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February 8, 2012

NYPD Must Pay $15 Million for Illegally Arresting 22,000

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Written by: Kelly Virella
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Police respond to October 1, 2011 Occupy Wall Street Protest on Brooklyn Bridge. Photo Courtesy of Flickr/_PaulS_

F

or almost 30 years — from 1983 to 2012 — the New York Police Department went about arresting people under laws that state and federal courts had long declared unconstitutional, cuffing and booking almost 22,000 people. In 2010, federal judge Shira A. Scheindlin finally held them in contempt of court. Yesterday, she signed an order approving what is effectively their punishment: a $15 million class-action settlement that could generate individual payments of as much as $5,000.

Those arrested were forced to defend themselves in court and even served jail time for completely lawful behavior. The class action settlement also requires the city to help the courts vacate and seal all convictions stemming from the illegal arrests.

“NYPD used these void laws over the past few decades to target people based on poverty, race and sexual orientation,” said J. McGregor Smyth, an attorney from the Bronx Defenders and a lead attorney for the class. “We are happy that the city has finally taken responsibilities for these abuses, agreeing to pay meaningful damages to its victims and to stop its unconstitutional practices once and for all.”

The three unconstitutional laws under which the NYPD made the illegal arrests prohibited people from loitering to panhandle, to search for sex partners or to wait in a bus or train station. Federal and state courts struck down all three of those laws between 1983 and 1993 as violating First Amendment rights, according to The New York Times.

As NYPD officers continued illegally arresting people under the unconstitutional laws, the department made efforts to stop them. It increased communication and training, disciplined some of the officers and conducted an internal investigation, according to The New York Times. However, Judge Scheindlin found the NYPD in contempt of court because, she wrote, they were not proactive about preventing the problem.

“Nearly every measure that the city has undertaken,” she wrote, according to The New York Times, “has been at the direction of the court, the prodding of plaintiffs, and/or under threat of sanctions.”

The attorneys handling the class action lawsuit plan to send a notice to all 22,000 members of the class in about three months.

The New York City case echoes a similar case in Chicago, in which the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Chicago’s anti-gang loitering law. That law targeted African American and Latino youth who were not engaged in criminal activity and resulted in the arrest of 45,000 innocent people, according to the ACLU, which represented the plaintiffs.

Loitering laws that disproportionately affect blacks remain on the books in the many states and cities. Some have their roots in the anti-vagrancy laws that emerged in the South after the Civil War. Those laws aimed to restore white control over black labor, by ensuring that no blacks were idle. According to A Short History of Reconstruction:

Vagrancy — a crime whose definition included the idle, disorderly and those who “misspend what they earn” — could be punished by fines or involuntary plantation labor; other criminal offenses included insulting gestures of language, “malicious mischief,” and preaching the Gospel without a license.


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About the Author

Kelly Virella
Kelly Virella lives in an East Harlem walk-up with her husband, her bicycle and her books. She's worked as a journalist for 11 years and started this website during the summer of 2011. She fell in love with New York City during her first visit here as a 16-year-old and finally made good on her promise to move here in April 2010.




 
 

 
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26 Comments


  1. Stephen

    If you want the abuses to stop, the judges would have to fine the cops where it hurts. The New York City Police Pension Fund, with immediate reductions in pension payments and no recourse to NYC taxpayers to meet the difference. If that happened ONCE, just ONCE… you’d see the cops gain a new respect for the Constitution.


  2. [...] NYPD 15 Million $ to Occupy Illegal Arrests GOOD it should have been 50 million NYPD Must Pay $15 Million for Illegally Arresting 22,000 | Dominion of New York [...]


  3. [...] NYPD has been forced to pay $15 million to settle a class action lawsuit over 22,000 fraudulent arrests from 1983 until the [...]


  4. [...] NYPD has been forced to pay $15 million to settle a class action lawsuit over 22,000 fraudulent arrests from 1983 until the [...]


  5. Joey W.

    This needs to come out the NYPD budget, not the city budget.
    Better yet, take it out of the pensions of those lieutenant or higher.

    Then you will have the brass giving orders to cease and desist.

    As long as it comes out of the city budget, NYPD doesn’t care.


    • GW James

      It would even be better if they took it out of the pensions of the arresting officers. They perpetrated the crime, their superiors supported their actions. the courts railroaded the victims.

      Every one involved has some fiduciary responsibility.

      PAY UP!!


  6. Mary Saunders

    We have got to get something like this going in Portland. I am counting on Occupy.


  7. AC

    The judge should put the police chief in jail for contempt, and hold him there until the abuses stop.


  8. [...] New York Police Department (NYPD) has been illegally arresting people under laws that were deemed unconstitutional far in advance of the arrests: For almost 30 years — from 1983 to 2012 — the New York Police Department went about arresting [...]


  9. [...] more: http://www.dominionofnewyork.com/2012/02/08/nypd-forced-to-pay-15-million-for-illegally-arresting-22… icBeacon('investmentwatchblog'); Be Sociable, Share! Tweet(function() {var [...]


  10. Dyun

    Sadly justice won’t be done. The only people who will benefit from this class-action lawsuit are the lawyers. They will take approximately 15% of the awarded amount which will leave about $12,750,000.00 for the victims. Divide that up by 22,000 people (some of whom may not even be alive anymore…in some cases it’s been 30 years after all), and you’re left with about $579.54 per person. As if that wasn’t enough of an insult, that $15,000,000.00 will come out of taxpayer pockets! Gotta love justice in this country.


    • As much as $5,000 dollars, big deal, some of those people spent time in jail and that forced them to have a record and maybe lose their job. Their reputation was destroyed and their families suffered, $5,000 is nothing. Maybe this case will convince our government to keep spending the money to treat prisoners with respect and as if they might be innocent because sometimes they are. Remember, the next innocent prisoner might be someone you know and love. Unfortunately, so many of us disown friends and family members when they get arrested because after all our government CAN’T be wrong. LOL.


    • larry

      well its a dam shame


  11. John Seal

    Chump change. Here in Oakland, our police have cost the city $57,000,000 in only ten years. Sorry, NYPD, but you’re gonna have to do better!


  12. Chris

    1983-2012 is almost thirty years. The article says it’s almost twenty.


    • LOL! Thanks for the correction. And to think, I was a math teacher.


      • Nicole

        I would blame it on a typo, as 2 is next to 3 after all. And looking at the digits I might be confused briefly, ignoring the 1 in 2012… Even though that is nearly my whole life. Wow.


    • dryan

      there were several laws repealed over a ten year period. in the article it states that the last one was repealed in ’93, and by my count, that makes 19 years, or “almost twenty”
      nothing like qualifiers huh?



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