State Police have a far weaker disciplinary system than those used in other large departments in New York.
A series by The New York Times’s Local Investigations Fellowship found that State Police officers who had committed serious misconduct largely remained on the job.
Melanie Garcia for The Marshall Project. Source images: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / AFP, via Getty Images; iStock; and Jimmy Woo, via Unsplash. The Marshall Project is a nonprofit newsroom covering ...
A new investigation from the state comptroller’s office found that serious weaknesses in New Jersey’s police pension system allowed officers accused of major misconduct — including assaulting ...
Disciplinary hearings in the most egregious cases of police misconduct could be pushed behind closed doors if an appellate court sides with Chicago’s largest police union this week. Most officers ...
Missouri's system often takes years to resolve a misconduct allegation, in some cases allowing officers to move on to a new department. In one glaring example, former Kansas City detective Eric ...
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