Heres' the lawsuit @NewYorkStateAG @TishJames filed today against NYC, Mayor de Blasio, and the NYPD seeking prospective relief to challenge NYPD use of force and protest policing policies/practices, including around the recent George Floyd protests:

https://ag.ny.gov/sites/default/files/filed_complaint_ny_v_nypd_1.14.2021.pdf
The complaint outlines the case that, in response to the protests seeking justice for George Floyd, the City, Mayor, and NYPD engaged in "unlawful policing practices" that "are not new" but rather "the latest manifestation of the NYPD's unconstitutional policing practices"
The complaint's description of "The NYPD's Aggressive Response to Prior Protests" below cites to public reports as well as litigation spanning my whole 16+ year career - in fact, 6 of the 19 cases cited in footnotes 4-5 are either mine or cases I did substantial work on.
This paragraph from the AG's complaint summarizing some of the policies and practices the AG's lawsuit challenges tracks some of the well-documented practices activists have been subjected to, documented, complained about, and fought against, including in lawsuits, for decades
Like both the @NYC_DOI and NYC Law Department's reports about the NYPD's responses to the Floyd protests, the AG's complaint focuses on a lack of appropriate NYPD training and supervision on use of force and crowd control in policing First Amendment assemblies before the protests
Unlike the City agency reports, the AG's complaint directly implicates Mayor de Blasio, Commissioner Shea, Chief Monahan, and other City policymakers for their knowledge that the City's and NYPD's policies and training were inadequate before AND after the Floyd protests...
...as well as their failures (at the time and ongoing) to prevent the harms caused by or otherwise meaningfully address the NYPD's protest policing policies and practices.

In fact, the Complaint says *things got worse* as a result of the NYPD's *most recent* training:
There's a lot of talk about, and now even more than the usual amount of litigation over, the NYPD's relevant training - but no real public scrutiny of that NYPD training.

Here you can find depositions and documents describing that training as of 2012: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/y18selkhl3cc5mj/AADxX9R_n23jHlo8PA_ebn9Oa?dl=0
At least as of 2012, the NYPD's "Disorder Control Guidelines" - written in the 1990's - still formed the core around which most of the NYPD's crowd control and protest response policing related training were based. My guess is that not much has changed.

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/y18selkhl3cc5mj/AADxX9R_n23jHlo8PA_ebn9Oa?dl=0&preview=Ex+37.pdf
These ancient, evergreen, Disorder Control Guidelines treat First Amendment assemblies and serious civil disorders essentially the same, and focus on militarized tactics to "disperse and demoralize" protesters including by using "mobile tactics of speed, surprise and deception"
I've sued the City and NYPD for 16+ years over protest policing tactics and I'm co-counsel for over 150 people arrested and/or beaten around the past few months' protests. As such, I think litigation plays a role in police accountability...but I know that role is VERY limited.
Most civil rights lawsuits seek $$. The basic idea is governments that have to pay for police misconduct lawsuits will take steps, including through training and meaningful supervision and discipline, as insurance against having to pay for similar misconduct in the future.
That's not the impact that protest-related police misconduct litigation has historically in NYC! Instead of meaningful, let alone radical, change, year after year, the City pays out many millions of dollars in police misconduct settlements and judgments and litigation defense...
...all with the complicity, if not the support, of New York City elected officials - including and especially a series of Mayors, City Council members, and local prosecutors - nearly all of whom have failed and refused to demand or provide transparency, accountability, or change.
Unlike most of the NYC protest-related police misconduct litigation in the past two decades, much of which challenged NYPD policies and practices in the context of $$ claims, the AG's lawsuit only seeks declaratory and injunctive relief, including potential monitoring - not $$
Relatedly, the AG does not represent any individual client(s), but rather, the "People of the State of New York", by virtue of the AG's official authority as New York State's chief law enforcement officer and the OAG's "quasi-sovereign interest in the[ir] health and well-being"
Because the AG doesn't represent any individual client(s), but rather, "the People" of New York, writ large, as a practical matter, that means the AG has the authority, in the context of the lawsuit, to decide what's in their best interests, with or without their input or consent
At the end of the day, litigation, including litigation that ultimately wins injunctions, monitors, consent decrees, or other, similar results, can often decrease, rather than increase, real, public transparency and community accountability
So, IMO, it's important both to recognize how unprecedented and monumental it is that the NYS Attorney General is suing the City of New York, Mayor de Blasio, and NYPD officials over these policies and practices, and to do everything possible to ensure that the AG's litigation...
...is meaningfully led by, and centers the goals of, the people and communities, including activists, most impacted by the NYPD practices -- informed by public dissemination of as much of the actual discovery, including training-related documents, as possible.
No matter what the AG or others - myself and other plaintiffs' police misconduct lawyers included - do, people should settle for nothing short of real community control and accountability, along with public transparency, and never expect those things to come from lawsuits alone
I'm proud to co-counsel with @LegallyFemme @j_remy_green and @JessicaMassimi representing 150+ people arrested and/or brutalized by the NYPD in the past few months, including Rayne Valentine and others whose experiences were mentioned or referred to in the AG's complaint
Our courageous client Rayne Valentine, some of whose experiences around being brutalized by the NYPD are sumarrized in the AG's complaint in the passages below, also spoke to those experiences during the AG's press conference this morning
Rayne first shared his story with @OliviaMesser in this June 2, 2020 @dailybeast piece. NYPD members attacked Rayne while he was on the way home from the hospital where his work included "piling hundreds of dead bodies...into refrigerated morgue trucks":

https://twitter.com/OliviaMesser/status/1267887507565395968?s=20
On August 31, 2020, we filed a Notice of Claim with the Comptroller of the City of New York identifying NYPD Detective Amjad Kasaji, Shield No. 6901, as the primary aggressor depicted in Rayne Valentine's cell phone video.
That August 31, 2020 Notice of Claim described how, on the night NYPD members assaulted Rayne on the street, other NYPD members, who had reportedly responded to the hospital to investigate reports to hospital staff that police had attacked him, further harassed and threatened him
The August 31, 2020 Notice of Claim further describes how, soon after Rayne was released from the hospital, other NYPD members showed up to harass him where he lived, ignored instructions that they did not have consent to come to his apartment, and repeatedly tried...
...to circumvent Rayne's lawyers and contact him directly.

When we called the NYPD on what the NYPD members who were purportedly investigating Rayne's beating had done, they told us in substance that nobody from IAB had gone to Rayne's apartment and they would not do that...
...After gaslighting us, the NYPD IAB members who were supposedly investigating Rayne's beating then stonewalled us. Yet they still wanted (and, I think, expected) Rayne to subject himself to further NYPD abuse, mistreatment, and dishonesty by subjecting to an interview.
Under these circumstances, where NYPD members had access to Rayne's video and statement on the night of the beating and NYPD members supposedly charged with investigating his beating have themselves been repeatedly abusive, he has not given them a further interview.

However...
** deep breath in criminal defense lawyer **
Prosecutors from the @BrooklynDA Law Enforcement Accountability Bureau reached out to Rayne through us in around August of last year and as a result, in October, Rayne gave an interview, as well as consent to release certain medical records, to them
Also in October of 2020, we ID'd/confirmed the ID of NYPD Det. Amjad Kasaji, to @BrooklynDA Law Enforcement Accountability Bureau prosecutors, as the officer in the below still from Rayne's video and @OliviaMesser description published by @thedailybeast

https://www.thedailybeast.com/even-medical-workers-fighting-covid-say-cops-are-attacking-them-at-george-floyd-protests?ref=home
NYPD members had video of Rayne's beating, and his own account, immediately after it happened, on May 31, 2020.

I wonder if there have been or will be any NYPD consequences for any of the officers involved, or if the NYPD "investigation" will claim Rayne was non-compliant?🤔
@BrooklynDA has had the video and press accounts of Rayne's beating since June of 2020; the ID of at least one of the NYPD assailants since some time between then and October of 2020 at the latest; and an interview with, and medical records from, Rayne, since October of 2020...
I can't tell you what @BrooklynDA is thinking about bringing charges against NYPD Det. Amjad Kasaji and/or other NYPD officers who attacked Rayne Valentine, but I can tell you @BrooklynDA routinely prosecutes people who are not cops without hesitation, based on much, much less.
Whatever @BrooklynDA is or is not doing related to bringing charges against NYPD Det. Amjad Kasaji and/or others who attacked Rayne, the process so far does not inspire confidence, or trust, that prosecutors will take action, and at any rate, Rayne is not in the driver's seat
And then there are statements like those just reported in @frankrunyeon's @Law360 article below, from a @BrooklynDA spox who claims their office "combed through social media for evidence of police misconduct" but that the bar for prosecution is "high"

https://twitter.com/frankrunyeon/status/1349886219296133120?s=20
Imagine having the resources at the disposal of @BrooklynDA to investigate - and, if necessary, identify - the police we all saw brutalizing protesters on social media and instead of using them to hold them accountable within your own punitive and carceral framework, you say this
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