An inconvenient cop My fight to change policing in America

Edwin Raymond, 1986-

Book - 2023

"From the highest-ranking whistleblower in the history of the NYPD, a political memoir that exposes the brokenness of policing from both outside and inside the system During the workday, Edwin Raymond is on the beat as a ranked lieutenant in the New York Police Department. When the uniform comes off, he takes on a very different role: the lead plaintiff in the largest-ever civil rights lawsuit against the very police force he serves. This is the true story of one of our country's most important whistleblowers against police injustice, told in his own words. Raised in a poverty-stricken, largely immigrant neighborhood in Brooklyn and driven toward law enforcement by the hope of being a positive influence in his community, Raymond q...uickly learned that the problem with policing is a lot deeper than merely "a few bad apples"-the entire mechanism is set up to ensure that racial profiling is rewarded, and there are weighty consequences for cops who don't play along. Offering a rare, often shocking view of American policing through the eyes of an insider to the system, Raymond pulls back the curtain on the many injustices woven into the NYPD's training, data, and practices-all of which have been repackaged and repurposed by police departments across America. At once revelatory and galvanizing, An Inconvenient Cop is a whistleblower account unlike any other-a book that courageously bears witness to and exposes institutional violence, all while presenting a vision of radical hope, making the case for a world in which the police's responsibility is to the people, not to their arrest numbers"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Viking [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Edwin Raymond, 1986- (author)
Other Authors
Jon Sternfeld (author)
Physical Description
xviii, 334 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 331-334).
ISBN
9780593653166
  • Introduction
  • 1. The Line
  • 2. My Mother's Face
  • 3. The Academy
  • 4. The 2 Train to Florida
  • 5. Immaculate Perception
  • 6. Black Boys
  • 7. Racist Math
  • 8. The Invisible Line
  • 9. High School with Guns
  • 10. Being Seen
  • 11. Conditions
  • 12. Problem Cop
  • 13. Pushing Through
  • 14. Officer Lil Wayne
  • 15. Hardheaded
  • 16. On the Record
  • 17. The Unheard
  • 18. Front Lines
  • 19. Takedown
  • 20. Raymond v. The City of New York
  • 21. The Brass
  • 22. Noise
  • 23. Public Enemy
  • 24. The Men in the Arena
  • 25. The People
  • Acknowledgments
  • Appendix: Recommendations
  • Notes
Review by Booklist Review

Former NYPD lieutenant Raymond tracks his path from an impoverished childhood as the son of Haitian immigrants in Flatbush to a police officer, activist, and whistleblower. In telling his story, Raymond highlights the structures of policing that support dehumanizing, numbers-based enforcement, systematic racism, and methods of maintaining the status quo. While his determination to jump-start reform is inspiring, the response to his battles to change the focus from arrest quotas to policing that supports and protects the community is disheartening. Raymond is given cruelly retaliatory shifts and assignments and faces low evaluations and disciplinary action despite his high scores on promotion exams and strong work ethic. Against the odds, he continues to bring the system's issues to light, taking risks with his career and even his safety to finally effect changes in the department through an eventually dismissed lawsuit and a high-profile article in the New York Times Magazine. Raymond's chronicle is an uplifting story of perseverance and a hard, eye-opening look at policing and what it takes to make a department live up to its best potential.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this searing memoir, 14-year NYPD veteran Raymond argues that New York City is "the red-hot center of the problem" of racially motivated police brutality. The son of Haitian immigrants in Brooklyn, Raymond lived in poverty following his mother's death and father's subsequent depression and unemployment. Despite his peers' distrust of law enforcement, Raymond was drawn to policing as a teenager after seeing a Haitian family friend in uniform: the "respect hovering over him... reframed for me what being police could mean." Yet once he joined the force, Raymond became disillusioned by a system of policing that discouraged him from interacting with his community. He recounts being ostracized by colleagues for his support of NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick's protests against police brutality and his alliance with Women's March organizer Tamika Mallory, and explains how the NYPD's embrace of "broken windows policing" and use of CompStat technologies incentivizes arrest quotas and encourages racism. Combining personal anecdotes and painstaking research, Raymond passionately advocates for wholesale police reform, arguing with convincing clarity that "when you toss out bad apples, you're not changing a damn thing." This is a gutting and essential take on a hot-button issue. Agent: Susan Golomb, Writers House. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A high-ranking whistleblower from the NYPD recounts his embattled tenure in the country's largest police force. Many Americans first encountered Raymond in 2016, when he was the subject of a New York Times profile that detailed his role as the lead plaintiff in a civil suit filed on behalf of minority officers in the NYPD. The lawsuit centered on the use of quota-based policing, despite a 2010 ban on the practice. In this vital, timely memoir, the author begins with his childhood in Brooklyn's East Flatbush neighborhood, where he was raised by Haitian immigrants. His mother died when he was 2, and his father was soon plagued by health problems, leaving the author and his brother to mostly fend for themselves. As a Black teenager, Raymond became the target of "aggressive policing," and he thought to himself, "the NYPD must hire a lot of bigots." It was only after he became an officer himself, at 22, that he understood this wasn't the case; even cops who had come from the same communities as Raymond "were now perpetuating the same problems they had recently faced." Later in the book, he notes, "their behavior is policy dictated from the top." The author carefully explains exactly how the "numbers game" of policing works. A particularly eye-opening passage details Raymond's first day as a transit cop, when he was told to hide in a supply closet in the subway station to catch turnstile jumpers. The author joined law enforcement to be an "antidote to racially motivated policing." For his efforts, he was harassed online, passed over for promotion, and punished with retaliatory posts. Readers will be impressed by Raymond's courage and integrity, and he presents an inspiring story, captivatingly written and exciting to read. An urgent exposé, essential to understanding the fractured state of policing in America. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.