Journalists Create a Database to Track Bad New Jersey Cops
The state doesn't track use-of-force incidents, so NJ.com did its own research.

An alarming number of New Jersey cops have used excessive force, but the state has done very little to track these incidents. In an effort to promote accountability and transparency in policing, NJ.com has taken up the gauntlet.
The Force Report, released this week, is a database based on 506 public records requests and 72,607 use-of-force reports from 2012 to 2016. With this information, New Jersey residents in any town can see the rates of excessive force in their town.
In Newark, for example, there were 2,580 use-of-force incidents over the course of five years—28.6 incidents for every 1,000 arrests made. That's the largest number of these incidents in the state.
The report also allows residents to see the relevant officers' names. Louis Weber, for example, has been identified in at least 36 excessive force incidents in Newark. In 2014, Weber was accused of planting drugs on a suspect to justify excessive force in his arrest.
The report's metadata covers the racial breakdown of incidents, the poor incident reporting system, and the different types of force used. To read the whole thing, go here.
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Wait - a media outlet doing its own research? And sharing the results with the public in a user-friendly way?
Nice website, be a shame if something were to happen to it. /NJ FOP
Louis Weber, for example, has been identified in at least 36 excessive force incidents in Newark. In 2014, Weber was accused of planting drugs on a suspect to justify excessive force in his arrest.
I assume he's been fired and jailed, right? Haaaaaaaa ha ha ha ha ha!
Whatever happened to that New Jerksey state trooper who fingered that stoner on the side of the highway?
His finger rotted off and he retired on 110% disability. He now moonlights as a rent-a-cop for 90% pay.
Looks like he got some help from state prosecutors. They moved the lawsuit to federal court, where such things move much more slowly.
gonna need more servers.
This needs to go national. And citizens should be able to upload video.
But, will it be banned from Facebook like Police the Police was or will they be allowed because of their gatekeeper status?
If Reason would be willing to host a similar database, or better yet a wiki, covering the whole country or even the world, I just bet quite a few local activists would bring in the data to populate it.
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