The misplaced emphasis on numbers and doctoring of them exacts an exorbitant price across the board, killing more than just the credibility of the perpetrators and inhibiting more than the mere filing of reports and data. As of 2010, many eligible candidates within NYPD were passing up opportunities to promote to captain. The reason? Many candidates didn't want the numbers-focused stress attendant with the promotion.
"It's the least-appreciated rank in the NYPD," one NYPD lieutenant told the New York Post. "As a captain, you're at work at your command 24-7, and when you go to Compstat, they make you feel that you haven't…accomplished anything."
As most officers know, CompStat is a geographic information-based system designed to map crime and identify problems, ostensibly to allow law enforcement leaders to proactively address criminal trends in their jurisdictions. To the minds of many within the profession, it has also become synonymous with weekly or monthly meetings wherein captains are raked over the coals in the presence of their peers for crime spikes committed on their watch. It is the kind of thing that lends itself to dramatization, as in the HBO series, "The Wire," wherein a Baltimore Police Deputy Commissioner ordered subordinates to lower felony statistics or find a new home: "I don't care how you do it, just f**kin' do it," he barks at the captains who are shown drinking Maalox antacid before the meeting.
As stressful as the realities of such in-house aggravations are, far more damning are the real emotional and physical costs that can accrue in the aftermath of administrative cover-ups and the subterfuge employed to prevent them. Cirone notes that a student at a college in his old jurisdiction of Geneva, N.Y., had committed several forcible rapes.
"With the first two, the victims reported their rapes to campus security," reflects Cirone. "The college blew the girls off and never reported the rapes to the police department. The third victim actually came to the PD after her rape and the investigation led to the other two and opened up Pandora's box: another classic case of the colleges not wanting those crime stats known. I was involved in the arrest of the perp. We then found prior rapes from the perp from when he was in high school.