Pubdate: Fri, 25 Jul 2014 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2014 The New York Times Company Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Joseph Goldstein SAFER ERA TESTS WISDOM OF 'BROKEN WINDOWS' FOCUS ON MINOR CRIME Even as violent crime has receded across New York City, arrests are near historic highs, driven by an increasingly controversial imperative that no offense is too minor for police officers to pursue. Now, the death of a Staten Island man after officers tried to arrest him for peddling cigarettes is intensifying scrutiny of the Police Department's unflagging push to arrest people over the most minor offenses. The Police Department reported making 394,539 arrests last year. That is tens of thousands more arrests than in 1995, when there were three times as many murders in the city and the department was in its early embrace of the "broken windows" strategy, which sees enforcement of low-level offenses as effective at preventing more serious crime. William J. Bratton, the man who brought "broken windows" policing to New York in the 1990s, is once again the city's police commissioner, appointed by Mayor Bill de Blasio, and is carrying on the department's focus on so-called quality of life crimes that he considers the seeds of more serious disorder. Eric Garner, 43, was a target of those efforts. Suspected of selling untaxed cigarettes on the sidewalk on Staten Island, Mr. Garner was approached by the police last week, in a confrontation that was captured on video recorded by bystanders. When officers moved in to arrest Mr. Garner, one of them wrapped an arm around his neck in what Mr. Bratton said appeared to be a chokehold - a tactic banned by the Police Department. After complaining that he could not breathe, Mr. Garner appeared to slip into unconsciousness and was pronounced dead a short time later at a hospital. While the apparent chokehold fueled much of the initial public outcry, community leaders have begun asking whether focusing police officers so intently on such petty offenses makes sense in a city that is far different and far safer than the one Mr. Bratton left in the mid-1990s. "I think we need to look at whether we still need these arrests," said Eric L. Adams, the Brooklyn borough president and a former captain in the Police Department. "This is a good moment," he said, "to re-evaluate what comes after 'broken windows,' now that the windows are no longer broken." And with the number of stop-and-frisk encounters down sharply, the community groups that mobilized against those street stops are turning their attention to the number of low-level arrests, saying they will push for changes. "It's the new stop-and-frisk," Robert Gangi, director of the Police Reform Organizing Project, said of the low-level arrests, which, he added, were eclipsed in recent years by the public debate over the stop-and-frisk tactic. The long-term increase in overall arrests reflects the convergence of two striking trends. Felony arrests have dropped off significantly, as violent crime has plummeted. But the soaring number of arrests for misdemeanors and noncriminal violations has more than made up for the drop. In 1995, for each felony arrest, the police were making 1.3 arrests for offenses in the broadest category of misdemeanors; by 2013, the ratio had grown to 2.5 misdemeanor arrests for each felony, according to data from the state's Department of Criminal Justice Services. Mr. de Blasio, whose campaign last year focused heavily against stopping and frisking, finds himself championing key aspects of the police strategies of his immediate predecessors - Mayors Rudolph W. Giuliani and Michael R. Bloomberg. During their administrations, the city saw enormous strides in public safety, but the Police Department was faulted for heavy-handed tactics. In July, the Brooklyn district attorney, Kenneth P. Thompson, announced he would stop prosecuting some marijuana arrests, which have soared in number in the last decade, at times making up more than 10 percent of overall arrests by the police. But the de Blasio administration pushed back, saying the police would not change their arrest practices when it came to marijuana. After Mr. Garner's death, Mr. de Blasio said that if citizens were complaining about the sale of cigarettes, the police were right to enforce the law. "If police officers are asked to enforce the law because there's a community concern, we require that - we expect that of them," he said. Indeed, Mr. Bratton said that Mr. Garner's death would result in "no change in that focus" of having officers confront low-level rule-breaking. "It's a key part of what we're doing," he said, adding that disorderly behavior proliferated quickly unless confronted by the police. But Mr. Bratton also seemed to signal to his officers that he was open to their handling rule-breaking in less forceful ways. He stressed that he wanted officers to understand he did not expect arrests where an "an admonition - 'move along, you can't do that' " - would have sufficed. He said officers needed to "understand they are given great powers of discretion and I'm not measuring success by numbers of arrests." While the Police Department's own statistics recorded slightly fewer than 400,000 arrests last year, the data on arrests is imperfect. Numbers reported to the City Council as well as to the state do not include several categories of arrests. Additionally, the Police Department includes arrests made by other smaller police agencies and occasionally assigns multiple arrest numbers to people apprehended for a spree of crimes, such as a string of burglaries. Still, data from the city's criminal courts charts the increase in arrests over the last two decades and confirms the trajectory of the Police Department's statistics. In 2013, the city's courts arraigned some 365,752 people who had been arrested, which undercounts the total number of arrests because it does not include, for example, cases that are immediately dismissed by prosecutors. Randy Mastro, a deputy mayor in the Giuliani administration and now a lawyer in private practice, said in an interview that "in one sense it's a surprising statistic that the arrest rates have grown" to their current levels. But he said that it would be a mistake to roll back police enforcement: "The policy of stricter enforcement in making arrests across the board for what some might consider minor offenses has served this city well, and is one of the many reasons we now have such a low murder rate." Over the years, the number of people pulled into the criminal justice system has soared in New York City. In 1994, when the Police Department adopted the 'broken windows' strategy, the police arrested 124,475 individuals for the broadest category of misdemeanors, some more than once. In 2013, officers arrested 162,808 people for misdemeanors, some more than once. All told, since 1994, the police in New York City have arrested more than 1.3 million people who had never been arrested for a penal-law crime, according to data from the state's Criminal Justice Services, although some double-counting is possible because of the way arrestees are tracked. Marijuana arrests have driven the increase over the last decade, with trespassing arrests also a leading factor. Some of those who ended up in handcuffs for trespassing said they were visiting friends or relatives, and a federal judge found the police were unconstitutionally stopping people. Some officers have said they were under pressure from commanders to raise their arrest numbers, which supervisors use to gauge productivity. But as the city grew safer, the police also pursued ever lower violations, such as having a foot on a subway seat. Years after cracking down on turnstile jumpers, the police started a push to arrest people who stood outside the turnstile, asking others for a swipe of their MetroCard. "There is no logic to the explosion of arrest activity," said Representative Hakeem Jeffries, a Brooklyn Democrat whose district includes Brownsville and East New York, where the police have focused enforcement. J. David Goodman contributed reporting. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt