Florida officer records are live — search the officer testifying against your client, free. Search free →
SKIP TO MAIN CONTENT

NYC Officer Lookup, BenchRecon

Run the NYPD officer testifying against your client.

CCRB civilian-complaint history, allegation, FADO category, CCRB and NYPD dispositions, rank and command at incident, public since the 2020 repeal of NY Civil Rights Law § 50-a, every entry cited to the underlying public record. Live free preview. $147 for the full citable brief with drafted FOIL records-demand letters.

CCRB complaint + allegation historyCCRB and NYPD dispositionsSource appendix on every rowFOIL records demand roadmap

What the Officer Lookup covers for NYC cases.

CCRB complaint + allegation history

NYPD officer civilian-complaint records maintained by the NYC Civilian Complaint Review Board and published on NYC Open Data , complaints since 2000, allegation-level rows with FADO category (Force, Abuse of Authority, Discourtesy, Offensive Language), the officer's rank and command at incident, and both the CCRB and NYPD dispositions.

Complaint context

Each allegation links to its complaint record, incident date, borough and precinct, reason for police contact, encounter outcome, and the complaint-level CCRB disposition, so a row reads as a case event, not a bare label.

FOIL records demand roadmap

The paid brief maps which record classes require a separate Freedom of Information Law demand and to which custodian, the CCRB investigation file, the NYPD internal-affairs (IAB) file, the borough District Attorney Brady/Giglio list, and includes a drafted request letter pre-filled with the officer's identifiers.

Identity verification checklist

CCRB rows match on name and agency, never a confirmed identity. Every match result carries a confidence level, and the brief flags same-name candidates so you verify identity before attaching any row to a motion.

Coverage boundary: NYPD officer civilian-complaint history from the New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB), unlocked by the 2020 repeal of NY Civil Rights Law § 50-a and published as NYC Open Data (complaints since 2000). This is the public CCRB complaint/allegation record, it does NOT include sealed or mediated complaints, NYPD internal-affairs (IAB) files, or the prosecutor's Brady/Giglio disclosure list, which must be requested from the custodians named in the paid brief.

What this solves.

  • Public officer data is fragmented across opinion text, public-record portals, complaint datasets, and certification exports. The preview tool pulls the NYC CCRB complaint layer into one search, allegation rows joined to their complaint context and to the officer's roster record.
  • The paid brief includes a drafted, statute-cited records-request letter, citing the New York Freedom of Information Law, N.Y. Pub. Off. Law art. 6 §§ 84-90, pre-filled with the officer's identifiers, plus the custodian-by-custodian roadmap for the CCRB investigation file, the NYPD IAB file, and the borough DA Brady/Giglio list the published dataset does not hold.
  • Every entry carries a citation to the underlying public record, with an identity-verification checklist before you rely on any row or attach it to a motion.

Full report, $147

The paid Officer Lookup brief.

One officer, one jurisdiction, one citable PDF and DOCX with a source appendix linking every row to its public-record origin. 7-day refund window.

  • Candidate Match Summary
  • Public-Record Event Rows
  • Records Demand Roadmap
  • Identity Verification Checklist
  • Drafted Records Request Letter
  • Source Appendix
  • Methods and Limits

Order the full Officer Lookup brief.

Enter the officer name and select NYC in the jurisdiction dropdown (the form defaults to Chicago) to run the full report.

Order for NYC, $147

Records reflect public complaint filings and certification-discipline entries. A complaint record is not a finding of misconduct. All data is drawn from the named public source. BenchRecon makes no finding regarding the conduct of any individual officer.

NYPD Officer Lookup, questions from defenders.

What does the Officer Lookup cover for an NYPD officer?
New York City results currently show CCRB complaint-history rows only, not certification-discipline records or Brady/Giglio lists. The paid brief includes the records-demand roadmap and drafted letters for requesting those separate layers under the Freedom of Information Law (N.Y. Pub. Off. Law art. 6).
What is in the $147 brief?
For the officer you name: a candidate-match summary, the source-backed CCRB complaint-history rows, a records-demand roadmap, an identity-verification checklist, a drafted Freedom of Information Law (N.Y. Pub. Off. Law art. 6) records-request letter, and a source appendix linking each row to its public-record origin, as a citable PDF and DOCX.
How do I confirm it is the right officer?
Every match carries an identity-confidence level and multi-agency name hits are flagged. The tool does not certify identity, confirm name, agency, and appointment date against your case discovery before attaching any row to a motion.
Is this a Brady or Giglio determination?
No. It surfaces public-record leads for attorney review; it does not make a legal conclusion or replace discovery, Henthorn/Giglio procedures, or local prosecutor disclosure policy. A complaint record is not a finding of misconduct.
Can I see what the brief looks like first?
Yes, a sample brief shows the section format with illustrative specimen data, and the live search preview is free and returns real source-backed rows for an officer you enter.

See a sample brief · Order for New York City, $147