Digital Cop City

We must fight Digital Cop City. Stop NYPD’s reach into all City agencies!

We must fight Digital Cop City. Stop NYPD’s reach into all City agencies!

In July 2024, the Mayor announced a $225 million “Unified Public Training Facility,” NYC’s own “Cop City.” New Yorkers denounced this plan, raising concerns about how hyper-militarized policing training will be weaponized against current and future generations of Black, Latine, migrant and poor communities.

What lies below the surface is a digital data collection and sharing infrastructure that expands the power of the NYPD’s and corporations. Digital Cop City will expand NYPD reach into other City agencies. NYPD will train their enforcement staff. NYPD will have access to their digital infrastructure and data training. Digital Cop City also creates more opportunities for corporate control of public service governance through lucrative contracts with the city.

This project inextricably links service delivery to data collection for the purpose of policing and punishment as these are agencies tasked with providing supportive services to New Yorkers. The NYPD has long policed “disorder” by managing certain categories of people as “threats.” Yet, we know that structural inequality, and lack of access to essential services and support, perpetuates what they call “disorder.” It is concerning that the NYPD will be entangled in how these agencies police the people they are supposed to provide services to, making it even more probable that the City will lead with policing, rather than supportive services. 

The administration claims that Digital Cop City’s infrastructure is unbiased, but in actual fact, it gives the cops access to way more information and way more power over how the future of our City is imagined.

In July 2024, New Yorkers denounced the Mayor’s announcement of $225 million earmarked for construction of the “Unified Public Safety Training Facility”, NYC’s own “Cop City”. This has raised concerns about how hyper-militarized policing training will be weaponized against current and future generations of Black, Latine, migrant and poor communities.

This new training facility and the associated expansion of policing across agencies outside the NYPD is the most visible aspect of a long-standing grab for more police power. 

What lies below the surface is a digital data collection and sharing infrastructure that expands the power of the NYPD’s and corporations. These technologies will become embedded into public infrastructures in ways that increase bias and inequality, and entrench the surveillance of people who rely on government services.

This “Digital Cop City” extends the NYPD’s digital infrastructure and data collection to all NYC agencies participating in this project. This inextricably links service delivery to data collection for the purpose of policing and punishment. It also creates more opportunities for corporate influence in public service governance as they shape and provide technological solutions.

Digital Cop City will expand NYPD reach into other City agencies. NYPD will train their enforcement staff. NYPD will have access to their digital infrastructure and data. This comes along with a “mayoral initiative to embed an NYPD member in each agency with an enforcement unit to enhance interagency coordination and streamline enforcement efforts.”

These are agencies tasked with providing supportive services to New Yorkers. Broken windows policing and stop and frisk show how the NYPD polices structural inequality and lack of access to essential services. Now, with Digital Cop City, the NYPD will be even more entangled with other agencies tasked with service delivery.

The administration claims that Digital Cop City’s tech infrastructure is unbiased, but in fact, it gives the cops and corporations access to way more information and power over how the future of our City is run. 

New York City’s Wider Digital Surveillance Infrastructure

New York City and New York State officials are building a substantial digital infrastructure that will amplify the harms of what New York City plans to enact through “Cop City”. This includes the State of New York’s digital driver’s license, the consolidation of databases through the MyCity portal, and the construction of a NYC digital wallet for MyCity users. You can learn more about this through our recent report MyCity, INC: A Case Against ‘CompStat Urbanism’.

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