NYPD Will Spend Nearly $400 Million to Hide its Radio Communications
NYPD radio frequencies have been open to the public since 1932. A new encrypted system will end that.

The New York Police Department (NYPD) will spend nearly $400 million to upgrade its radio system, including encrypting its communications channels, which the public has been able to tune into since 1932.
At a New York City Council meeting Monday, NYPD Chief of Information Technology Ruben Beltran said the upgrade, expected to cost $390 million, will be completed by the end of next year, replacing the old analog radio network with a fully encrypted digital system.
The move is part of a growing trend. Over the last decade, other large police departments in Chicago, Baltimore, Washington, D.C., and Portland have all encrypted their radio communications or are planning to do so. Departments say broadcasting in the clear gives criminals advance warning. Beltran said encryption would also protect the information of crime victims and block pranksters who jam up NYPD frequencies. (The NYPD regularly leaks information on arrestees and even victims for political purposes.)
However, scanner enthusiasts, news organizations, and elected officials complain that encrypted radio is cutting off a longstanding and useful source of information on police activity. As Gothamist reported, NYPD radio chatter has been the source of several major news stories over the years:
The New York Daily News obtained the crucial video of Officer Daniel Pantaleo killing Eric Garner thanks to a call that came over the police radio in Staten Island. As tens of thousands of peaceful demonstrators flooded the streets in June 2020, Gothamist recorded NYPD officers on radio airwaves using threatening language about the protesters, including saying that officers should run protesters over and shoot them. Responding, one officer was recorded saying "don't put that over air."
Police frequencies going dark is especially challenging for photojournalists, who rely on scanners to get to emergency scenes as fast as possible. The Chicago Police Department is considering a 30-minute public broadcast delay to allow news organizations to still hear dispatch calls.
Responding to concerns from council members, Beltran wouldn't commit to similar policies, but he alleged that the NYPD "is the most transparent police force in the country," a statement so removed from reality that it can only be considered comedy.
The NYPD is notorious for flouting the state's Freedom of Information Law (FOIL). Every reporter in New York City knows that filing a records request to the NYPD is a complete waste of time unless you're willing to file a lawsuit, too.
Speaking of which, the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project (STOP), a New York watchdog group, filed a lawsuit in March alleging that the NYPD unlawfully refuses to respond to FOIL requests. The suit cited delays in 42,000 public records requests filed over the past four years to the NYPD. For example, I've been waiting since June 2020 for disciplinary records on the officers who fatally shot Amadou Diallo in 1999.
"The idea that we're going to turn this sort of vital information into something that's only accessible to the public at the whims of police is just truly chilling," Albert Fox Cahn, the executive director of the STOP, said of radio encryption to The New York Times.
In unrelated news, the New York City public library system is cutting Sunday service as a result of budget cuts.
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I’m ok with this. It’s things that take money away from democrat trash are good.
In a proper justice system, statements like this would be perjury.
Most secure election ever.
Cockroaches hate sunshine
No widespread encryption.
My town with no real crime is switching to encrypted communications. The switch was presented to voters as something we have to do.
On the plus side, this drives a stake through the argument that "government must have a backdoor to all encryption because only bad guys have anything to hide".
Police forces have been trunking communication for two decades, this is not a new development.
Trunking is bearable
Do a web search on bear in trunks and you may find a possible etymology.
So us spying on you protects you and us hiding what we're doing protects you, too?
Saw this in another article on a different website today.
“The asymmetry of the surveillance state belies its true purpose: to protect the government, not the people.”
OT. Fuck Joe Biden.
Gothamist recorded NYPD officers on radio airwaves using threatening language about the protesters, including saying that officers should run protesters over and shoot them. Responding, one officer was recorded saying "don't put that over air."
More proof that good cops do not exist.
The good ones, like at the Capitol, would have carried through with their evil.
NYPD "is the most transparent police force in the country,"
The Biden administration is the most transparent administration that ever existed
The 2020 election was the most transparent election in history
I am sensing a trend.
CJ only sees a lie in one of these.
Solution: Mandate every police radio be recorded continuously, and uploaded for public review within 24 hours. This ends the claim of "could give advance warning," while providing transparency.
Police will hate it.