get these nets
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https://www.nytimes.com/
Jan 5, 2022
Can Adams Rebuild, and Rein In, a Notorious N.Y.P.D. Unit?
Mayor Eric Adams wants to recreate the department’s plainclothes anti-crime unit, which recovered illegal guns but was responsible for a number of fatal shootings.
Mayor Eric Adams, center, and the police commissioner, Keechant Sewell, left, have said that they will rebrand the team as an “anti-gun unit” that wears body cameras and targets illegal firearms and gang activity.Credit...Dave Sanders for The New York Times
https://www.nytimes.com/by/troy-closson
Jan. 5, 2022
During his successful campaign for mayor of New York City, Eric Adams made his top priority clear: tackling the rise in gun violence that began early in the pandemic.
But the path that Mayor Adams has charted to reduce shootings centers on reinstating a version of the plainclothes police units that had become notorious for their use of force on Black and Latino New Yorkers before the units were disbanded in 2020.
The proposal to restore what were known as anti-crime units has been roundly criticized by progressive groups, and underscores the tensions Mr. Adams is facing over policing issues in his first days in office.
Mr. Adams, a former police captain who was at times an outspoken critic of the department from within, helped lead the backlash against the units after officers killed an unarmed Black man, Amadou Diallo, on his porch in 1999.
The units were widely viewed within the department as an elite force that produced strong results. But they played an outsize role in the searches of millions of young Black and Latino men across the height of the stop-and-frisk era. And studies suggest the practice — which very rarely produced weapons — did little to actually lower crime levels.
To some, Mr. Adams’s history makes him uniquely qualified to rebuild the unit responsibly. But others worry that he has forgotten lessons of the past, and say that an intense focus on gun enforcement has historically led to aggressive and discriminatory policing.
The way Mr. Adams navigates the reinstatement of the unit will offer an early window into how his administration may tackle some of the most critical questions the Police Department faces.
“What we have here is an opportunity to focus not on what uniform is an officer wearing or the name of the unit they’re in,” said Corey Stoughton, a lawyer who leads the special litigation unit of the Legal Aid Society. “But what are they doing? And how is that affecting New Yorkers — and in particular Black and brown New Yorkers — who bore the brunt of aggressive and violent policing activity over the years?”
The push to recreate an anti-crime unit arrives amid a pitched national debate over police practices, and follows a rise in gun violence in New York. After reaching historic lows in 2018 and 2019, shootings increased dramatically in 2020 as the pandemic raged. While they have leveled off in recent months, they have remained higher than prepandemic levels.