Mark Myskowsky

Badge #12204, White Male
Former Police Officer at 24th Precinct
Service started January 1992, ended February 2012, Tax #900532

Lawsuit settlements:
$5,000   Monroe, Dwinel vs The City of New York, et al., 2014 SDNY SDNY 12CV05513
View Details

Complaints

3 Complaints
3 Allegations
0 Substantiated
2 Exonerated
1 Unsubstantiated

Complaint #200410632, October 2004
Allegation: Force: Physical force
Complainant: White Male, 20
CCRB Conclusion: Unsubstantiated
additional details

Complaint #200005563, July 2000
Allegation: Force: Pepper spray
Complainant: Hispanic Male, 21
CCRB Conclusion: Exonerated
additional details

Complaint #9903736, August 1999
Allegation: Abuse of Authority: Frisk and/or search
Complainant: Black Female, 45
CCRB Conclusion: Exonerated
additional details

Complaint #200410632, October 2004
Allegation Complainant CCRB Conclusion
Force: Physical force White Male, 20 Unsubstantiated
additional details
Complaint #200005563, July 2000
Allegation Complainant CCRB Conclusion
Force: Pepper spray Hispanic Male, 21 Exonerated
additional details
Complaint #9903736, August 1999
Allegation Complainant CCRB Conclusion
Abuse of Authority: Frisk and/or search Black Female, 45 Exonerated
additional details

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.
'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

Monroe, Dwinel vs The City of New York, et al.
Case # 12CV05513, U.S. District Court - Southern District NY, July 31, 2014, ended January 22, 2015
$5,000 Settlement
Complaint
Description: On April 13, 2011, at approximately 1:00 a.m., Plaintiff Dwinel Monroe was lying in bed in his apartment 3A6 at the Camden Residential Hotel at 206 West 95th Street in New York City, when he heard a loud banging on his door. Plaintiff went to the door, but did no open it. He heard voices outside the door and then the sound of a key opening the door. Defendant Officers Ganz and Leyden entered the room and they were accompanied by John Baisley, who was employed as a Security Officer for the Camden Residential Hotel. Mr. Baisley opened the door with a master key at the Defendants' request. The Defendants did not have a warrant to enter and the Plaintiff did not give them consent to enter. As the Plaintiff stood be...