FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM  JUNE 18, 2020 • THE QUEENS COURIER 3 
 Cuomo signs justice agenda bills,  
 orders police to reform or lose funding 
 BY EMILY DAVENPORT 
 edavenport@qns.com 
 @QNS 
 Governor Andrew Cuomo on June 12  
 signed new reforms into law that are  
 meant to start to reshape the justice system  
 Photo via Twitter/@NYGovCuomo 
 Shea disbands plain-clothed NYPD anti-crime cops across city 
 BY TODD MAISEL 
 editorial@qns.com 
 @QNS 
 Th  e NYPD eliminated its plain-clothed  
 Anti-Crime Units — a fi xture in every  
 precinct  that  specializes  in  targeting  
 armed  suspects  —  and  reassigned  its  
 more than 600 assigned offi  cers into other  
 duties,  Police  Commissioner  Dermot  
 Shea revealed in a stunning announcement  
 on June 15.  
 During a press conference at One Police  
 Plaza broadcast on social media, Shea  
 described the eff ort as a “seismic shift ”  
 in policing and an eff ort to rebuild public  
 trust.  
 Th  e major change in policing comes  
 aft er two weeks of constant demonstrations, 
  some of them violent and involving  
 looting, following the death of George  
 Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police.  
 “Within the last hour, I chaired a meeting  
 of all the senior executives in the  
 department regarding deployment of precinct 
 level  and  PSA-level  (Public  
 Service Area, for public housing  
 complexes) anti-crime police offi  - 
 cers. Th  ese are the plain-clothed  
 units that operate our traditional  
 anti-crime,” Shea said. “Eff ective  
 immediately, we will be transitioning  
 those units, roughly 600 people  
 citywide, into a variety  
 of assignments, including  
 detective  units,  neighborhood  
 policing  and  
 other assignments.”  
 Th  e  commissioner  
 said  the  “seismic  
 shift   in  the  
 way  we  police  
 this  city”  comes  
 aft er months of internal discussions with  
 NYPD brass. He noted that anti-crime  
 offi  cers  are  oft en involved in police-involved  
 shootings, and their current composition  
 refl ected a “20th-century policing” 
  model that must be modernized.  
 Shea  also  recognized  that  people  in  
 some communities were “enduring  
 being stopped, their children being  
 stopped,” adding “there is a disproportionate  
 number of complaints  
 and shootings as they are doing  
 what we ask of them.” But the commissioner  
 was quick to note that the  
 change was “no refl ection  on  
 the men and women of  
 the Police Department  
 who  are  doing  an  
 exceptional job.  
 “It’s time to move  
 forward and change  
 how  we  police  in  
 this  city  with  
 brains and guile,  
 and  move  away  
 from brute force,” he said. Th e  former  
 anti-crime offi  cers will focus instead on  
 intelligence and evidence gathering to  
 help strengthen cases being prosecuted.  
 Shea stressed that the NYPD needs the  
 cooperation of the city’s fi ve district attorneys, 
  and the general public, in helping to  
 keep crime down.  
 “We can do better and 2020 policing is  
 not what it was fi ve, 10, 15 years ago. …  
 We need the cooperation of the fi ve district  
 attorneys and the communities that  
 we serve — we need their cooperation  
 and their trust,” Shea added. Th e change  
 does not aff ect anti-crime units within the  
 NYPD Transit Bureau, Shea explained.  
 Shea said the NYPD has faced great diffi  
 culties in crime fi ghting this year, specifi  
 cally bail reform laws that he claimed  
 released more criminals who have committed  
 additional  crimes.  Additionally,  
 the COVID-19 pandemic killed 45 offi  - 
 cers and, at one point, forced nearly 20  
 percent of the entire force into sick leave.  
 Th  en the George Floyd police-involved  
 murder in Minneapolis on Memorial Day  
 sparked nationwide protests, including in  
 New York City. Th  ere were renewed calls  
 for police defunding, condemnations of  
 brutality, and a legislative push to reform  
 how the NYPD works within the communities  
 they are charged to serve.  
 Photo by Todd Maisel 
 in New York state.  
 Known  as  the  “Say  Th  eir  Name  
 Agenda,” the reforms include repealing  
 50-A, which would make the disciplinary  
 records of police offi  cers more  transparent  
 and available should that offi  cer  be  
 accused of misconduct.  
 Th  e  reforms  also  include  banning  
 chokeholds, making false race-related 911  
 calls a hate crime and assigning the attorney  
 general to serve as the special prosecutor  
 in these cases. But the governor  
 went a step further Friday by also signing  
 an executive order requiring police  
 departments across New York to work  
 with their communities to devise a plan  
 to modernize and reform their policing  
 strategies — or risk losing state funding  
 next year.  
 Cuomo was joined by Senate Majority  
 Leader  Andrea  Stewart-Cousins,  
 Assembly  Speaker  Carl  Heastie  and  
 Reverend Al Sharpton for the signing of  
 these bills, as well as Gwen Carr, mother  
 of Eric Garner; Valerie Bell, mother of  
 Sean Bell; and Hazel Dukes, president of  
 NAACP.  
 “New York state is the progressive capital. 
  We never sit back and just say what the  
 nation should do,” said Cuomo. “We show  
 the nation what it should do.”  
 Cuomo acknowledged that this is only  
 the beginning and that for more change  
 to come, the federal government needs  
 to step up and reform not only the criminal  
 justice system, but also the education  
 system, child poverty and aff ordable  
 housing.  
 “Why does a child who happens to  
 be born to a poor family have a second 
 rate education to those who are born  
 in wealthier communities? Why do we  
 still have child poverty in this nation?  
 How do you justify that?” said Cuomo.  
 “Aff ordable housing is needed across the  
 country because the federal government  
 went out of the aff ordable housing business. 
  It was the one responsibility that the  
 federal government used to undertake.”  
 Under  the  executive  order  Cuomo  
 signed,  called  the  NYS  Police  Reform  
 & Reinvention Collaborative, Cuomo is  
 requiring local governments and police  
 agencies to devise a plan that reinvents  
 and modernizes police strategies and programming  
 in their communities.  
 Th  e plans must include ways to address  
 use of force by offi  cers, crowd controlling  
 tactics, implicit bias awareness, community  
 management, de-escalating training  
 and practices, restorative justice practices, 
  community-based outreach, a transparent  
 citizen complaint disposition procedure  
 as well as any other issues raised by  
 the community.  
 Each police department’s community  
 must be involved in the planning process. 
  New plans must be enacted by April  
 1, 2021 — those who do not pass new  
 reforms by then will not be eligible for  
 state funding.  
 “We’re going to say to every police department, 
  sit down at the table with the local  
 community, address the issues, get to the  
 root, get a plan, pass through local government  
 — and if you don’t you’re not going to  
 get any additional state funds,” said Cuomo.  
 “We’re not going to, as a state government,  
 subsidize improper police tactics.”  
 “We are at a moment of reckoning, there  
 is no question about it,” said Stewart- 
 Cousins. “We know this isn’t a cure. We  
 know this is the beginning of a movement  
 to bring justice to a system that has long  
 been unjust.”  
 “I joined the Civil Rights Movement  
 as a teenager. When I was 13 I became  
 part of Dr. King’s branch here. We were  
 told you start with demonstration to lead  
 to legislation, then reconciliation,” said  
 Sharpton. “Without the legislation, the  
 demonstration is just an exercise. Th is is  
 not an exercise; this is to change things.  
 By  signing  these  bills  is  bringing  the  
 change. What the governor is doing today,  
 and this assembly speaker and this majority  
 leader of the senate is doing, is legislating  
 what we demonstrated about.”  
 
				
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