spot_img
More
    HomeOther NewsLawsuit filed against police patrolling private apartment buildings

    Lawsuit filed against police patrolling private apartment buildings

    Published on

    spot_img

    The New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU) late last month filed a federal lawsuit to curb a key provision of the New York City Police Department’s controversial stop-and-frisk program.
    The class-action lawsuit, filed March 28, alleges that the NYPD’s “Operation Clean Halls” program in which landlords can ask NYPD to patrol a building’s hallways to prevent drug dealing and use, has instead resulted in illegal searches, stops, summons, and arrests of residents and their guests in the buildings enrolled.
    This citywide program has been in effect since 1991. In Brooklyn, it is commonly known as FTAP, which stands for “Formal Trespass Affidavit Program”, in which landlords allow local cops to patrol their buildings.
    “Operation Clean Halls has placed hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers, mostly black and Latino, under siege in their own homes,” NYCLU Executive Director Donna Lieberman said. “For residents of Clean Halls Buildings, taking the garbage out or checking the mail can result in being thrown against the wall and humiliated by police. Untold numbers of people have been wrongly arrested for trespassing because they had the audacity to leave their apartments without IDs or visit friends and family who live in Clean Halls Buildings. This aggressive assault on people’s constitutional rights must be stopped.”
    The NYCLU also criticized the management of the program, stating that there are no established criteria for selecting buildings to enroll in the program and there is no citywide list of buildings in the program.
    The lawsuit is seeking an injunction requiring the NYPD to stop asking people inside and around Clean Halls Buildings for ID or about their destination without suspicion that they are trespassing or engaged in other wrongdoing and to stop arresting people for trespassing in Clean Halls Buildings without establishing whether or not the person is authorized to be there.
    The suit also is asking the court to establish citywide standards for enrollment of buildings in Operation Clean Halls, implement training for officers who patrol clean halls buildings and establish a system to track and monitor the stops, searches, summonses and arrests made pursuant to Operation Clean Halls.
    According to the lawsuit, “Illegal stops inside Clean Halls Buildings sometimes occur during floor-by-floor sweeps by NYPD officers, known as vertical patrols.”
    In one year alone, about 240,000 vertical patrols were conducted in privately owned buildings by the NYPD.   Several thousand buildings are in the program, in Manhattan, for example, there are about 3,895 Clean Halls Buildings.
    It was on such a vertical patrol that the unarmed 19-year-old Timothy Stansbury was gunned down by police in 2004 – although that vertical was conducted in the Louis Armstrong Houses, a public housing complex.
    According to NYPD data, since 2007, there have been 16,000 misdemeanor trespassing arrests in New York City annually. Between 2007 and 2010, more than 37 percent of trespassing arrest cases was resolved in favor of the accused.
    In 2011, prosecutors declined to charge more than 13 percent of people arrested for trespassing in the city.
    NYPD’s chief spokesman Paur Browne defended the program stating that the program provides a type of security for the building’s residents.  “By challenging uninvited individuals, police are providing a level of safety to tenants that the residents of doormen buildings take for granted,” Browne stated.
    Additional reporting by B. Sadlonova

     

    Latest articles

    Where Comfort Meets Cool: The Bedford Shines in Williamsburg

    The RSC fish and chips at The Bedford, 110 Bedford Avenue in Brooklyn

    Sigh… We Had So Much Hope for Eric Adams

    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 27: NYC Mayor Eric Adams attends the 2025 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade on November 27, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Michael Loccisano/Getty Images)

    The Power in Your Purse

    By Nayaba ArindeEditor-at-Large From armchair activists who just refused to click and drag to shopping...

    They Refused to be Silenced

    The Novels of Hattie McDaniel and Hazel Scott Book Review by Dr. Brenda M. GreeneThe...

    More like this

    Where Do We Go From Here?

    What’s At Stake Former President Barack Obama Democracy was never meant to be transactional -- you...

    OTP Interview with Oronike Odeleye, Cofounder of the #MuteRKelly Movement Part Two

    By Maitefa Angaza In last week’s issue Oronike Odeleye spoke of the unexpected, but...

    Brown and Barkley: Men Behaving Badly

    By Maitefa Angaza      Two men are in the news this week, not for...