NYPD kicking people out their homes who did no crimes... WTF?!?! Daily News/Gawker Expose'

ORDER_66

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A joint investigation published today by ProPublica and the New York Daily News shines light on the NYPD’s enforcement of a little-known law that allows the department to kick people out of their apartments without charging them with a crime or even arresting them. The process, known as nuisance abatement, is used almost exclusively against people of color.




The NYPD is Kicking People Out of Their Homes, Even if They Haven’t Committed a Crime
And it’s happening almost exclusively in minority neighborhoods.Read more propublica.org

The nuisance abatement law was drafted in the 1970s as a way to crack down on Times Square brothels, but its use has greatly expanded by then, ProPublica and the Daily News report. Under the law, police can take civil action to shut down the use of places they believe are being used to commit crimes, using as little as affidavits from anonymous confidential informants as evidence.


Early in the extraordinarily thorough piece, reporter Sarah Ryley details some of the New Yorkers she encountered who’d been targeted by
nuisance abatement actions: a man who was kicked out of his home and barred from seeing his daughter over gambling charges that were eventually dropped, a mother who was asked to bar her son from entering her apartment after a powder used for religious purposes was mistaken for cocaine, a man rendered homeless over a low-level drug charge that was eventually dropped.

Because nuisance abatement is a civil and not a criminal process, those on the receiving end of actions are not entitled to an attorney. Police often give an emergency appeal to a judge before enforcing an action, giving them the ability to temporarily remove people from their homes before they have a chance to argue their side. Without a place to stay or a lawyer to represent them, many of those targeted agree to incredibly far-reaching settlements in exchange for renewed access to their homes: barring family members from ever entering again; allowing police to conduct warrantless searches at any time; in some cases, moving out themselves.

Lillie Capers, a 90-year-old woman interviewed for the piece, was the target of nuisance abatement after her son sold drugs to an undercover
police officer. The court orders used by the department require that locations are used for illegal activity in an ongoing manner, but Capers’ son was already living in a court-ordered drug-treatment when police issued an abatement action against her. Without a lawyer or even a judge present, she was pressured to sign a settlement barring her son from the home she owns for a year.

“I’m protecting the kid who wants to go to school and shouldn’t have to walk past the drug dealer’s door every time. I’m protecting that kid’s grandmother,” Robert Messner, who heads the NYPD unit that issues the abatements, told Ryley. “I’m not as concerned about the drug dealer. If the guy ends up in a homeless shelter, yes, I’m sorry he ended up in a homeless shelter. But if that’s what it takes so that a whole generation of kids can grow up and whose parents can’t afford to send them to fancy schools, if that’s what it takes, I’m okay with it.”

http://gawker.com/the-nypd-is-taking-the-homes-of-people-who-have-never-b-1757308879
 

Yehuda

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“I’m protecting the kid who wants to go to school and shouldn’t have to walk past the drug dealer’s door every time. I’m protecting that kid’s grandmother,” Robert Messner, who heads the NYPD unit that issues the abatements, told Ryley. “I’m not as concerned about the drug dealer. If the guy ends up in a homeless shelter, yes, I’m sorry he ended up in a homeless shelter. But if that’s what it takes so that a whole generation of kids can grow up and whose parents can’t afford to send them to fancy schools, if that’s what it takes, I’m okay with it.”

:comeon:
 

Yehuda

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I know right, they wont do this in them majority white neighborhoods flooded with heroin and meth heads walking around all day but they'll pull that shyt on us... :stopitslime: Who the fukk are they kidding???

Black folks who love respectability politics will probably eat this shyt up, though.
 

Turbulent

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there is no such things as rights when you break it down. only power and leverage. the rights you think you have and the laws you think exist are only theoretical concepts used to keep us in a herd. to keep order.

don't get me wrong, i'm no anarchist. i benefit greatly from order. most of us would probably die real quick if things were way more chaotic. but there is nothing "fair" or "just" about it. it's all power games. the enforcement of laws depends on who benefits. i don't believe in illuminati groups meeting once a month to discuss how they control the world. i believe in people (some more powerful/influential than others, some more clever than others) who have personal agendas and trying to pull the blanket to their side. and the more clever ones make temporary strategic alliances for their benefit. this is true on the macro as well as the micro level.
the supposed fairness of the laws is just an illusion they sell us for us to buy into the system. Deep down, most of us don't want to be TRULY free. but we don't want to be prisoners either. the truth is we have to be both. we will always be free to do whatever we want at the core. always free to challenge rules, laws and power and take the consequences that come with it. and we will always be restricted (prisoners) by those who have more power than us. as with most things, it's all in the mind and it's a matter of perspective.

as far as the OP, it's pretty much a police state at this point. but things won't change because deep down, we don't care THAT much.
 

PikaDaDon

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I don't think this is an example of big government

Agents of the government forcefully removing people from their homes because of some obscure law. This is an example of an expanding tyrannical government.

But whatever, Bernie Sanders is our savior. He'll fix all of this.
 
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