
Senator Jesse Hamilton Calls on City to Reform Broken Windows
Councilmember Carlos Menchaca
Chair, Committee on Immigration
New York City Council
Dear Councilmember Menchaca:
I write to urge you to do everything in your power, including holding
hearings and authoring legislation, to end broken windows policing. The
urgency of policing reform is that much more critical due to the unjust,
unwise, and unconstitutional policy undertakings of the Trump administration.
Broken windows policing, really the over-policing of minor offenses, has
particularly harmful consequences in vulnerable communities, including
communities of color and our immigrant communities. Communities of color
already have a fraught history with police and broken windows is rubbing
salt in an already unhealed wound.
The horrible broken windows policy led police to put Rosan Miller, a seven-months
pregnant woman initially approached for grilling outside her home, into
the same banned chokehold that had led to Garner’s death.
We must work together with the state to Raise the Age and with the City
to end broken windows policing. The vast majority of youth arrests are
for minor crimes (74 percent are misdemeanors) including not paying fare
(turnstile jumping) for a subway or bus. Over 90% of turnstile jumping
arrests in 2016 involved people of color.
Set on a bigoted witch-hunt against immigrants and Muslims, the Trump
administration could use broken windows policing as an aid in furthering
its deportation agenda and harming our vulnerable New York immigrant communities.
In your capacity as Chair of the Committee on Immigration, I believe you
are positioned to forcefully make the point on the dangers to our immigrant
communities to your colleagues across government.
As I am sure you are aware, broken windows policing has its roots in the
Giuliani administration and has been controversial from the outset. An
analysis of recent years by the Office of the Inspector General for the
NYPD (OIG-NYPD) found “no empirical evidence demonstrating a clear
and direct link between an increase in summons and misdemeanor arrest
activity and a related drop in felony crime.” OIG-NYPD further found,
“Between 2010 and 2015, quality-of-life enforcement rates –
and in particular, quality-of-life summons rates – have dramatically
declined, but there has been no commensurate increase in felony crime.”
The June, 22, 2016 report, “An Analysis of Quality-of-Life Summonses,
Quality-of-Life Misdemeanor Arrests, and Felony Crime in New York City,
2010 to 2015,” vindicates the insightful critique leveled at broken
windows policing.
Though the OIG-NYPD report, diplomatically, says the NYPD need “carefully
evaluate how quality-of-life summonses and misdemeanor arrests fit into
its overall strategy for disorder reduction and crime control,”
I submit to you that the communities the NYPD serves have already deliberated
on the balance of consequences and costs. The community has reached a
determination – as expressed in meetings both private and public,
at town halls, at precinct-community councils, and elsewhere – and
that determination is to end the flawed policy of broken windows policing.
I hope you will join us in this important effort to ensure safety and
security for the millions of New Yorkers feeling less safe and less secure
under an ideology on policing whose values do not match the inclusive
New York City we hope to advance.
With Action,
Senator Jesse Hamilton