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NYPD Brooklyn commanding officer to be transferred following complaints
Under Mastronardi s leadership, the Civilian Complaint Review Board logged 1,364 complaints of police misconduct
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Change is coming to Brooklyn’s 75 Precinct. Deputy Inspector
John Mastronardi will no longer hold the position by the end of the month, as reported on Tuesday by
“The department is moving him because of some retirements,” a police source told the publication.
Mastronardi had developed a negative reputation while looking over the city’s largest precinct. A Change.org petition was created to remove the controversial officer from the precinct for excessive force and lack of leadership.
arrow The new class of NYPD office at their graduation in 2015 Peter Foley/EPA/Shutterstock
New York City’s police oversight agency has released its first public database of NYPD disciplinary records, following an order from a federal appeals court which cleared the way for broad disclosures on police misconduct.
That searchable database covers tens of thousands of finalized misconduct complaints against officers by the Civilian Complaint Review Board, the agency s ruling on those cases, and the penalty that was ultimately imposed by the NYPD. It does not include records that fall under the NYPD’s own internal disciplinary process, such as complaints involving corruption, perjury, and off-duty criminal conduct.
Nelson told the council every single box was checked in terms of the city discussing with the PBA items the council asked them to renegotiate. Including the language that speaks to the Civilian Complaint Review Board, Nelson said. With respect to the fiscal impact statement, one was provided on the original agreement, Oct. 28.
Toward the end of Monday s meeting, Councilmember Yvonne Flowers requested the resolution be added back so the council may discuss and take a vote. However, per the law, councilmembers could not publicly discuss specifics in the contract.
Councilmembers Sarah Brannen, Randall Johnson, Evan Menist and Salem abstained from voting, citing late notice to vote, no room for public comment on the resolution and concern over language. Councilmembers Flowers, Natasha Cherry, Chris Petsas, Matthew McNamara and Lorraine Johnson voted to approve the new contact.