‘No Arrests’: In New York, Some Police Can Drink, Drive and Avoid Charges
Officers in New York State crashed their official vehicles, hit other motorists and arrived to work reeking of alcohol. And yet, they sometimes evaded criminal punishment, an investigation found.
- Loose Rules Let State Police Hand Out Lax Penalties for Serious Misconduct
- An Officer Bungled a Teen Rape Case. The Victim Was Abused Again.
- How We Obtained 10,000 Police Disciplinary Records
- Rehired: How New York’s Problem Cops Can Bounce Between Jobs
- Can Police Departments Be Trusted to Release Their Own Misconduct Records? Apparently Not.
- Behind the Badge: In New York City Homeless Shelters, the Same 'Peace Officers' Abuse Residents
Sammy Sussman pored over more than 10,000 police disciplinary files to report this article, which is part of a series by The New York Times’s Local Investigations Fellowship.
Sammy Sussman pored over more than 10,000 police disciplinary files to report this article, which is part of a series by The New York Times’s Local Investigations Fellowship.
Sign up for Staying Focused, our newsletter keeping readers up to speed on New York politics.
Sarah Cohen contributed reporting. This article was reported in partnership with Big Local News at Stanford University, and with support from MuckRock, the Fund for Investigative Journalism and the Data-Driven Reporting Project.