Police quotas-mandatory numbers for nailing you with parking tickets and traffic violations-have always been a kind of unconfirmed realities of urban living. But the NY Times has new proof , exposing an agenda from the pinnacle at the NYPD.
A secret tape recording from a Brooklyn police station, obtained by the brand new York Times, provides compelling evidence that quotas for summonses aren’t just real, but are being pushed upon officers by their superiors. Police Captain Alex Perez encourages removing seatbelt and mobile phone law transgressors, among other violations, saying he expects five citations issued every week.
And those officers who don’t rake within the dough by pushing citations? They risk getting canned. ” Once I bounce you to yet another platoon for inactivity, the subsequent thing is to position you on paper, start rating you below standards and look to fireplace you,” Perez says.
The revelation won’t keep New Yorkers safe from a ticket next time you’re double parked for five minutes to unload groceries, but this should at the least affirm that you just’re not simply plagued by bad luck. [ NY Times ]
Photo by Rob Boudon
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