped his fellow New York Police Department officers.

For more than two years, Adrian Schoolcraft secretly recorded every roll call at the 81st
Precinct in Brooklyn and captured his superiors urging police officers to do two things in
order to manipulate the "stats" that the department is under pressure to produce: Officers
were told to arrest people who were doing little more than standing on the street, but they
were also encouraged to disregard actual victims of serious crimes who wanted to file
reports.


Arresting bystanders made it look like the department was efficient, while artificially
reducing the amount of serious crime made the commander look good.


In October 2009, Schoolcraft met with NYPD investigators for three hours and detailed more
than a dozen cases of crime reports being manipulated in the district. Three weeks after that
meeting—which was supposed to have been kept secret from Schoolcraft's superiors—his
precinct commander and a deputy chief ordered Schoolcraft to be dragged from his
apartment and forced into the Jamaica Hospital psychiatric ward for six days.

In the wake of our series, NYPD commissioner Raymond Kelly ordered an investigation into
Schoolcraft's claims. By June 2010, that investigation produced a report that the department
has tried to keep secret for nearly two years.


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