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      • Schoolcraft passed easily, and they asked him to be in the city two weeks later. It was 2002. Fourteen months after joining, he started working in the 81st Precinct, where he stayed until he was suspended.
      www.police1.com/legal/articles/cop-who-made-tapes-accuses-nypd-of-false-arrest-d3CVYtDGYrf61vXC/
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  2. Sep 30, 2015 · Adrian Schoolcraft, a New York City police officer who secretly recorded his superiors at his Brooklyn precinct and disclosed the manipulation of crime reports, will receive $600,000 as part of a...

    • J. David Goodman
  3. Dec 13, 2012 · The lieutenant took Schoolcraft’s NYPD memo book — in which Schoolcraft had documented misconduct in the precinct — and made copies which he then gave to the precinct commander.

  4. Jun 15, 2010 · On July 27, 2009, Schoolcraft met again with NYPD psychologist Lamstein, who told him that he had “anger issues.” He responded that he was disappointed with the department, but wasn’t angry.

  5. Oct 9, 2010 · On a tape he labeled “Home Invasion,” Schoolcraft sounds measured as he complains about stomach pains and declines demands to go back to the precinct and then to a hospital. At one point, Schoolcraft agrees to go to the hospital when paramedics called to the scene find his blood pressure is high.

  6. May 17, 2010 · Whether whiner or whistleblower, police officer Adrian Schoolcraft continues to damage the credibility of the New York City Police Department. An eight-year veteran assigned to Brooklyn’s 81st precinct, Schoolcraft appeared last February in a Daily News exposé, accusing precinct commander Steven Mauriello of fudging statistics so that crime ...

  7. Mar 8, 2012 · The NYPD completed its 95-page report addressing Schoolcraft's complaints in June 2010 and several months later four officers were hit with a litany of charges, including tampering with crime...

  8. Oct 5, 2015 · Upon Schoolcraft’s release, he refused to return to his job and with his father Larry moved upstate. There the NYPD pursued them, making a dozen appearances at their home, which, Larry said, involved pounding and kicking on their door and shouting “NYPD. We know you’re in there.”

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