NEW YORK — There are calls for CompStat, a publicly available listing of crime data for seven different types of major crimes and six other crime categories, to be eliminated altogether because it has ...
The crime analysis and accountability system known as Compstat, developed by the New York Police Department in 1994, is the most revolutionary public-sector achievement of the last quarter-century.
Compstat emerged in the mid-90s as a nifty computerized tool designed to track the most serious crimes in New York City. Initial Compstat meetings found New York's finest analyzing statistics from the ...
New York City experienced its safest May in the history of the CompStat era, officials said Monday. CompStat began in 1995. “We had the safest April we’ve ever had, and May continues this good news,” ...
For more than a decade, coteries of academics, and ex-cops who became academics, have been selling the idea that CompStat, the police command accountability and crime strategy system developed in the ...
Since its inception in New York City in 1994, CompStat — short for comparative or computer statistics — has gained considerable recognition for its role in knowledge-based law enforcement. Used by ...
The crime fighting innovation that helped make New York into America’s safest big city requires police officers to question not just suspects, but each other. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get ...
On Jan. 23, New York City announced a $75 million payout to settle a class-action lawsuit against the New York Police Department. The complainants successfully argued that the NYPD issued more than ...
Mayor Giuliani has quietly replicated the Police Department’s phenomenally successful Compstat program at other city agencies and will soon unveil the results, The Post has learned. Sources said the ...
Brooklyn’s new beep is about to bring an innovative crime-fighting tool to Borough Hall. Borough President Eric Adams plans to use CompStat, the data-driven model created during the 1990s — when Adams ...
The city will launch a child-welfare database-tracking system modeled on the NYPD’s successful CompStat program, Mayor Bloomberg announced yesterday. Starting next month, New Yorkers can keep an eye ...
One morning this week, Eric Adams sat down at a sidewalk table outside the Washington Square Diner, in the West Village. Two decades ago, at the end of his career in the N.Y.P.D., Adams had worked ...