Organizers towards the NYPD’s Felony Group Database concern Mayor Zohran Mamdani could soften his stance on abolishing the policing device which nearly completely surveils Black and Brown younger males after feedback made throughout a press convention on April 6. This “gang database” can label people as gang members with out an arrest or conviction.
“So, I’ve made my critiques of the database clear, and the NYPD has additionally carried out numerous reforms as per the advice that got here by way of,” mentioned Mamdani through the press convention. “And the implementation of these reforms and the outcomes of which might be a part of the lively dialogue that we’re having.”
These reforms stem from findings by the Workplace of the Inspector Common-NYPD (OIG-NYPD) revealed over the previous yr. In 2023, the police oversight company supplied 17 suggestions on how the division ought to reform the database. Since then, the variety of names registered fell by practically half.
Former Division of Investigation Commissioner Jocelyn Strauber, who oversaw the OIG-NYPD final yr, informed the AmNews that the police division cooperated totally with the probe again in October. However even with the reforms, the racial make-up stays ostensibly the identical: overwhelmingly Black and Brown.
The G.A.N.G.S. Coalition, which consists of a number of civil rights legislation companies and pro-privacy teams just like the Authorized Support Society and the NAACP Authorized Protection Fund (LDF), maintains that the database can’t be reformed. Whereas the NYPD efforts appear to deal with probably the most flagrant considerations, which frequently contain monitoring minors, the racial disparities appear immutable. And through previous hearings, police officers couldn’t present precise numbers on what number of shootings the database prevented throughout a 2024 metropolis council listening to, whereas claiming the device was key for gun violence prevention efforts.
“How do you reform a database that’s 99% Black and Hispanic focused?” mentioned NAACP LDF group organizer Obi Afriyie. “What does reform appear to be? Taking away one facet of the various dangerous points of the database won’t ever do something to cease these racial disparities. The database policing will at all times disproportionately have an effect on Black and Brown our bodies. The thought of reforming that is nonsensical to me [and] a non-starter for the coalition.”
Presently, a metropolis council invoice sponsored by Councilmember Althea Stevens would abolish the gang database and stop the NYPD from refashioning it below some other title. Final September, Mamdani brazenly backed the laws abolishing the database throughout a sit-down with Errol Louis at Columbia College.
“I’ve supported that proposal,” he mentioned through the discuss. “It’s one which I’ve supported due to the huge dragnet has meant the inclusion of New Yorkers on the idea of whether or not they exit late, photographs they placed on social media, a lot of the info of lifetime of being a younger New Yorker. And but it then turns into a mark of suspicion.”
Critics of the gang database largely see the town’s Disaster Administration System, which deploys credible messengers to leverage their belief and ties to squash feuds and stop retaliatory shootings, as the choice resolution. Mamdani pledged to bolster the community by way of his Division of Neighborhood Security proposal, which not too long ago obtained off the bottom after an government order, drawing reward from teams just like the NAACP LDF.
However Afriyie says the gang database contradicts these efforts and worries that Mamdani’s potential assist of the NYPD follow could erode the belief for his administration within the neighborhoods the place credible messengers, many with former gang ties themselves, function.
“You’re telling folks that you simply need to spend money on them, that their lived experiences should not their faults,” mentioned Afriyie. “That we have to have all these items and that is what true security seems to be like and then you definitely’re nonetheless surveilling and criminalizing them…a part of the significance [and success] of getting CMS staff and credible messengers is that they’re very linked to those communities. Typically they’re formally gang-impacted themselves. It’s these key members which might be those criminalized by the NYPD in these methods.”



















