Elena Gonzalez

Badge #3843, Hispanic Female
Former Detective Grade 3 at 73rd Precinct Detective Squad
Service started February 1994, ended February 2015, Tax #906360

Complaints

1 Complaint
1 Allegation
0 Substantiated
1 Unsubstantiated

Complaint #201202057, February 2012
Allegation: Discourtesy: Word
Complainant: Black Female, 45
CCRB Conclusion: Unsubstantiated
additional details

Complaint #201202057, February 2012
Allegation Complainant CCRB Conclusion
Discourtesy: Word Black Female, 45 Unsubstantiated
additional details

Conclusion Meanings:

'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.


Lawsuits

Named in 2 known lawsuits.

Moore, Christopher vs City of New York, et al.
Case # 510643/2022, Supreme Court - Kings, May 20, 2022
Description: On October 7, 2012, Plaintiff gave a statement to FDNY Officer John Orlando regarding the fire in his residence after Plaintiff had just returned from a night out. The following day, on October 8, while visiting his deathly ill mother at the hospital, Plaintiff was asked by the defendant NYPD Officers to come to the 73rd Precinct for some questions. Plaintiff agreed and arrived at the the precinct at approximately 8:30 pm. For the next 27 hours, until 11:00 pm on October 9, Plaintiff was interrogated by defendant NYPD Officers Erick Parks, Elena Gonzalez-Munoz, Salvatore Triscritti, and John Herbert as well as FDNY Officers Orlando, Constantine Kanelopoulos, and Eric Hansen, who ignored Plaintiff's request to l...

Moore, Christopher vs City of New York, et al.
Case # 19CV00542, U.S. District Court - Eastern District NY, February 12, 2019, ended March 14, 2020
Zero Disposition
Complaint
Description: Around 4:00 am on October 7, 2012, Mr. Moore returned to his residence to find it on fire with a group of officers standing outside of it. Mr. Moore gave a statement saying he was not at the residence when the fire started. The next day, Mr. Moore was visiting his terminally ill mother in the hospital when the defendant officers arrived and told him he had to go to the precinct. Mr. Moore left voluntarily, gave his statement at the precinct, then requested to leave so he could return to his ill mother. The officers refused and detained Mr. Moore against his will. They detained him throughout the night and told Mr. Moore he could not leave unless he said what the defendant officers told him to say. The officer...