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Ticket-Fixing Officers Say They Just Followed Supervisors' Example

Friday, November 04, 2011 - 12:00 AM

As 11 New York City police officers face ticket-fixing charges in the Bronx, the largest police union in the city — the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association — has angrily stuck to one position: Ticket-fixing has been condoned for decades as part of the "NYPD culture." Editorials have been slamming that argument all week, and the backlash has sparked a debate within the NYPD.

Current and retired officers admit they knew tampering with summonses was wrong, but they say supervisors set the example by doing it, too.  

Many of them maintain the issuance of tickets has always been a matter of individual discretion, so making a ticket go away should be within an officer's discretion as well.  They point out the NYPD's own Patrol Guide allows for the voiding of tickets.

Prosecutors in the Bronx have accused the indicted officers of fixing tickets in primarily three ways: defacing a ticket with false information, removing a ticket from a summons box at the station house or persuading an officer to lie on the stand in traffic court.

Knowing it was Wrong

Gary Gorman, a police officer in East Harlem during the 1970s and 80s, said he fixed about a dozen tickets during his 13 years in the NYPD. If he discovered a fellow police officer got slapped with a traffic ticket, maybe because his police union card wasn't displayed in his car window, Gorman would make sure that ticket wouldn't hold up in court. He said to do that he'd write incorrect information on the face of the ticket to make it defective.

"Is it a hundred percent right doing that? In my heart, no. I know that. I know the difference between right and wrong," Gorman said.

But he never got caught. He said other officers also knew it was wrong, but did it anyway — because in many cases, supervisors ordered officers to fix tickets.

Special Fixes for Special People

Joe Guagliardo was a police officer in Brooklyn during the 1980s when he unknowingly wrote a ticket for the chief of staff of a city council member. Guagliardo said an Integrity Control Officer — an officer who is tasked with rooting out corruption within the police — told him he had to "take care of it."  Guagliardo asked his supervisors how he was supposed to make a ticket go away, and he said they told him, "Change the date of birth, and don't worry about it."

Guagliardo said he and other officers would get rewarded with perks when they fixed tickets for their supervisors. Some were assigned to desirable shifts or jobs in the department.  

Retired officers say it was common to receive orders from supervisors to fix tickets for people from the mayor's office or city council members.

Aurelio Grillo, a police officer in Williamsburg during the 1960s and 70s, said he saw powerful voting blocks in his precinct get special treatment.  

"I was told by captains, inspectors, lieutenants, sergeants to avoid going on blocks where there were Hassidic communities that had shuls or temples, and they were double- and triple-parked, and we were told, you know, to leave them alone, even if they were blocking the street," Grillo said.

Retired supervisors say there's no question they did some people favors by forgiving traffic tickets, and they knew officers watched them do it.
 
"In the three different precincts that I commanded, I must have voided a hundred different tickets and summons," said Louis Anemone, who served in the 1990s as Chief of Department, the highest-ranking uniformed member in the entire police force. Anemone said he would regularly void tickets for church parishioners who were double-parked on a Sunday.

Not All Ticket-Fixing is Equal

But Anemone said when he voided a ticket, he would follow the official NYPD Patrol Guide procedure, which requires the department to retain copies of the original ticket. WNYC obtained a copy of that guide, which does spell out how to cancel a ticket.  But according to the rules, the procedure is only for tickets that were first issued "in error."

Anemone said other kinds of ticket-fixing were never acceptable — such as defacing a ticket by writing false information, or removing a ticket from the pile in the precinct.

"Why would we lock the summons box?  Because we were aware of the fact that it could happen," Anemone said.

And if an officer was caught lying on the stand in traffic court, Anemone said he would be fired.  That's why he said it was disingenuous for the police union to now say ticket-fixing has always been condoned — officers knew they faced administrative punishments for certain kinds of ticket-fixing.  

But Roy Richter, who heads the police union for captains and higher-ranking officers, said last week's charges in the Bronx is the first time anyone in the department has ever faced possible jail time for ticket-fixing. None of the 11 indicted for ticket-fixing were supervising officers.

Richter said Police Commissioner Ray Kelly should have issued an explicit internal order to the entire department to stop fixing tickets before prosecutors ever got involved.

"All of a sudden, we're going from administrative penalties to criminal penalties, and that's the unfairness of the indictments in the Bronx," Richter said.

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Comments [5]

Gary Gorman from Brooklyn NY

We have truly become a society of hypocrites and phonies. People ask cops all the time e for PBA cards to avoid getting summonses.

Please remember that tickets for parking and moving violations are not for crimes but for simple violations of the VTL and Traffic law. Cops are often ask to look the other way and not do their jobs. From not arresting people at demonstrations (e.g Zuccotti Park/OWS ) who have destroyed property to people smoking pot. Many officers are told don't make arrests for this and that.

One reason bosses may have asked PO's to void summonses not by the book was that it was easier then writing up an explanation on why the summons was voided on a 49- (UF49) official department letterhead. No boss was going to put in writing councilman or chief or a religious leader told take care of that summons.
But it would be interesting to ask the department how many summons were voided by the department and what were the reasons given?

I disagree with "I wasn't caught." No one was caught because no one cared from City Hall to the DA's to 1PP and it was not looked down on when a cop did void a summons.

On another note it's funny everybody cares about Cops pensions when before the economy took a turn people could care less.

Nov. 05 2011 08:29 AM
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Helen from NYC

Yeah I'm pretty sure that the "but everyone else is doing it" excuse didn't fly for me in the 2nd grade, I'm not sure why it works for these cops.

Nov. 04 2011 04:50 PM
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Mike Levine from Broklyn

It appears that certain people are immune from traffic tickets. The families of police officers and public officials can violate traffic laws with impunity. A PBA card on the dashboard provides that immunity.

Nov. 04 2011 11:37 AM
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Michele Fitz from Flushing, NY

While it may not be legal to fix tickets I think it is ridiculous to start prosecuting officers for doing what has been the norm for years/decades. This is not a case of officers going out and soliciting kickbacks from citizens to squash tickets. It seems unlikely that there was a pervasive problem with kick backs in this scandal due to the nature of the charges that have been brought against the police officers. Perhaps the NYPD is intimidating it's own union since so many of the officers they are going after are union representatives. I agree with Richter that if the department felt this was a growing problem an order should have been sent down from Police Commissioner Ray Kelly that the culture of ticket fixing needed to stop. I'm sure even Police Commissioner Ray Kelly in his years in the department was guilty of either fixing a ticket or two himself or more recently requesting an officer to fix a ticket for him.

Nov. 04 2011 10:07 AM
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clive betters

you could say, both the head and the tail are rotten.

Nov. 04 2011 09:26 AM
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