![]() ![]() Please allow 30 seconds to load properly. The app on this page is required to load a large amount of data, so you will likely experience a delay and may notice that your browser has slowed while the data loads. The CCRB also has a tool that allows a user to download the complaint history of individual officers, and maintains a more narrow version of our database here, which is updated on a daily basis. Given these limitations, the “Sort by Officer” view provides a summary of the complaint histories of individual officers since January 2000.ĭetails about the CCRB investigation process can be found on their website. The “Officer ID” field included in complaints received before 2000 is not consistent with the same field in records received after 2000. Information about discipline imposed on officers and people impacted in complaints is limited in records that predate January 2000. Of all complaints naming a NYPD officer since the 1980s, 60 percent are about white officers and 37 percent are about Black or Latinx officers. Of the complaints that include the self-reported race of the impacted person, 13 percent are white, and about 80 percent are Black or Latinx. It is not uncommon for a single police-civilian encounter to result in multiple complaints against the same officer or against multiple officers. Each row of the database represents a unique complaint made against an NYPD officer, including the officer’s name, race or ethnicity, rank, and current command (the NYPD unit where the officer was most recently assigned at the time that the complaint was filed at the time of the incident). Using the CCRB complaint history data, the NYCLU built a search tool to make the information more accessible. The database does not include pending complaints for which the CCRB has not completed an investigation as of April 2023. ![]() Since 2000, 38,272 active or former NYPD officers were named in misconduct investigations. The database includes 302,801 unique complaint records involving 107,187 incidents. The NYPD Misconduct Complaint Database, which the NYCLU obtained through Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) requests, is a repository of complaints made by the public on record at the CCRB. The records include information about misconduct investigations completed by the CCRB as of April 2023. Update: The NYCLU obtained an updated set of records from the Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB) in April 2023. ![]()
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