Quarterly reports on the number of arrests, criminal summonses, and civil summonses in which the person arrested or summonsed was recording or attempting to record police activities. The data is disaggregated by offense, gender, race, age and precinct where enforcement took place.
The CCRB Executive Director's Monthly Report provides the public with all relevant statistics on CCRB complaints, including board dispositions, substantiation rates, truncations, and statistics from both the Mediation Unit and Administrative Prosecution Unit.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams is joined by President Joseph Biden to announce a series of new initiatives and a major commitment of federal resources dedicated to tackling the gun violence crisis across New York City and other communities in the country.
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-152, this quarterly report contains information on noncriminal, arrest, and summons incidents that occurred in schools, as well as complaints against school safety agents and injuries sustained by school safety personnel
Annual report prepared on the number of instances requiring a referral or transportation of a child to a partner organization or child advocacy center due to their caregiver’s arrest.
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-157, this quarterly report contains information on the # of criminal and civil summonses issued, disaggregated by offense, race, gender, age, borough, precinct, police service area, and transit district, as well as NYPD reason codes for criminal summonses issued.
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-153(c), this quarterly report contains 1) the number of leaving the scene incidents with a critical injury, 2) the number of such incidents the department closed to arrest and closed without an arrest; and 3) the number of notices of violation issued for 19-191
Pursuant to Admin Code Sect. 14-178, this quarterly report contains information on the # of 1) Special Victims Division (SVD) case management system audits 2) non-SVD units and non-SVD personnel that accessed the case management system during the previous quarter and 3) improper access