DOI issues report finding City Board of Elections could have saved taxpayers $2.4 million by consolidating staffing for November 2011 off-year general election.
DOI report on the findings of a follow-up investigation into roles of the NYPD and NYCHA in controlling violent and narcotics crime in Public housing by removing criminal offenders from NYCHA
A report detailing NYCHA's continued failure to enforce its Permanent Exclusion policy for dangerous criminal offenses. The investigation also uncovered employees purchasing drugs from tenants and targets of the criminal investigation and other misconduct at NYCHA's Sheepshead/Nostrand Houses.
DOI Report Finds Security Breaches at Rikers Island, Leading to Reforms That Include The Use of Canine Units to Detect Drug Smuggling at Staff Entrances
The report examines certain aspects of The NYC Human Resources Administration (HRA) Special One-Time Assistance (SOTA) program, a rental assistance program that is designed to provide permanent, stable housing to qualified Department of Homeless Services (DHS) clients.
The New York City Marshals' Handbook of Regulations, issued by the Department of Investigation, lists the directives prescribing the standards for official conduct by the marshals, as well as the standards for the maintenance of official books and records. Marshals shall be accountable for the duties, functions, and responsibilities that are delegated to them, as well as for the Department of Investigation directive and the Handbook of Regulations.
The Marshals Handbook include DOI's directives issued through the years and certain new directives. All current directives have been codified within this handbook.
Department of Investigation’s (“DOI”) Office of the Inspector General for the New York City Police Department (“OIG-NYPD”) released its Ninth Annual Report, which discusses each of the 18 investigative reports authored by OIG-NYPD since 2015 and the status of the 200 recommendations issued to NYPD.
DOI Report finding deficiencies in how the NYPD tracks and review litigation data and trends. DOI issued report pursuant to a 2017 law passed by City Council (LL166 of 2017), and a follow-up to DOI's April 2015 report on the use of data from lawsuits involving NYPD to improve policing.
The DOI’s Office of the Inspector General for the New York City Police Department issued its fourth report pursuant to Local Law 166 of 2017, which directs OIG-NYPD to consider “patterns or trends identified by analyzing actions, claims, complaints, and investigations” filed against the NYPD.
DOI Report detailing the findings of a year-long probe of the DOC hiring practices for Correction Officers, exposing persistent problems at the agency's Applicant Investigation Unit. Failures identified by DOI in a 2015 report remain, and recommended changes were never adopted by DOC.
The New York City Police Department (“NYPD”) conducts widespread surveillance in the public domain using data gathered by sophisticated technology throughout New York City.1 That technology has the capability to gather information about millions of people who move around the City.
Acting Commissioner Cort said, “DOI’s Report exposes the long-standing and continuing problems with the City’s
Lifeguard Division, revealing leadership and management failures; a lack of accountability and transparency.