On Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, NYPD officers violently attacked peaceful Black Lives Matter protesters gathered at City Hall. Officers continue to use illegal chokeholds almost seven years after Eric Garner was murdered by Daniel Pantaleo. In fact, since 2014, the Civilian Complaint Review Board has substantiated 40 instances of officers using banned chokeholds, yet not a single officer has been fired as a result. Meanwhile, Mayor de Blasio continues to tout a meaningless “disciplinary matrix” that is not legally binding and gives the police commissioner ultimate authority in the disciplinary process.
Days before the NYPD crackdown on MLK Day, NY Attorney General Letitia James announced that her office was suing the NYPD over their response during the summer uprising that followed the police murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. The lawsuit itself may be historic, but the wording—which says that police violence was a result of “poor training and supervision”—ignores the fact that the NYPD is doing exactly what it’s designed to do. Committing violence with impunity against BIPOC is fundamental to policing, and no amount of training or supervision can change that.
With this understanding—resulting from years of educating ourselves and listening to and reading works by BIPOC organizers who are trying to build a world without police—we in the Police Accountability Working Group have decided to change our name. We recognize that “holding police accountable” is not a complete description of the work we need to do. Police will always evade accountability. Policing has its origins in slave patrols and union busting and was designed to uphold class inequality and racial capitalism. A “safer, better” version of policing will never be possible, so we would like to begin imagining a future without it. We also wanted our name to express that we are working to reject policing in all its forms, including the ways that we, as white people, police ourselves and our communities.
We had several discussions in order to brainstorm and discuss new names, and we agreed on the Beyond Policing Working Group (BPWG). We will continue to work with our partners at Communities United for Police Reform and Justice Committee and the families of New Yorkers who were killed by the NYPD in their fights for accountability, but our work will continue to evolve in support of abolition.
Some ways to get involved in the BPWG’s efforts:
Mondays - call blasts to Mayor de Blasio’s office to demand the firing of Officer Wayne Isaacs for the killing of Delrawn Small
Fridays - call blast to Ask the Mayor on The Brian Lehrer Show on WNYC for Delrawn Small
Every third Wednesday of the month - BPWG monthly meetings
Stay tuned for how we are supporting calls from our partners to defund the police in the next city budget
In solidarity,
Beyond Policing Working Group (BPWG)