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by ornornor 954 days ago
> NYC's finest have many creative examples to offer.

Am I understanding you correctly that the police staff themselves use illegal or obscured plates on their private vehicles which they park at the police employees parking lot, with no consequences whatsoever? If so this is insane.

1 comments

> Am I understanding you correctly that the police staff themselves use illegal or obscured plates on their private vehicles which they park

Yes[1].

> at the police employees parking lot

Nope, they park illegally on the sidewalk instead[2]. This includes on blocks with public schools[3].

> with no consequences whatsoever? If so this is insane.

Yes, and yes.

Edit: I forgot to mention: documenting any of this comes with a risk of fines or arrest[4]. You will also be ignored if you attempt to report it[5].

[1]: https://nyc.streetsblog.org/2023/02/01/are-police-disciplini...

[2]: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-04-12/mapping-t...

[3]: https://www.vice.com/en/article/3ak54k/how-one-brooklyn-neig...

[4]: https://hellgatenyc.com/nypd-try-to-illegally-park-then-tick...

[5]: https://nyc.streetsblog.org/2021/10/25/nypd-ignores-council-...

This is surreal. Is there no due process? Couldn’t someone go to court over this and above the police?
Yep, it is surreal. It’s one of the many ways in which the NYPD communicates its utter lack of respect for the city it’s meant to protect.

I’m not aware of a court case that has tried to fight this, probably in part because of procedural challenges (the NYPD spans 5 boroughs with 5 different court systems, standing is unclear, etc.). Unfortunately, the city’s courts probably just aren’t equipped to handle this kind of en masse, “mild” collective punishment by law enforcement itself.