-
Connecticut’s Republican gubernatorial candidate Bob Stefanowski has doubled down on his pledge to reverse the state’s two-year old police accountability law, if elected governor.
-
Prude died a week after his arrest by Rochester police. Lawyers representing the plaintiffs will receive $4 million of the total.
-
Supporters of Randy Cox, a Black man paralyzed after being hurled around a New Haven police van, announced the planned lawsuit at city hall.
-
New York Attorney General Letitia James will not bring charges against a Suffolk County police officer who shot and killed a man in Manorville last year.
-
The town of Southold on Long Island is refusing to turn over records related to an investigation by the town board into a police retirement party.
-
The data must be more reliable and comprehensive before it can show relationships based on race, ethnicity or crime rates, the report from Connecticut police use-of-force report says.
-
The Nassau County Legislature has approved a $650,000 settlement to offer a former county police officer.
-
The U.S. Justice Department has charged four Louisville police officers involved in the deadly Breonna Taylor raid with civil rights violations.
-
Waterbury police have largely stopped using police vans to transport prisoners in response to a man becoming paralyzed in a New Haven police van incident last month.
-
A large crowd of community activists, led by high-profile civil rights attorney Ben Crump, marched down the city's Dixwell Avenue almost two miles to the steps of the New Haven police station, demanding justice for Randy Cox.