Complaint #200402332, March 2004

Incident: March 13, 2004
Received: March 14, 2004
Closed: September 17, 2004


Reason for contact: Report of other crime
Location: Commercial building
In NYPD Midtown South Precinct Manhattan
Outcome: No arrest made or summons issued

Witness Officers: Charles Carlstrom, James Giuliano, John Smith, Frank Tedesco
Officer: Schick, Thomas
Complainant: Black Female, 27
Allegation: Abuse of Authority: Refusal to provide name/shield number
CCRB Conclusion: Substantiated (Command Discipline)
Officer: Schick, Thomas
Complainant: Black Female, 27
Allegation: Discourtesy: Action
CCRB Conclusion: Unsubstantiated
Officer: Schick, Thomas
Complainant: Black Female, 27
Allegation: Abuse of Authority: Question and/or stop
CCRB Conclusion: Exonerated
Officer: Fressle, Philip
Complainant: Black Female, 27
Allegation: Abuse of Authority: Question and/or stop
CCRB Conclusion: Exonerated
Officer: Schick, Thomas
Complainant: Black Female, 27
Allegation: Discourtesy: Word
CCRB Conclusion: Unfounded
Officer Complainant Allegation CCRB Conclusion
Schick, Thomas Black Female, 27 Abuse of Authority: Refusal to provide name/shield number Substantiated (Command Discipline)
Schick, Thomas Black Female, 27 Discourtesy: Action Unsubstantiated
Schick, Thomas Black Female, 27 Abuse of Authority: Question and/or stop Exonerated
Fressle, Philip Black Female, 27 Abuse of Authority: Question and/or stop Exonerated
Schick, Thomas Black Female, 27 Discourtesy: Word Unfounded

Penalty

Schick, Thomas
Command Discipline - A


Conclusion Meanings:

'Exonerated': or 'Within NYPD Guidelines' - the alleged conduct occurred but did not violate the NYPD's own rules, which often give officers significant discretion.
'Substantiated': The alleged conduct occurred and it violated the rules. The NYPD has discretion over what, if any, discipline is imposed.
'Unfounded': Evidence suggests that the event or alleged conduct did not occur.
'Unsubstantiated': or 'Unable to Determine' - CCRB has fully investigated but could not affirmatively conclude both that the conduct occurred and that it broke the rules.

Further details on conclusion definitions.