Transcript: Mayor Bill de Blasio, Police Commissioner William Bratton Hold Media Availability To Discuss Latest Crime Statistics

July 11, 2016Police  Commissioner William Bratton: Good morning. As you know, our tradition  is at the end of the month – to report within several days of the end of the  month our CompStat figures, as well as discuss particular crimes of interest to  you. Today’s event is intended to discuss not only the month of June, but also  the first six months of this year trending in terms of where we think we’ll be  at the end of the year. So, it is a little later than usual. And the events of  last week also compounded our ability to put the numbers together and be able  to have a conference where we can discuss the crime numbers, which from my  perspective and that of the Mayor – we’re looking very, very good. Thirty  months into this administration that crime continues to go down – and we  are projecting it will continue to go down.That  – we have taken the liberty of giving you all seats and giving ourselves  seats. Dermot will be talking about six months of crime – presentation,  Dermot Shea – presentation might run a little longer than usual, so we  figured we’d make sure we were all in a position to be rested while he gives  his numbers.The  numbers are very, very good. I am very pleased with the performance of the  department I’m privileged to lead. As Dermot will point out – that the  crime numbers for June continuing the trends of the last 30 months look very,  very good. And the crime numbers for the first six months of this year  – with overall crime under – around 48,000 criminal incidents. There is a  real strong potential by the end of the year – our goal will be to once  again try to hit under 100,000 major crimes in the city. And we go back to the  early 1990s where we were averaging over half a million a year.So,  I’m going to turn it over to the Mayor for his comments. Dermot will give more  of the specifics. We will also be prepared to have discussions about the crime  numbers we’re presenting – but then we’ll have off-topic opportunities  also. So with that, I would turn it over to Mayor de Blasio, Sir.Mayor  Bill de Blasio:  Thank you very much, Commissioner. Commissioner – congratulations to you and  your leadership team and especially congratulations to the men and women of the  NYPD for an extraordinary six months of accomplishment. I want to thank  everyone at the NYPD. This was the ultimate team effort. And some of the  numbers we’re going to go over here suggest big changes in this city that have  been engineered over the last 30 months by Commissioner Bratton, and Chief  O’Neill, and the whole team up here. And these – from my point of view – are  the kind of changes that will have a lasting impact on this city because this  model of policing is working more and more. And in this approach to policing  – this pinpointed strategy, this effort of going at where the specific  problems are and reinforcing those areas heavily; the community policing,  neighborhood policing model we put in place; the focus on technology – all  of this is paying off. And it’s creating a momentum that allows the police to  do better and better all the time. And as more problems are addressed, there’s  more energy to go at the remaining problems; and in the middle of all that  – by the end of the year – 2,000 officers more on patrol. So this is  a really powerful moment where the NYPD is getting to do things that it’s  always wanted to do. It’s now getting the chance to do them and to change the  lives of people in all the neighborhoods of this city.I  want to, of course, reflect upon how difficult it has been this last week. And  what I said about the recognition all New Yorkers should have – that our  officers feel a deep kinship with each other – they feel a deep connection to  each other – not only here in the city, but all around the country. So  it’s really important for all New Yorkers to appreciate what the policing  profession has gone through this week – this last week. And remember that  the way forward comes from deepening the bonds between police and community.  And every one of us is a part of that. Every one of us has an opportunity to  connect more deeply with the police who protect us. And certainly our police  are doing that with our communities. That’s the strategy. And that strategy is  really taking hold. And you’ll see in these numbers – some of the progress  here is directly related to neighborhood policing – to the NCO initiative  where more and more residents are now making police aware of dangers in their  community. 

They’re reporting to officers where criminals are, where illegal  guns are, where illegal social clubs are. When you talk to police officers,  it’s very much like any other situation strategically in life. Information is  power.And  when community residents proactively seek out police officers to tell them the  things they need, that is the beginning of much greater change. And we see it  happening already with the NCO program all over this city.In  terms of the unity that we have to reach, it comes from – all of these efforts,  neighborhood by neighborhood, comes from the neighborhood policing strategy, it  comes from a different approach to training, it comes from a recognition of the  biases in all of us – and strategies to address those biases. That’s why I  commend the Commissioner for having instituted as part of police training  implicit bias training. That is one of the difference makers. And that is  admired and appreciated all over the country – that the NYPD is leading the way  in this area.That’s  part of how we make the change. Another part of how we make the change is that  every person who cares deeply about improving the relationship between police  and community has to comport themselves in a way that helps achieve that.  There’s been a lot of information and some misinformation in the last week, and  certainly over months and months.I  want to commend the protesters who, this weekend, stopped in the middle of their  protest and had a moment of silence for the five officers we lost in Dallas,  because they very visibly showed the world that you can be working for social  change but still honor our police officers, and want only safety for our police  officers.And  I have said it to you before but I have to say it again – there’s no more  powerful example and metaphor for this nation than the fact that the officers  in Dallas under fire immediately went to protect the protesters they had just  been walking alongside. Their first instinct was to protect the civilians  around them. These are the examples of the way forward, and the things that we  all have to do for each other to create a different and better society.In  terms of what’s happening here – and you’ll hear a lengthy, hopefully not too  lengthy presentation, from Dermot Shea.Commissioner  Bratton:  It’s actually fairly brief.

Mayor: He’s getting  better. You’re going to hear some numbers that are striking.Shootings  – down 20 percent since last year, the fewest shootings in the first six months  of any year in our history. This reflects the extraordinary work of the men and  women of the NYPD. And to put it in real terms – 100 fewer shootings compared  to the same point last year. Let’s put that in very human terms, what that  means for the people who did not encounter violence, whose lives were not  disrupted because of the work of the NYPD.Gun  arrests – up 20 percent. We’re dealing with a horrendous situation, and I  believe this nation is really focusing on the gun issue more and more. And I  believe as this country recognizes that the flow of guns all over this country  into the wrong hands, be they terrorists or criminals or people with mental  illness – is a threat to all of us, and it’s a threat to our law enforcement  officers. The more this nation recognizes this reality, the more change I  believe will come.But  against that horrible backdrop, the NYPD has found a way to get more and more  illegal guns off our streets – 20 percent more than last year. 11 fewer murders  compared to the first six months of last year – down six percent.And  this next point is so powerful – in terms of robberies, burglaries, and auto  theft in each of these categories – the best first six months of a year in the  modern era in all three of those categories. No six-months of the beginning of  any year has been better than this in terms of reducing robberies, burglaries,  and auto theft.So  2016 saw the fewest shootings, the fewest robberies, the fewest burglaries, the  fewest auto-thefts of any first-half of a year in a CompStat era.So,  when you think about that, the lives of everyday New Yorkers are freer. They’re  more peaceful. They’re less disrupted. And people have every reason to feel  safer. We have more work to do. Every day we know have more work to do, and one  crime is one crime too many.But  these kinds of numbers suggest real change for every day people’s lives.I’m  going to say a few words in Spanish.[The  Mayor speaks in Spanish]Back  to you.Commissioner  Bratton:  Dermot Shea will give you the update here. He will be assisted by a number of  charts that will be shown on the various screens around the room.Deputy  Commissioner Dermot Shea, NYPD: Good morning, everyone. So  two-and-a-half years ago, we began speaking about a core group of offenders  showing up at multiple shooting scenes, arrested multiple times for firearm  possession. We committed, at that time, to focusing in on this core group of  offenders, and I think the numbers that you’re going to hear today are  proof-positive of a winning strategy, if you will. 110 fewer shooting incidents  this year – these are not minor ebbs and flows in crime, these are dramatic  drops. 120 fewer people shot in New York City so far this year. So, the  question generally is, what are we doing? And we’re doing quite a bit. You’re  seeing a combination of focused gang takedowns, focused enforcement, and then  complimented by the integration of the new NCO program with community  involvement that the Mayor alluded to. You  hear constantly – and you’re going to see and hear in a minute from Bob Boyce,  describing some of these successful gang take downs. And it garners a lot of  media attention as these cases are coming down, but what you don’t always hear  is the data-driven analysis behind these, the analysis of effective cases, who  to target. And this is all behind the scenes going on, which is leading to that  110 shooting drop – really, to maximize the results. At the same time that  we’re doing this, we’re seeing shootings drop. We’re seeing gun arrests rise 20  percent – that’s the highest number of gun arrests in New York City in over  five years. You see other types of activity fall – in June alone, 5,000 fewer  arrests; 5,000 fewer criminal court summonses; over 8,000 fewer stops; nearly  20,000 fewer contacts, if you will, at the same time that we’re hitting  record-setting low levels of crime. And this precision that we’re detailing  doesn’t just apply to gun violence. It’s the same individuals, whether groups,  gangs, crews – that their day job is stealing cars, robbing people, etcetera.  So, this is the corollary where we’re seeing not just crime drop – violence  drops and at the same time.The  good news is, as you hear these numbers, we’re not done. We’re getting  unprecedented amounts of technology integrated into the systems. And this  technology – the anticipation is that we have not peaked – it’s going to  catapult us further as we learn – our detectives, our officers really learn how  to maximize the benefits of these technologies. So,  here’s a brief view of June crime – down one percent – a decrease of 121 crimes  – that’s the lowest June index crime number in CompStat era. We hit the lowest  number in robberies for June, burglaries in June, and shooting incidents. One  category we had an increase in – murder – 32 recorded murders, 30 of which  happened in June – two were re-classed. What we saw in the murders in the month  of June was street – very plain outside gunfire, predominantly the vast  majority in the Brooklyn and the Bronx. 24 of the 30 that occurred in June  occurred in Brooklyn and the Bronx. When  you talk about year-to-date through June 30th, now, index crime – we are  essentially flat. The Commissioner alluded to the goal of under 100,000 crimes.  We finished last year with roughly 105,000 major index crimes in New York City.  As we sit here today, July 11th, we are actually about 160 crimes below the  level where we were last year – so, very promising numbers. Murder – 11 murders  down; rape year-to-date – we are up 7.3 percent. I’ll slow down a minute here,  because we always get questions on the rape. So, just to dissect the rape  occurrences that we’re seeing, we categorize rape into three categories in New  York City – stranger, acquaintance, and domestic. The stranger rapes account  for about eight percent of the overall rapes. Stranger rapes in New York City  are actually down this year. So, that leaves the other 92 percent – both  acquaintance and domestic, which are up slightly. The irony here is not lost on  us that in these categories, generally, oftentimes, we have from the beginning  in these cases an identified perpetrator, but the unique nature of these cases  at times makes it difficult as we move through the criminal justice system. So,  it is something we are aware of. Despite this, we are constantly advocating for  more reporting, because we’re aware that this is a unique crime that oftentimes  goes unreported. With the rapes that were recorded in New York City this year,  one out of four did not occur this year – and that’s fairly consistent with  what we see in prior years. Robberies  – I mentioned the lowest June. It’s also the lowest point we’re ever been at in  the CompStat era in year-to-date through June 30th – robberies in New York  City. Same can be said for burglaries. Same can be said for stolen autos. By  borough, three of the five boroughs are down in overall crime through June  30th. There are two boroughs that are up – one being the Bronx, which is being  driven by domestic-related crime. You have two ends of the spectrum in the  Bronx this year – they are having their lowest recorded shooting incident  numbers at the same time that we’re seeing flare-ups in some other categories,  most recently robberies and domestic crime. And there is a corollary sometimes  between those robberies. We’re seeing domestic robberies, domestic assaults.  So, the Bronx is one of the two boroughs up. The second borough that’s up in  crime through June 30th is Manhattan, and that is a completely different  scenario. We’re seeing a bit of an increase in grand larcenies. And with the  grand larcenies, what we’re seeing is recent spikes in not in-person grand  larcenies. So, phone calls – and I would urge everyone, just to get the message  out to family, friends, loved ones, if it’s too good to be true, it is. So,  what we’re seeing most recently in New York City – and we know that this is  happening across the country – people getting solicited on the phone or on the  internet. If somebody sends you a check and says keep it, but send me something  back, it’s probably a scam. If somebody asks you to send them [inaudible] or  iTunes gift cards as payment for some service, whether it’s a car or a computer  that you’re buying, it’s potentially a scam. Use a lot of caution, because  those are the two areas where we’re seeing an increase this year in New York  City. When  you talk about housing crime year-to-date, we’re up 158 crimes – it comes out  to a 6.8 percent increase in housing crime fueled by two categories – the Bronx  and domestic crime, both, again, which are related. Housing crime – like the  Bronx – lowest shooting numbers for housing in at least 10 years. So,  significant advances on some fronts, but, behind closed doors, those crimes that  are sometimes very difficult to combat is where we are seeing our increase.  Housing crime currently in New York City is right where it normally is – about  five percent of overall index crime in New York City – about 20 percent of the  shootings. And on the transit front, Joe Fox will be very quick to point out  that we are near record lows in transit and we’re essentially now flat in  transit crime – down in stabbing-slashings in transit, which was making the  news earlier this year. And transit overall has accomplished this while cutting  significantly the number of arrests made. I’ll  finish a little bit with just some of the overall activity. Arrests – down  three percent this year. To see the full story, you need to go further – down  19 percent in two years. We are at the lowest level in over 20 years in arrests  made in New York City. This is while felony arrests are up, index crime arrests  are up, and the Mayor already alluded to the gun arrests – minimum five-year  high – and not just arrests – stronger cases and with the anticipation of  better prosecution. And we are working on unprecedented levels with all of our  partners on that front. Stop,  question, and frisks – down 250 percent – excuse me, 45 percent – 250 is for  the year. Under 8,000 recorded stops in New York City this year. So, to  summarize – a very good picture. We expect to go even lower as we integrate. We  think we’re scratching the surface of some of the new technology that’s been  afforded to us. So, very good times ahead. Commissioner  Bratton:  Two comments, following up on Dermot’s presentation, relative to the stop,  question, and frisks. The numbers are down, as you’re well aware, even as crime  continues to go down. So, increasingly, we believe we’re stopping the right  people, and that’s reflected by the fact that a percentage of those stopped –  arrested is up dramatically from the period of time where we were stopping  hundreds of thousands. In terms of the gun seizures, that’s also reflective of  officers in the street. A lot of work being done by our field intelligence  officers that work out of the precincts. Their seizures are up dramatically  also this year. I would also point out that violent crime in America – the  country as a whole – and particularly in most of its major cities is up dramatically  this year. You report on it in many of your media outlets in other cities  around the country. The experience in New York is really the exception to most  of the major cities in this country at this particular time.So,  arrests, summonses, stops are down [inaudible]. Meanwhile, we’re arresting a  lot more of the right people for the right crimes, that’s leading to the crime  decline. And my projection is that the numbers will continue to go down. We’re  now into our 26th straight year of overall crime decline in this city, and  that’s something I think we can all feel grateful for. There’s 8.5 million of  us here now. There were 7.5 million when I first came to New York in 1990. So,  by and large, we’re getting along pretty well with each other and I think it’s  something that oftentimes gets lost in the mix of all the other things that are  going on nationally and elsewhere in the State.With  that, I’d like to introduce Chief of Detectives Bob Boyce, well known to all of  you. Bob will give you some specifics on some of the driving influences on the  kind of declines that Dermot Shea has just talked about. Bob?­Chief  of Detectives Robert K. Boyce, NYPD: Good afternoon everyone. At the end of  2015, we took a hard look at motives. Detectives Bureau defines the motive of  each shooting and each homicide. So we took a hard look and we saw the number  one motive on shootings in this city was gang-related. What are we going to do  about it?We  changed that paradigm we had before. We had all of our best detectives, or a  lot of our best detectives in homicide squads. 

So we wanted to move them into a  proactive sphere, which are gang investigations. So we created different  divisions within the Detective Bureau, the unified investigative model, and  started using those detectives to tough tackle on these gang members. So far  this year in the first six months, Dermot talked about the reduction in  shootings in homicides. It’s even greater in the gang realm as well as  narcotics and I will explain. We have 41 total takedowns year to date for the  first six months of this year – 24 of those 41 were gang; 17 were narcotic. And  the gang takedowns – 491 arrests and they’re targeted at prior shooting  locations. Where is that? In the Bronx in the 4-7 Precinct, the Big Money  Bosses, 45 arrests. Operation Eastchester Gardens, 2Fly, 44 arrests – there  were giving us fits for years in the 4-7 and 4-9 as far as back and forth  gang-shootings. We arrested them and we are seeing dramatic reductions. And if  you see these maps over here, as you go around the City, certain locations are  driving our shooting numbers. Brooklyn North, Cypress Hills Houses – there was  another big takedown there. Team Side Crips, Pop Out Boys in the 7-9. And you  go through each one, the Upper East Side of Manhattan, the 2-3, 2-5, where  Detective Holder was murdered; those East Harlem gangs taken down and put in  federal [inaudible]. So where are we? Gang-motivated homicides this year so  far, 11 versus 29. That’s 18 reductions, that’s a 62 percent reduction in  gang-motivated homicides. Shootings: 84 gang shootings thus far this year  versus 165 last year; down 81 or about 50 percent.So  we are seeing quite a benefit out of these long term investigations with these  great detectives doing this work. With all members of all the District  Attorneys of New York combined as well the Eastern Southern District. I will  say this, each one of these gang cases are pre-indicted so we gather evidence;  we bring it to a grand jury. Those individuals are indicted and then we go out  and arrest them with these takedowns. So they are already as far as halfway  along into the court procedure before we arrest them. Very few times do we  arrest without an indictment in these operations. We’ve done incredibly well  with this.Narcotics  – one of the big things, if you see the other posted behind that we see an  uptick and it’s a scary situation with the amount of heroin overdoses. I  specifically tasked my narcotics officers. Each one will take a case on an  overdose in this city. It’s developed into a lot of 17 major takedowns done so  far this year and you can see the amount of recovery, it’s tremendous. 115  arrests but we have 655 kilos of cocaine recovered and I believe 130 kilos of  heroin recovered as well; 23 guns, $2 million. So the greatest detectives in  the world are being the greatest detectives in the world and doing a great job  as far as targeting the people who are driving the numbers in the city. It’s a  joint effort in the Police Department; however I represent the detectives so I  am going to bang that drum as hard as I can. But I’ve done a great job with it  and it’s not over yet, we still have active cases going forward right now.  Thanks.Mayor: Bob,  do you have that gang-shooting number you talked about upstairs?Chief  Boyce: Yes. The gang-shootings, I said 84 versus 65 down all these numbers; narcotics,  67 versus 76. Tremendous decreases in the gang overall takedown and its paying  a dividend here. Probably the best thing we’ve done – gang-wise in a long time.  It’s not the end of it but it’s certainly 49 percent, 50 percent reduction in  gang-shootings. 81 of the 100-plus, 120, I believe, overall number. That’s  three-quarters at least; of the gang-shootings this year are gang-shooting  reductions.Commissioner  Bratton: Thank  you Bob. Chief O’Neill will speak next, Chief of Department. He and Chief  Gomez, as you know, have been driving the department’s community policing,  neighborhood policing effort in very successful ways. The introduction of  Neighborhood Coordination Officers, the pilot Precinct Program in addition to  the significant reduction in crime that we are experiencing, a significant  number of enforcement necessary in the city to keep the peace – the peace  dividend, as we call it. We’ve also seen a significant decline in the number of  CCB complaints against our officers as their activity has lessened because they  don’t need to be as proactive in many neighborhoods as they once did with the  decline in crime. Chief O’Neill is going to speak to you about specifically the  recent demonstrations – what the department has been dealing with. In New York  fortunately the demonstration we’ve been dealing with had been by and large  very peaceful, destructive to traffic from time to time, but with the exception  of one arrest for an assault on our police officer, they have also been  remarkably free of violence. Jim have you got an update on what people have  been doing?Chief  O’Neill:  Sure just to talk about the NCO Program for a second, we are up to 26 commands  throughout the city plus 6 PSA’s and by the time we get to October that should  be up to 35. There’s actually a roll out tonight in the 7-9 Precinct, Chief  Monahan will be taking care of that. Just a recap on the demos I spoke about. I  spoke about Thursday night’s demos at the press conference on Friday but for  those of you who aren’t here we had about 1,500 people at peak. We ended up  making 42 arrests. The bulk of them were at 42nd Street and 7th Avenue in Times  Square. And a couple were over at 5-7 and 5, 57th and 5th Avenue, and then one  at 72nd Street and 5th Avenue.There  was one arrest for assault— assault, second degree which is an assault on a  police officer. The police officer is recovering. I think it was a leg injury.  On Friday evening, we also had demonstrations in three locations: Union Square,  1-2-5 and Lenox and 110 and Lenox. At peak that was about 500 people, it ended  around 11 o’clock that night. No major incidents. No major disruptions and no  arrests. Saturday evening was much busier. We ended up with about 1,500  demonstrators, started at Brooklyn Bridge with about 100 to 200 people. By the  time the group got to Union Square it grew. They broke out into multiple groups  and we ended up making 23 arrests. Three were at 42nd Street and 5th Avenue; 7  were at 14th and 6th. There was an additional arrest in the Midtown South area.  And the most problematic one for me was the 12 on the F-D-R Drive. There was an  additional charge there for being on a prohibited roadway and that was in the –  I don’t know if you remember Saturday evening that was in the [inaudible],  pouring rain, so a real dangerous place to be on the FDR Drive around 53rd  Street. I think everybody knows that roadway and it’s actually a covered  roadway but it was really a deluge. On Sunday we had another demonstration, it  started at Times Square, went down to Bryant Park, went to Herald Square, went  to 23rd Street and 5th Avenue and ended up at Union Square. There are about 350  demonstrators. It started at 11 and ended up at around 3 o’clock. No major  incidents, it was very orderly. So in total we have 65 total arrests. That is  the four day recap and as we go through the week we are still going to be  pulling resources from other precincts throughout the city to handle if there  are any upcoming demonstrations, in addition to using SRG. So, so far as the  Commissioner said, not too bad as long as we refrain from trying to take  highways and bridges, there is no major disruptions. I think we will be able to  get through this quite peacefully. I just want to thank all the police officers  that have been assigned to this detail over the last four days. They’ve done a  tremendous job so, Commissioner –Commissioner  Bratton: With  that we can open up for questions relative to the presentation this morning on  the first [inaudible] of the crime stats and subsequent to that we can open it  up to other areas of interest that you might have. Steve—Question: [Inaudible] Mr.  Mayor you’ve talked about the effect that the NCO program had on crime. What  stats can you point to show how the overall CrimeStat is having an effect? How  do you know that program [inaudible]?Mayor: Let me start  and then let the experts weigh in. It’s a nascent program as you know, but I  can tell you about my life in public service – when I talk to people all over  the city and start to hear the same thing over and over and over again it’s a  very powerful indicator to me. It’s my own form of public polling. And first of  all, the enthusiasm of the NCO officers is unbelievable. I have had the real pleasure  of talking with a lot of them about their work. When you hear them, the only  word you can say is it’s joyful. They are thrilled that they are connecting  much more deeply to the communities they serve. They feel more effective but  these are people who have devoted their lives to this profession. And they are  beginning to do it on the highest level and they are feeling tremendous support  from the communities they serve. One of the things I’ve talked about over the  last few days is everyone wants respect. Everyone wants encouragement and  support. And our officers who are part of the NCO program are getting that. And  second, the number of examples we have already of leads being given to  officers, tips, information that was turned into arrests that was used to  prevent crime. Just the anecdotal body of evidence is so powerful for a nascent  program. It suggests to me that there is tremendous possibility in this. So I  would put it in the context of the whole peace dividend discussion. One element  of the peace dividend is reducing negative encounters and often unnecessary  encounters to keep an open and positive channel between police and community.  But the second and even more powerful piece in it is building friendships,  relationships – bond between police and community. Then everyone is wearing the  same uniform at that point.Commissioner  Bratton:  The analysis is at this point largely anecdotal that the many Neighborhood  Coordinating Officers have had the opportunity [inaudible] – the many, many  community meetings that I go to and interact with where they are being  constantly referenced. The moral standpoint – that they are all volunteer  officers. These are officers who willingly, routinely throughout the day are  giving out their cellphone numbers, their email addresses for people to reach  out to them. They like being problem solvers and they are an essential part of  the neighborhood policing program that we’re putting in place here. They are an  essential part of the neighborhood policing program I put back in Boston in  1977, 1978. And they are modeled after the Senior Lead Officer program in Los  Angeles, a program that was extraordinarily successful in building bridges into  the community. And I am very pleased with the early results of it. We will be  in a position – because we now have developed a polling capability that will be  launching very soon – to reach in to the various neighborhoods and poll how are  we doing – and to hear from the public in those neighborhoods; to reach out to  our officers more routinely how are we doing? What do we need to improve? So,  more than anecdotal we’ll also then have some actual polling that we’ll be  relying on. We’ll be one of the first departments in America – I think the  first department in America to have citywide polling capabilities that we’ll  drill down to the neighborhood level in a very, very intimate way and a very  routine way. So that’s the – one of the rollouts of the neighborhood policing  initiative here that the Mayor has been very actively supporting and encouraging.Question: [Inaudible]Mayor: Hold on, hold  on – Chief?Chief  O’Neill:  David, we can get you stats for the program as a whole and for precincts also.  

Violence-wise they are doing tremendously – response times, we’re knocking off  a huge chunk of time responding to 3-1-1 and 9-1-1 jobs. And as the Mayor and  the Commissioner said, a lot of what we hear is anecdotal, but if you do talk  to the cops they are excited about the program. They are given the opportunity  to do what we’ve been asking them to do for years and years and years. They  have the time during the course of the day not just to respond to 9-1-1 jobs,  but to actually make that connection. So, we’ll get the stats to you.Question: [Inaudible]  why do you think it’s taking this long to be applied to New York?Mayor: I think the  stars have aligned in the sense of when I think back to the different versions  – obviously I give Commissioner Bratton tremendous credit for what he started  in Boston, what he started in LA – but I think the previous efforts of this  City were inconsistent. I think they were noble. I certainly believe they  well-intended, but they weren’t sustained and they weren’t consistent. And it  takes a unity of leadership to achieve it. I won’t comment on the experiences  the Commissioner had in the early 1990s. I have tremendous respect for him and  I think a lot of times his good work was not understood by the person he worked  for, but in this time the Commissioner and I and Chief O’Neill – the whole  leadership team – we’re highly unified. We respect each other, we understand  each other, we – from all different life experiences have come together in a  very common philosophy and strategy. And I think when you have that a lot is  possible. We have been able to apply the resources – another part of it. You  know, the kinds of things we’re talking about here, the training and all the  other elements that we’re talking about they cost money and it takes a real  sustained resource commitment. So – and obviously officers were key. And I  remember when Chief O’Neill first presented the early vision of this, it was  quite clear it will take a lot of personnel and we went through a very rigorous  process to make the strategic decision that that would be a budget priority.  So, when I say the stars aligned I think it’s – you know – unity among all of  us, the resources are there, the agreement on the vision and a recognition that  it was a perfect companion piece to the reduction in the negative interactions  between police and community – that if you just took away the negative you  weren’t going far enough. You had to create the positive. We’re going to be at  this a long time and I think this one – this is going to be the vision of  neighborhood policing that finally stuck and finally was sustained.Question: [Inaudible]  mentioned domestic crime being a driver in the Bronx – being on the rise. I’m  wondering how you’re thinking about that and why the Bronx? Why now?Commissioner  Bratton:  Let me speak to that. Back in 1994, when I was commissioner the last time, that  as we were developing the strategies to deal with the identified problems back  then – domestic violence, which is often times referred to as the hidden crime  because it really not had been addressed in any significant way in the 70s and  80s – that basically the analysis we did of crimes being reported to us. We  created the position of Domestic Violence Officer – one of our eight strategies  was domestic violence because we found based on surveys that a woman was six  times more likely to be assaulted in her home than on the streets of a very  violent New York at that time. Also, where you have domestic violence directed  against the woman, you have it against the elderly, you have it against the  children, and you have it against the animals – pets in the house. And each  precinct was authorized, back then, three domestic violence officers. Some of  our precincts now have six of eight because of their workload. Precinct  commanders are allowed to determine how many they need. Additionally, Susan  Herman, whose been leading our Collaborative Strategies Program, proposed to me  and then I proposed to the Mayor in the budget process and he approved in the  City Council – we will have in addition to those domestic violence offices,  victim advocates in each of our precincts – two of them in each precinct  initially. They will be hired from many of the agencies that provide that type  of service. So recognizing the continuing problem that we are actually  expanding the resources that we’re going to focus on that effort. Public  housing has a very significant problem with that. The Bronx, as evidence by  Dermot’s presentation, at this particular time has a very significant problem  with it. We’re identifying it; we’re committing to working on it. And it is not  just the police response we are dealing with, through the Mayor’s Office of  Criminal Justice all the related agencies that have to be involved in this. So,  I’m very excited about it. It’s – we’re getting much better in identifying a  problem and getting a whole lot better with dealing with the problem.Question: But why now?  And why the Bronx in particular? Is there any sort of think behind that?Deputy  Commissioner Shea:  What I can tell you is that when you look at our overall domestic crime -- the  entire increase for the year is surpassed by the increase in the Bronx this  year. And trying to pinpoint exactly why – the answer is no I have not been able  to. Just jumping on the Commissioner’s statement there, you know, it’s  affecting right now the areas that we see it is predominantly – I would  categorize it as lower to middle income. You’re talking about neighborhoods  where the police are responding – and aren’t just the police – we’re taking on  responsibilities, we’re the counselors, we’ve become the locksmith in many  times. So, there’s a lot of [inaudible] coming out of this. Our services are  being provided, but getting to the root of the problem, I would concur with the  Commissioner that this is not solely a police issue – that the struggle and the  frustration, if you will on my part personally, is that these again are cases –  it’s very similar to the rapes, the 92 percent of rapes that we talk to. We  know from the start if Carlos’ officers aren’t making arrests on the scene that  Bob Boyce’s detectives are making arrests on these types of cases. But for a  variety of reasons – frankly, very complex reasons – these cases; the ultimate  conclusion and resolution of this may not be in the criminal justice system.  And these cases are often falling apart for a variety of reasons.Question: You mentioned  you’ve been to plenty of community meetings and you’ve talked about this  disconnect in past crime briefings that some folks in New York still say I hear  those numbers but I don’t feel safe. Have you experienced a [inaudible] change  on that part? Are people starting to embrace these numbers and tell you that  they feel safer? Or are you still hearing that in neighborhoods –Commissioner  Bratton:  That’s what our polling will be all about. Right now, we rely on Quinnipiac,  Siena, and quite frankly the accuracy of those polls, depending on when they  take the poll what’s going on in the City at that particular time. I think a  lot of the feeling of [inaudible] about crime in the City has to do with a lot  of the street people – some of the behavior they see out in the streets because  our numbers certainly don’t reflect that this is an unsafe city. I’m sorry – I  was here in 1990 when it was a very unsafe city and beginning there with Mayor  Dinkins and the hiring of 6,000 cops and then the work I was able to do with  Mayor Giuliani continuing on through. And again, for 26 years we’ve been  documenting crime going down every year. You can’t argue that this was a more  dangerous city when we had 2,245 murders in 1990, and this year we will be  running close to about 315, 320. We had over 5,600 people shot in the streets  of New York and this year we’re batting close to 1,000 by the time we finish  the year. So, this feeling – this reporting to the pollsters we don’t get it  because as we look at these numbers in an exhaustive way, the patient is  getting healthier all the time – the patient being the City of New York. This  is where we were so insistent and the Mayor has been so supportive of allowing  [inaudible] to polling. We need to get into each of these communities on a  block by block basis and see what’s going on. That’s why the importance for the  neighborhood coordinating officer to put a face and a personality onto the New  York City Police Department in every one of these neighborhoods – and that type  of intimacy because the numbers – I just don’t understand it when we’re  reporting these types of numbers. Maybe it’s the fact we have so many newcomers  to this city – over half the population wasn’t here in 2000.Question: So, you’re not  disputing it, you hear it from folks?Commissioner  Bratton:  All the time, all the time whether it’s with the ‘multi-gazzillionaires’ or  some of the community meetings I go to where people certainly aren’t  ‘multi-gazzillionaires’ whether its dinner parties on Park Avenue or church  basements up in Harlem. I have done over 600 meetings in the last two years  around these issues and you hear it all the time. And it frustrates us because  those cops are out there working very, very heard. The numbers should speak for  themselves. So, whether it’s in terms of how you guys report it in the media,  what people see and feel in their particular neighborhood. If we’re so unsafe  why are those 60 million tourists coming here every year? If we’re so unsafe –  we talked about this morning 104,000 jobs have been created around the movie  and television industry that will spend $9 billion in this city with 56  television shows being produced here. Do you think they would be doing it here  if they felt unsafe in these streets? There is a disconnect and if you can  figure it out let me know – I’d like you to explain it to me.Question: Commissioner,  you mentioned a short while ago how the violence pictured in other major U.S.  cities is quite opposite of what you’re seeing in New York City. Have you given  any more thought as to what’s going on in those other cities and have any of  the police officials in the other cities come to you for guidance as to what  might be done?Commissioner  Bratton:  We have an organization called the Major Cities Chief Organization – the 75  largest cities in Canada in the United States. And we meet a number of times.  We actually hosted the meeting here several months ago. So, we do tend to take  a look at what each other is doing – what’s working, what’s not working. And so  we’re very proud to present – when they were here – the technology that Dermot  talked about, the smartphone stuff that we have here. And we have offered to  any of our colleagues around the country anything we have we will more than  happy to share with you – CompStat 2.0, the computer system that we have. We  are very fortunate the Mayor has been extraordinarily generous in my three years  now working with him to this department. There is nothing I have asked for that  I haven’t received. He puts me through the ringer sometimes including getting  those 1,300 cops – Jimmy O’Neill had hair when we started this process and you  can see what’s left of it after justifying those 1,300 cops. But we’re getting  them and – each city is different. Think of it from a medical perspective,  Chicago, why is it so bad there? Every city is different. And as a  Commissioner, my colleagues, Chiefs of Police, we’re like doctors. We’re still  practicing the police profession, we haven’t perfected it yet. And we’re  learning from each other, but the good news for New York City is that we’ve got  more resources than most places, we’re having more success than most places,  and even better it is an uninterrupted continuation of crime decline and order  patrol.And  the debate around the country right now dealing with all the issues of concern  – the disconnect between police and community – everything that is being  recommended as I have read all of the stories and listened to all the  interviews – everything that I being recommended we are doing. President’s  Commission, we had basically implemented before that commission report came  out. The [inaudible] recommendations on use-of-force, we have one of the most  comprehensive sets of use-of-force in the United States. On use-of-force by our  police offices, 36,000 in a city of eight-and-a-half million people – last year  we had 33 combat incidents in which our officers engaged in a combat situation  on the streets of New York – 33 with 36,000 cops. Yet every year we spend an  exhaustive amount of time training them, why? Because it works, because we  reduce the numbers of shootings. So, we try to learn from each other all the  time. I’m constantly – I’ll beg, borrow, and steal from anybody – always with  attribution. The Senior Lead Officer program effectively being, quite frankly,  what I have done here in New York with the Mayor’s strong support is I’ve  married the LAPD and the NYPD – taking the best of what they were doing, Senior  Lead Officer program, training and brought it here. And given back to LA some  of the things I’ve found when I got back here. So, we’re constantly exchanging  ideas and systems. Jimmy just [inaudible] Seattle to look at their bicycle  program to deal with the demonstrations. We’re in the process of buying 300  bicycles so that our Senior Response Group you’re going to see them riding  around with the bicycles on their trucks. So, when we have a demonstration I  can put 300 cops out on bicycles to keep up with the demonstrators. We’re  constantly learning and this is a learning department and it’s a learning  profession.Question:  For  Chief Boyce, so many [inaudible] are talking about heroin epidemic. What is the  situation with heroin use in the city?Chief  O’Neill:  Okay, there’s been a major [inaudible] change if you will from where heroin is  coming from. It is coming from Colombia and Mexico where it was from East Asia.  [Inaudible] is bringing more into the country than it ever has before. The  quality of that heroin has changed dramatically. It used to be around 10  percent, now it is up to 60 percent. So, it’s creating more and more – we’re  losing more and more lives on overdoses. So, that’s the issue in a really tight  nutshell; more heroin, more powerful, coming into the country – couple that  with the opioid abuse and it increases there. There’s the issue, so it is up to  us right now and heroin is still sold for about $10 an increment in New York  City as it was back in the 70s. However, now it’s even more potent and more  destructive than it ever was before. So, we’re trying to define [inaudible].  You see some of those [inaudible] that we have on the opioids next door – all  the pills there – they are all interconnected. As I said before, each one of my  detectives from Narco and the Detective Squad take the case. We had a case last  weekend in Brooklyn North I believe it was where we were able to make three  arrests from the suppliers by just going to the house responding to that  overdose. That’s the kind of work I want done and it is being done right now.  We’ve closed out small cases and we’re working on large cases as well. So,  there’s the issues [inaudible] right there. And it is across the country by the  way.Question: Do you think  the gang takedowns or [inaudible] involved in buying and selling?Chief  O’Neill:  My biggest fear is that the gangs get into heroin sales right now. So, we’re  trying to stop that by going through this right now. Right now, the gangs are  violence and its violence driven – it’s shooting and stabbings. For the most  part, the heroin is something quite different. Those are the narcotic  organizations that we detailed where we’ve taken down the 17 cases down. So,  that’s where that comes from. Right now, they are not together, we’re hoping  they never come together as they did with crack/cocaine.Question: For the Mayor,  the Police Commissioner just said he doesn’t understand people feel unsafe, do  you?Mayor: I think it is  a couple of different things. I think people respond to their own very personal  experience. The fact is even as we’re making tremendous progress, if something  happens in your community, that looms very large in your mind. So, we’ll look  at these numbers, it means many fewer things are happening, but even one  incident can cause people a lot of concern. So, I think that is a normal human  reality. I do think bad news travels a lot faster than good news, so when you  see a lot of bad news it’ll make you unsettled. But I will say at the same  time, plenty of people come up to me and talk about changes they have  experienced. I’ve certainly had parents and I’ve had young men come up to me  and talk about what it is like not to be stopped all the time and how that has  changed their lives for the better. I have – as I mentioned – folks come up and  talk about what it is like to know the officer in their community and what a  change that is and how much they appreciate that. So, I certainly can say there  is plenty of times when people do recognize progress and do recognize that  these efforts mean something for their lives personally; and every time there’s  a tremendous appreciation when people see the CRC out there, and CRG, ESU – the  units that are out there protecting them at major events. You know, I get a lot  of appreciation for that – the sense of the sheer strength and presence of the  NYPD keeps us safe and [inaudible]. We have these huge events that come off so  beautifully. And then there are a lot of times people will come up to me and  say how important it is to see the presence of the NYPD. So, I don’t think it  is a one way street, but I think it motivates us to keep going because, as  you’ve heard everyone up here say, I commend the Commissioner and Chief O’Neill  and – as Dermott said in the presentation, we are all confident that we’re  going to go farther. That is not a typical thing you find from leaders to sit  before you and say we’re convinced. We’ve only just gotten started, we’re going  to go farther we’re going to make the city safer. I think people are going to  feel that for sure.Commissioner  Bratton:  Let me expand on that for just a moment in terms of one of the – certainly my  belief – one of the causes of then increased concern is social media – you  understand it in your world how your world has changed, so dramatically. It  used to be going on 5 o’clock deadlines, 11 o’clock deadlines – now, it’s every  minute is a deadline for you. So, social media – when I began in this business  in the 70s I used to go to community meetings armed to the teeth with my stats  as I now still do 40 years later. And back in those days I went to some of the  most crime ridden neighborhoods of Boston – the South End, Back Bay areas. And  many of the people who came to my community meetings were not even aware of the  serious crimes that I was investigating – murders, robberies, etcetera. They  weren’t aware of it because the newspaper – so much of them weren’t reporting  it all. And at that time newspapers and TV were the principle means of  communication in some of the most crime-ridden neighborhoods, people didn’t  talk with each other, so they were not even aware sometimes in their building  there had been a burglary. What has changed now is everything gets out there  very, very quickly. So, we dealing with some of the sentiment and that’s why  we’ve invested so much in social media to try and tell our story, because we  can’t rely on you because it is just too much news to get out there. So, we  have to effectively try to get to get out there. In response to your question,  a driving force of it is social media. It’s changing so much in so many of our  lives in so many ways.Question: [Inaudible]Commissioner  Bratton:  Is for me – the events of the last week are a reinforcement that the Mayor and  I are on the right track and have been in the 30 months we’ve worked together.  Predating our own horrific incident – the murders of Detectives Liu and Ramos –  as you are well aware because many of you have covered us for these 30 months,  we began to bring about reformation that we summarized after the reengineering  process and the five T’s – the idea of technology building on the platform of  trust. We’ve talked about it for 30 months about the need to pushback on  stop-question-and-frisks, to start regaining trust, but as the Mayor just  talked about – once we push down on that we got to replace it with something  and the Neighborhood Coordinating Officers [inaudible] program. So, effectively  for 30 months we have been engaged in exactly what everybody is calling out for  now to try to address the crisis in America. Better training for cops – there  is no police department in America, bar none – and I don’t have any fear of  being repudiated on this, it is doing more training focused on the issues  whether it is implicit bias, whether it is dealing with the emotionally  disturbed, no place does more training than this place guaranteed. Similarly,  equipment – no place is equipping officers better than this place whether it is  the vest, the trauma kits, the ballistic doors on the cars – no place is doing  it better than we’re doing. On the technology, no place is doing it better than  we’re doing here. And on the trust-building, I am convinced that what Jimmy and  Carlos are designing will in fact bring about that trust as officers go  forward. So, the events of the last week, to me, are just a reaffirmation and a  reinforcement that what the Mayor and I gave been engaged in for the last 30  months that we’re not only on the right path, we’re on the only path by which  we can get to a destination where we want to bring people together to close  that divide, not just bridge it – to close the damn thing. And I’m – again, I’m  encouraged, being quite frank with you, by what I have just seen over the past  week in terms of what we’re doing here in New York and with some of my  colleagues around the country in other cities are doing. The Chief of Dallas  was applauded over this past week about how great a job they’re doing with  community policing. I know that Chief, I know what they are doing. I know this  city; I know what we’re doing. And a lot of what they’re being complimented for  we’re doing here and then some. And that’s what’s going on in American cities.  I’m blessed that I have a lot of colleagues around the country who are  committed to getting this right.Mayor: And just – let  me just quickly add to that. You know, Bill Bratton started a lot of this  thinking long ago. And it has become the dominant strain in much of American  policing that we have to bring neighborhoods and police together. And you could  look at these tragedies as a reason for pessimism or cynicism, or you could  look at it as time a [inaudible] call that we have to get it right. It’s our  generation’s time to get this right, and I think it’s the latter. I tried to  talk about that over the weekend, that we in this time. we have finally the  tools to address these challenges. The stain of racism underlies all of this.  It’s being talked about in a way it never has before – literally in American  history, never been so blunt a discussion of racism and what it’s meant to our  country. And it is allowing us to finally look in the face the things we need  to change. On top of that, we have the tools the Commissioner just laid out  that really allow us to make the change. And we have willing partners – again,  the officers, not just here but around the country – who recognize the need to  build a different relationship with the community. The community members who  want to have a different and better relationship with officers. You see it over  and over – the grieved families calling for peace, calling for respect for our  police even in their pain, again, the police who sheltered and shielded the  protestors while bullets were raining down. The protestors who had a minute of  silence for the police officers lost. There’s plenty of indication that people  want to find a way forward, but there’s also a clear reality – we have to find  a way forward. We don’t have any other choice but to work this out. I’ve felt –  I’ve tried to talk about this the last few days – I feel like history tries to  drag us down. You know, we’ve got to break the chains of that history, and I  think this team here – I’m so proud of all of them because they’re doing all of  that in the biggest city in the country.Question: In case there  will be more demonstrations in New York, are you preparing for that with  special preparations?Commissioner  Bratton: [Inaudible] we’re a city that has demonstrations all the time. But the lessons  learned back in December and January of 2014 and ‘15 have really shaped what  we’ve done over the last two years – the creation of the Strategic Response  Group, the vehicles, the equipment, now the continuation of the purchase of the  bicycles. We get better and better all the time in trying to adjust to how  demonstrations are changed because of social media. Demonstrations that are led  by Twitter – anybody with a smartphone can basically get a demonstration going  and move it around, so we’re getting better and better at that all the time. In  terms of this city, we’re very fortunate with the large amount of resources we  have that one we have unity of command – I don’t have to depend on 20 police  departments coming together to try and police a demonstration, which is one of  the most difficult things of police to deal with. Bad enough when I have one  police department, but when you have – as you’ve seen around the country – 20  or 30 trying to coalesce and come together and have unity of command, it’s very  difficult. We are prepared to deal with whatever we have. What we ask of the demonstrators  is – we’ll work with you. We’ll work with you to demonstrate. Do it peacefully,  though. Do it in a way that you don’t try to provoke the officers that you’re  not their consciously trying to create a provocation on the part of our  officers where they over react and then ‘aha’ a gotcha moment. We’ll work with  you. We’ll try to give you as much breathing room as possible. We’re known for  that. That’s what we work for. We plan for the best, but also plan on –  unfortunately – to deal with the worst. This past week I think we can celebrate  in this city demonstrators – police, and community alike – that we have had  demonstrations with no violence, no vandalism, no damage. People have been able  to get on the news – the news capital of the world. That’s great, get your  message across. I think the message gets across a lot more when you’re not  engaging in violence. It’s a positive message.Question: Commissioner  Bratton, as you know, much has been made about the recent comments made by  Mayor Giuliani in his attempt to defend police officers. As you and I both  know, because we were there in the 90s, he’s made that argument in the past  that black on black crime within the community poses a greater risk to  African-American New Yorkers or citizens than any sort of police misconduct. Do  you believe that those comments were motivated by racism by former Mayor  Giuliani? And separately, to you and Mayor de Blasio, how to you explain or  process your differences in opinion about the Black Lives Matter movement? Do you  think that those are a function of your separate job descriptions?Mayor: I just will  start on that and then pass to the Commissioner. I think we have a tremendous  commonality on the changes that are need in our city and in our society. That’s  what we’re working on every day. I think when you talk about the different  protests out there you have to look at – it’s a lot of different people. It’s  not one monolith. There are people who come to these protests – and they are a  very small minority in my view – but they come to disrupt. To pick up on the  Commissioner’s previous point, they come to provoke, they come to make  violence, they come to denigrate police, and I have only disdain for them. And  they do not represent any appreciable number of people in this country or this  city. I think hateful speech towards the police is absolutely unacceptable, and  obviously anything that provokes violence is unacceptable, but that’s a very  small number. I’ve had long conversations with my colleagues here about what  they’ve seen at different demonstrations, and it’s a very small number that  cause a very tremendous amount of trouble for everyone else. If you look at the  New York City experience and around the country, the vast majority of protests  are by law-abiding people respecting the specific instruction of the police,  who are trying to get a point across as the Commissioner said. From my point of  view, when you say Black Lives Matter, you’re talking about a very broad,  diffused, decentralized movement; the core of which I think has hit the right  note. The very phrase ‘Black Lives Matter’ is a necessary part of the national  discussion. It has helped us to recognize that sadly our history over and over  again did not value African-Americans. From what I’ve seen of the movement, the  vast majority of people have gone about it in the right way. I don’t have to  agree with them on everything, but they’ve gone about it the right way. So I  would separate from my point of view, the intolerable form of protest – the  type that – I was at plenty of protests in my day too, and we also went exactly  the other way from the provocateurs and the people who as the commissioner said  undermined the whole message, undermined the whole idea. How many times have  you turned on the TV and seen these protests and seen grandmothers and mothers  with children? Those are not the people causing the problem here. It’s a small  minority.So  my answer is – I look at it as a broader, positive movement with some  individuals around it who have done the wrong thing. But if this is part of  sparking the dialogue we’ve needed to have for a long time, that’s a good  thing. In terms of the work we’re doing, the commissioner and I are in as much  unity as I’ve ever seen two people be working on something of this importance.  We talk almost every day, and we share life’s mission really. I have tremendous  admiration for how he’s given his entire life to keeping people safe and  addressing this history. I don’t think it’s given the credit it deserves, but  one way to think about Bill Bratton’s career is he’s gone right at the problem  of race in America over and over and over in a very bold way. In a way that’s  made a huge difference. So I think we’re in tremendous strategic unity. I do  have a perspective of any movement as someone who’s been involved in movements.  That might be different from someone who wasn’t, but I think in terms of the  work we’re very unified.Commissioner  Bratton: I’m struck by your question about the idea of our response, comments to  demonstrations in the case of – at the moment – Black Lives Matter movement  that is relative to the functioning job responsibilities. In some respects, it  is. As my position as police commissioner, as a lifelong [inaudible] of the  police profession – a profession I’m very proud of – I have an obligation, I  believe, to speak on behalf of the men and women I represent in this department  and the men and women – the 850,000 in American policing. I have no concerns at  all about Black Lives Matter – the name or the organization – or the focus on  the concerns of Black Lives Matter. We have all types of organizations. I have  unions that focus on the concerns of police officers. I’ve just referenced, I’m  speaking on my concerns about my particular profession. But the issue of  concern I have is when an organization – any organization – seeks to  stereotype, define us, stereotype us. I’ve given a lot of thought to this over  this last week or so because it’s just brought back the horrific issues of 2014  and ‘15 – the deaths of Ramos and Liu. I had hoped that out of that awful  tragedy would come great progress in this city in the sense that marches and  demonstrations and some of those marches and demonstrations in which some of  the anarchists and some of the provocateurs had taken over and tried to steal  the message, if you will. Let me just read two paragraphs to you if I may as  I’ve thought about this because I don’t want to extemporaneously talk about it  and then try to have you parse it or phrase it. Let me just give you some quick  thoughts about the issue as it relates to the stereotyping of the members of my  profession – a profession I think has done phenomenal good for this country. We  just talked about it this morning. This profession has been a significant  catalyst for profound change in improving the safety for 8.5 million people of  all colors in this city. So just bear with me for a moment please.The  germ that allows racism to grow is the stereotype, the painting with a wide  brush against a race, a color, or a religion. When you have protestors who are  claiming police are racist, all police are racist, or that cops are cold  blooded killers, you have the same construct. There are 36,000 cops in New York  City. There are 850,000 of us across the country. They come in all races and  colors, especially in New York. To call them racist – all of them – or killers  – all of them – is to commit the same sin they are protesting. You can’t say  that people are bad because they are blue. In New York the police are  half-white, and the other half is Hispanic, Black, Asian, Muslim, and  statistically they use less force, fire their weapons fewer times than any  other major city in America, and more than half of them live in this city with  their families. We don’t bring them in from Mars, we don’t bring them in from  them the moon. They’re born and raised here. Many of them come from other  countries and choose to live here. That doesn’t sound like a racist band of  killers to me. Do they make mistakes in split second decisions, they certainly  do. But fewer times than most departments and even overall across the country,  in all departments the number of incidents is relatively small compared to all  the instances they deal with. Every invested time and training in dealing with  bias, even subconscious, implicit we certainly have. Every invested time and  training in how to deescalate situation. We certainly have – in fact, I think  we’re ahead of the rest of American policing in that regard in terms of the  profession. I understand many other departments are doing the same thing we’re  attempting to do. The vast majority of police officers go to work every day to  try and help people and make a difference, so there is some frustration when  they are lumped together as a group and called racist by protesters. One of  your newspapers reported on a demonstrator – a white woman at a demonstration  over the weekend – stepped out of the line of march, went up in the face of one  of my officers, and screamed murderer at that officer. Murderer – a cop who was  there protecting her right to scream and basically disparage him. Do we feel  less frustration when African-American males are shot more often than any other  group in the city in crimes? We certainly do. I get a message every time a  person is shot in this city – every time a person is murdered – every time a  person is raped in this city. It’s very disconcerting to me that the majority  of them in this city, unfortunately that the victims are minorities, and the  perpetrators are minorities. I feel it every time the vibrating goes off and I  take that Blackberry out and here it is another victim. As do my cops who  actually go to the scene and deal with that. Do I feel frustrated by a flood of  guns coming from other states with lax gun laws into our streets that fuel this  violence? I do, and my cops do. Is it hard to bring justice in these cases  because 38 percent of our shooting victims refuse to cooperate with the police?  They won’t talk with us. Yes, that is frustrating but no one seems to be  marching against that. So when I see marches, many of whom don’t even live in  the communities focused on [inaudible] only on the narrow issue of shootings by  police, which in New York is rare by comparison – 33 shootings, 36,000 cops in  a year in a city of 8.5 million people. I say there’s a different kind of  bigotry because like all prejudices, it is based on stereotypes and labels.What  was need is dialogue and over the weekend that’s what I talked about with  Secretary Johnson. That’s what I talked about last night in my comments to ABC  radio because dialogue works, collaboration works. There is a place and time  for demonstrations, but what we did in this particular point in time is to move  beyond demonstrations, try to find common ground, and engage in dialogues  because it’s the dialogue that’s going to make the difference. The marches  might be the catalyst, but marches as an end in themselves will not bring it  about. You have to move from being in a demonstration to sitting at a table and  talking it though. This kind of poisoned talks – of calling police as a  profession murderers or racists – are the kind of generalizations that spew  hate not solutions. We saw that in New York in 2014 with the murder of my new  detectives, and we saw it last week with the murder of five police officers in  Dallas. That contributes to the murder of those dietetics and those officers.  Are we perfect as a profession? No, we make mistakes. Sometimes when we do  they’re doozies. This is a conversation that needs to be had – that’s for sure.  But a broad brush attack on police in general, or taking New York police – and  I speak on behalf of them as their commissioner – to [inaudible] for things  that occur in other cities is not the way to get value out of those  conversations. What we need to do is have those conversations and have those  conversations in the way that we get value out of them.I’m  sorry for that, but it needed to be said. I’ve been in this for 45 years. I  came into this business at the time of demonstrations. Some of my first duties  were policing the anti-war demonstrations in front of the federal building in  Boston while I was attending college in the day time with the same kids who  were demonstrating on the other side of the line. When I put on my blue uniform  it hurt to be basically yelled at and screamed at and not understood, and I  think you’ve all heard me talk about Sweet Alison Los Angeles commenting on why  I think I had some success with minority issues in Los Angeles. He said ‘you  know why we like you Chief Bratton, you see us.’ And I used that phrase during  the Ramos and Liu murder. The idea is we need to see each other. We need to see  police not as racist and bigots and murderers. Unfortunately some are. You will  find them, and we will deal with them – but not 850,000 of them, and not 36,000  of them. Much the same as there is unfortunately so much crime in the black  community but are all 40 million blacks in America criminals? Not at all.  Unfortunately too many of them are victims. So we need to see each other. We  need to hear each other. And it’s hard to see each other in demonstrations when  they’re yelling and screaming and not wanting to listen and only to be heard.Mayor: I want to just  note that I appreciate what the Commissioner said, and in the vein of people  not seeing – the other part of your question was about Rudy Giuliani. And I’ll  just say something brief. I think the commissioner has views on this as well. I  don’t know why he has chosen for decades to divide people, but sadly that’s  what his body increasingly is. He says things that cause pain and divide  people, and it’s not helpful. It’s not helping to move this city forward or  move America forward. And I thought the Daily News cover was very  powerful today. I want to commend the Daily News for putting it in very stark  terms, but no there are so many families in this country – families of color –  trying to do the right thing, children of color trying to do the right thing,  and they should not be denigrated by Rudy Giuliani.Commissioner  Bratton: The only thing I would add to it is you’ll have to really speak to Mayor  Giuliani about his comments. I’ve tried to share with you my perspectives and  views on this issue. We all have views and perspectives, and we have to be in a  position – in a sense – to explain them, to justify them, so I’m not going to  try and seek to do that for him. I’m more than happy to speak on terms of my  comments and my opinions and my perspectives that we are a country that  celebrates freedom and the ability to speak our minds, and quite obviously over  the weekend he spoke his mind. Basically it’s like me trying to explain my  comments over the weekend, the mayor certainly will have to try and explain  his.Question: Mayor, do you  agree with the black [inaudible] organize a protest and [inaudible] people  speaking out about black crimes [inaudible.]Mayor: The – my simple  message would be – every day in all communities there are people working to  stop crime. There are people speaking out. There are people working with the  police. There are neighborhood patrols, tenant patrols. A story worth telling  that is rarely told in this city is of all the people at the grassroots who  have been a part of this quarter century of beating back time, so for everyone  who has been out there – including many times at substantial risk to themselves  – working against crime in their communities, organizing people, organizing  against drug dealers, helping keep young people out of gangs – all of that is a  form of renouncing violence and taking responsibility. That doesn’t hardly ever  get the attention and respect it deserves. So, I think we need to pay a lot  more attention to what people are actually doing to make their communities  better.Question: [Inaudible]Commissioner  Bratton:  [Inaudible] incident as a result of the new protocols initiated by the  governor, the overall responsibility for the investigation of that manner and  the ultimate conclusion is the responsibility of the Attorney General’s Office.  They are being assisted by our Force Investigation Division, which has done a  lot of work on that. The Department, yesterday, upon my instructions modified  the officer involved in that shooting. As you know that means that his badge  and gun has been taken pending resolution of the investigation. And on Friday,  we had a presentation here that the Force Investigation did which normally  gives in which they give us a preliminary review including videos that they had  recovered as of that time. They are still seeking additional videos. They are  still seeking identify the motorists who was parked – well not parked – but  stopped at the red light that may have witnessed some of circumstances that  occurred there. And we are also attempting to locate a witness that I think the  Daily News had reported on the first day who reported a situation very  different than the video portrays. I think the Daily News witness claimed that  the officer was out of the vehicle when he shot the individual and that was not  the case as clearly evident in the video that did finally surface. As you all  are well aware these things – the reason we use the term preliminary is the  first story is never the last story. This one is one that is continually  changing, but we will investigate it to the best of our abilities which are  extensive and we will work with the guidance of the AG’s office on that.Thank  you.

日期:2022/04/15点击:16