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SCANNER AUDIO - NYPD POLICE SHOOT-OUT !! -

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Uploaded by on Mar 9, 2008

The New York City Police Department was established in May 1845, which along with the Boston Police Department, was among the first modern police forces in the United States. At the time, New York City's population of 320,000 was served by an archaic force, consisting of one night watch, one hundred city marshals, thirty-one constables, and fifty-one police officers. Peter Cooper, at request of the Common Council, drew up a proposal to create a police force of 1,200 officers. John Watts de Peyster was an early advocate of implementing military style discipline and organization to the force.The state legislature approved the proposal which authorized creation of a police force on May 7, 1844, along with abolition of the nightwatch system. Under Mayor William Havemeyer, the NYPD was reorganized on May 13, 1845, with the city divided into three districts, with courts, magistrates, and clerks, and station houses set up. The NYPD was closely modeled after the Metropolitan Police Service in London, which in turn used a military-like organizational structure, with rank and order.

In 1857, a new Metropolitan police force was established and the Municipal police abolished. The Metropolitan police bill consolidated the police in New York, Brooklyn, Staten Island, and Westchester County (which then included The Bronx), under a governor-appointed board of commissioners. Mayor Fernando Wood and the Municipals, unwilling to be abolished, resisted for several months.

Throughout the years, the NYPD has been involved with a number of riots in New York City. In July 1863, the New York State Militias were absent to aid Union troops, when the 1863 Draft Riots broke out, leaving the police who were outnumbered to quell the riots. The Tompkins Square Riot occurred on January 13, 1874 when police crushed a demonstration involving thousands of unemployed in Tompkins Square Park.Newspapers, including The New York Times, covered numerous cases of police brutality during the latter part of the 19th century. Cases often involved officers beating suspects and persons, using clubs, who were drunk or rowdy, posed a challenge to officers' authority, or refused to move along down the street. Most cases of police brutality occurred in poor immigrant neighborhood, including Five Points, the Lower East Side, and Tenderloin.

Beginning in the 1870s, politics and corruption of Tammany Hall, a political machine supported by Irish immigrants infiltrated the NYPD, which was used as political tool, with positions awarded by politicians to loyalists. Many officers and leaders in the police department took bribes from local businesses, overlooking things like illegal liquor sales. Police also served political purposes such as manning polling places, where they would turn a blind eye to ballot box stuffing and other acts of fraud.

The Lexow Committee was established in 1894 to investigate corruption in the police department. The committee made reform recommendations, including the suggestion that the police department adopt a civil service system. Around the turn of the century, the NYPD began to professionalize under leadership of then Police Commissioner, Theodore Roosevelt. The NYPD also began to emphasize training, and took advantage of technological innovations such as fingerprinting.

The economic downturn of the 1970s led to some extremely difficult times for the city. The Bronx, in particular, was plagued by arson, and an atmosphere of lawlessness permeated the city. In addition, the city's financial crisis led to a hiring freeze on all city departments, including the NYPD, from 1976 to 1980.

This was followed by the crack epidemic of the late 1980s and early 1990s that was one factor that caused the city's homicide rate to soar to an all-time high. By 1990, New York set a record of 2,262 murders, a record that has yet to be broken by any US major city. Petty thefts associated with drug addiction were also increasingly common.

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  • Sounds like that dispatcher saved lives that night. Great Job! Brooklyn is one hell of a place to be a cop

  • 72 CO should be sent for immediate reinstruction on "HOW to listen to the radio" and "WHEN to call off a chase". He called off the chase without listening to situation. No Commanding Officer in their right mind calls off a chase when shots are being fired at his officers. If that is the case, the CO should lose his command immediately and start pushing papers if his judgement is so poor. Either way, he owes his officers an apology.

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  • @paperboi718 3-9-1990 to be exact. There's another vid with this audio clearer and it has the date.

  • @furstenfeldbruck Worse? Brooklyn accounts for 42% of the city's murders while the Bronx only 28%. Brooklyn is worse by far.

  • @newyorkjets86 Da Bronx is worse and i'm not just saying that to be cool

  • Good recording. Well dine my fellow scan-fan...

  • there was about 50 officers with guns pointing at the buidling. it was even more tough for them boys since its a one way street and used people's parked cars for cover because that street is tight and had no trees or anything at the time. cops already had their cars on the street but it was just plain mayhem. about 30 mins later you see the spanish dude being escorted out the building with just boxers on...homeboy got rid of his clothes or something. nutty time back then

  • how old is this audio??? I used to live on 54 st marks between 3rd and 4th ave. if this is what i think it is, this happened back in the late 80's! I think I remember this. cops flooded the entire block looking for a spanish kat that shot 3 cops. they caught him hiding under a bed. the whole building was laced with crack. wyckoff projects is just up the block. SWAT STAYED in wyckoff...kids gotta come home from school seeing them boys with the pumps about to rush an apt. wyckoff..nutty

  • You take the Job u take the Risk .

  • FUCK THE PO-PO.

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