243 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
243 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
|
February 1991
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NYPD'S APPL PROGRAM: A NEW PARTNERSHIP
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
By
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Anthony M. Voelker
|
|||
|
Chief of Organized Crime Control
|
|||
|
New York City Police Department
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"A man claiming to represent a reputable delivery service
|
|||
|
appeared at the office of a theater service group and asked
|
|||
|
to collect COD charges for a package addressed to a
|
|||
|
well-known actress. The organization's alert security
|
|||
|
supervisor told the man to come back later for payment, and
|
|||
|
when he returned, the police arrested him for perpetrating
|
|||
|
a delivery scam. (The package contained only an empty
|
|||
|
box.) The Special Frauds Squad of the New York Police
|
|||
|
Department (NYPD) had received 20 complaints of these
|
|||
|
COD cases, with losses averaging from $100 to $500."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"A security guard observed a scam in progress. The victim
|
|||
|
was shown an envelope containing individually wrapped
|
|||
|
coins. A physician's name, phone number, and address were
|
|||
|
on the envelope. The victim was asked to call the
|
|||
|
"doctor," who said there was a reward for the coins. The
|
|||
|
coins were sold to the victim, who soon discovered that
|
|||
|
they were worthless. The security guard observing this
|
|||
|
scam called local detectives, who arrested the suspect.
|
|||
|
The team had operated in midtown for about 18 months. This
|
|||
|
systematic, ongoing conduct amounted to a "scheme to
|
|||
|
defraud," and a felony charge and conviction followed."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"In 1985, women were being attacked in elevators and
|
|||
|
staircases of office buildings. In just over a month, the
|
|||
|
suspect raped and robbed nine women. The case generated
|
|||
|
intense media coverage, and as the police attempted to
|
|||
|
identify the suspect, a former NYPD detective, employed as
|
|||
|
a security agent for a large corporation, realized that the
|
|||
|
assailant's modus operandi fit that of a rapist he had
|
|||
|
previously arrested. Local detectives pulled the case file
|
|||
|
to show the suspect's picture to the victims, and the
|
|||
|
`midtown rapist' was positively identified and arrested."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The common denominator in these incidents was the quick,
|
|||
|
professional action taken by private security personnel who had
|
|||
|
systems in place to notify local police when they observed
|
|||
|
unusual activity. Were it not for their quick actions, these
|
|||
|
cases would probably remain unsolved.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AN UNTAPPED RESOURCE IS RECOGNIZED
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the past decade, both law enforcement and private
|
|||
|
security professionals have arrived at the same conclusion: The
|
|||
|
police cannot provide all the protection and enforcement
|
|||
|
necessary to maintain safe and orderly communities. There are
|
|||
|
increasingly fewer police resources to handle an ever-increasing
|
|||
|
demand for services. For example, in New York City in 1989,
|
|||
|
there were 8.3 million calls to the emergency 911 number. The
|
|||
|
Hallcrest Report, (1) which gives the results of a 30-month
|
|||
|
research project on the respective roles of private security and
|
|||
|
public law enforcement, highlighted a growing phenomenon: While
|
|||
|
the private security sector is continually growing in size,
|
|||
|
public law enforcement remains stable, at best, and in some
|
|||
|
areas, is being reduced. The report estimated that in 1990,
|
|||
|
private security expenditures will reach $22 billion (a figure
|
|||
|
recently revised to $26 billion) and will involve almost 700,000
|
|||
|
guards, investigators, and other private security employees. By
|
|||
|
comparison, outlays for local, State, and Federal law
|
|||
|
enforcement will be under $14 billion, with approximately
|
|||
|
600,000 personnel. These facts underscore the tremendous
|
|||
|
importance of a stronger alliance between the New York City
|
|||
|
Police Department (NYPD) and the private security community.
|
|||
|
There have been many long-standing informal relationships
|
|||
|
between public law enforcement officers and private security
|
|||
|
officers, often only on an investigation or incident basis.
|
|||
|
However, only recently have department officials tapped this
|
|||
|
valuable resource.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THE APPL PROGRAM
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In November 1985, the NYPD commissioner met with four
|
|||
|
former NYPD chiefs, who had become leaders in the private
|
|||
|
security community, to discuss ways of increasing the extent of
|
|||
|
collaboration between the groups. The end result was the
|
|||
|
Police-Private Security Liaison Committee. This committee, in
|
|||
|
turn, formed the Area Police-Private Security Liaison Program
|
|||
|
(APPL). Because APPL operated in Manhattan's central business
|
|||
|
district, the initial operation was aptly named "Midtown APPL."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The lifeblood of the Midtown APPL program is the close
|
|||
|
working relationship between local police officers and private
|
|||
|
security personnel. The police keep security directors informed
|
|||
|
about local crime trends and patterns, wanted persons, and lost
|
|||
|
or stolen property. This information, often initially received
|
|||
|
from the private security sector, is then passed on by the
|
|||
|
security directors to their corporate networks. In return,
|
|||
|
private security directors inform the police of internal crimes,
|
|||
|
share their knowledge of plant/personnel protection, and advise
|
|||
|
the police of other relevant on-site observations.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The APPL program encourages personal contact, at each level
|
|||
|
of the chain of command, between the police and private security.
|
|||
|
Police commanders and security directors meet monthly on a formal
|
|||
|
basis, and more frequently on an informal basis, to discuss
|
|||
|
mutual concerns. In addition, police supervisors and officers
|
|||
|
interact on a daily basis with security supervisors and guards.
|
|||
|
By doing this, each gains a better understanding of the others'
|
|||
|
roles, functions, problems, and goals.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In addition to the monthly meetings, quarterly regional
|
|||
|
meetings are held on a division level (combining several
|
|||
|
precincts) between managers in both public and private security.
|
|||
|
These meetings give managers an opportunity to discuss current
|
|||
|
situations and share their expertise. Presentations by guest
|
|||
|
speakers are made at these quarterly meetings on topics such as
|
|||
|
drugs in the workplace, sexual harassment, emergency medical
|
|||
|
responses, and how to deal with suspicious packages and devices.
|
|||
|
Virtually anything that will enhance performance is deemed an
|
|||
|
appropriate subject for lectures and discussions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BRIDGING THE GAP
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Deep-rooted negative feelings can hinder a successful
|
|||
|
merger between police and private security. For years, police
|
|||
|
officers viewed private security officers as little more than
|
|||
|
uneducated, ill-trained guards assigned to watch buildings and
|
|||
|
construction sites. Private security officers, in turn,
|
|||
|
rejected police authority because they resented being treated as
|
|||
|
less than professional law enforcement officers. To bridge this
|
|||
|
credibility gap, the APPL program began as an effort to inform
|
|||
|
the police community about the key role that private security
|
|||
|
plays in our society and the level of professionalism to which
|
|||
|
this industry and its members have risen.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To illustrate, NYPD Police Academy administrators revised
|
|||
|
its training curriculum to include a private security awareness
|
|||
|
discussion for incoming recruits. Police officers, supervisors,
|
|||
|
and middle managers received the same information through
|
|||
|
regular inservice training, pre-promotion training, and
|
|||
|
workshops. In addition, as part of the executive development
|
|||
|
program (for the rank of captain and above), the department
|
|||
|
arranged for panel discussions with high-level private security
|
|||
|
executives who retired from the department at the chief level.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
With the same objectives in mind--improved understanding
|
|||
|
and respect--groups of police officers and supervisors on patrol
|
|||
|
have been invited to visit private security organizations. They
|
|||
|
meet with security directors and managers to discuss common
|
|||
|
street occurrences and problems and to get a close-up view of
|
|||
|
security facilities, technology, and internal procedures.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In yet another effort to maintain open lines of
|
|||
|
communication, the department published a registry of private
|
|||
|
security organizations to provide members of both police and
|
|||
|
security units with the means for direct contact. This allowed
|
|||
|
members of the department and private security to exchange
|
|||
|
information, locate experts, or give details of incidents
|
|||
|
observed that would help APPL members perform their duties more
|
|||
|
effectively. This registry also serves as a mailing list to
|
|||
|
disseminate information bulletins and wanted posters to APPL
|
|||
|
members on a regular basis. These bulletins and posters contain
|
|||
|
suspect descriptions, sketches or photos of wanted persons or
|
|||
|
property, and details of methods being employed by local
|
|||
|
criminals. Many of these posters and bulletins have led to the
|
|||
|
arrest of locally active criminals, including the three cited in
|
|||
|
the beginning of this article.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The APPL program also includes a course taught by
|
|||
|
instructors at the police academy that is specially designed to
|
|||
|
meet the needs of private security first-line supervisors. The
|
|||
|
1-day course features basic police science and social science
|
|||
|
subjects, as well as a description of the legal responsibilities
|
|||
|
of private security. When they complete the course, the private
|
|||
|
security supervisors share the information with their
|
|||
|
subordinates. In the last 3 years, more than 450 security
|
|||
|
supervisors have attended the class, and all have attested to
|
|||
|
the usefulness of the training when they make security
|
|||
|
decisions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EXPANSION OF APPL
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When the APPL program was first implemented, it was limited
|
|||
|
to the central business district in Manhattan. The initial
|
|||
|
Midtown APPL program has since grown from a dedicated group of
|
|||
|
30 private security associations in three patrol precincts to
|
|||
|
four programs located throughout the city. The program now
|
|||
|
includes more than 350 private security organizations that
|
|||
|
employ over 12,000 security personnel in more than 500
|
|||
|
buildings. Current plans are to establish an APPL program in
|
|||
|
every part of the city that has private security organizations.
|
|||
|
Until that time, each precinct commander is encouraged to
|
|||
|
establish working relationships with private security personnel
|
|||
|
working within their areas.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
APPL'S KEY INGREDIENTS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After 4 years, considerable progress has been made in
|
|||
|
bridging the credibility and trust gap between public and
|
|||
|
private policing and in encouraging a spirit of cooperation.
|
|||
|
This could not, however, have been accomplished if it were not
|
|||
|
for a blending of key ingredients.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
First, the enthusiastic support of department officials and
|
|||
|
influential members of the private security community provided a
|
|||
|
substantial foundation upon which to build this program. The
|
|||
|
constant attention, direction, commitment, and unfailing
|
|||
|
involvement of these two factions set a positive tone and
|
|||
|
encouraged both action and change.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Second, the face-to-face contact between police and
|
|||
|
security personnel forced initial dialogue, and formalized
|
|||
|
networking resulted in a recognition of each other's problems
|
|||
|
and needs. With accurate information came better understanding,
|
|||
|
which led to more productive relationships.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Finally, there is the requirement that police managers
|
|||
|
submit regular reports to the commissioner on their involvement
|
|||
|
with the private security sector. These reports include current
|
|||
|
cooperative efforts and the results of new initiatives that
|
|||
|
encourage police commanders to interact with private security.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CONCLUSION
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is no question that the public benefits when an
|
|||
|
alliance is forged between public law enforcement and private
|
|||
|
security agencies. Initial feedback strongly suggests that the
|
|||
|
APPL program has the NYPD moving in the right direction.
|
|||
|
Distrust seems to be waning, and acceptance of private
|
|||
|
security's place in law enforcement appears improved. The
|
|||
|
efforts of APPL participants have borne the fruits of improved
|
|||
|
understanding and greater tolerance of each other's roles and
|
|||
|
needs within the scope of the law.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FOOTNOTE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(1) William C. Cunningham and Todd H. Taylor, Private Security
|
|||
|
and Police in America: The Hallcrest Report (Chancellor Press:
|
|||
|
1985).
|
|||
|
|