Complaint #200504158, April 2005

Incident: April 13, 2005
Received: April 18, 2005
Closed: April 5, 2006


Reason for contact: PD suspected C/V of violation/crime - street
Location: Apartment/house
In NYPD 73rd Precinct Brooklyn
Outcome: No arrest made or summons issued
Officer: Cardinale, Anthony
Complainant: Male
Allegation: Force: Physical force
CCRB Conclusion: Exonerated
Officer: Roman, Maribel
Complainant: Hispanic Female
Allegation: Force: Physical force
CCRB Conclusion: Unsubstantiated
Officer: Rios, Roberto
Complainant: Male
Allegation: Force: Physical force
CCRB Conclusion: Exonerated
Officer: Hemmer, James
Complainant: Male
Allegation: Force: Physical force
CCRB Conclusion: Exonerated
Officer: Cardinale, Anthony
Allegation: Abuse of Authority: Premises entered and/or searched
CCRB Conclusion: Exonerated
Officer: Hemmer, James
Allegation: Abuse of Authority: Premises entered and/or searched
CCRB Conclusion: Exonerated
Officer: Unknown Officer
Complainant: Male
Allegation: Force: Other blunt instrument as a club
CCRB Conclusion: Unsubstantiated
Officer: Unknown Officer
Complainant: Hispanic Female, 70-74
Allegation: Force: Physical force
CCRB Conclusion: Unsubstantiated
Officer Complainant Allegation CCRB Conclusion
Cardinale, Anthony Male Force: Physical force Exonerated
Roman, Maribel Hispanic Female Force: Physical force Unsubstantiated
Rios, Roberto Male Force: Physical force Exonerated
Hemmer, James Male Force: Physical force Exonerated
Cardinale, Anthony Abuse of Authority: Premises entered and/or searched Exonerated
Hemmer, James Abuse of Authority: Premises entered and/or searched Exonerated
Unknown Officer Male Force: Other blunt instrument as a club Unsubstantiated
Unknown Officer Hispanic Female, 70-74 Force: Physical force Unsubstantiated

Conclusion Meanings:

'Exonerated': or 'Within NYPD Guidelines' - the alleged conduct occurred but did not violate the NYPD's own rules, which often give officers significant discretion.
'Unsubstantiated': or 'Unable to Determine' - CCRB has fully investigated but could not affirmatively conclude both that the conduct occurred and that it broke the rules.

Further details on conclusion definitions.