• Kingston
  •  
  •    
  •    
Jamaica Gleaner Company
  • Home
  • Lead Stories
  • News
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Letters
  • Commentary
  • Flair
  • Health
  • World News
  • Lifestyle
  • In Focus
  • Auto
  • Social
  • Outlook
  • Food
  • Art & Leisure
  • Overseas Gleaner Archives
  • Contact
  • Classifieds
Thursday March 15, 2012

Mobile Version
Join us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Global Jamaica: News

Poll: NYC voters approve of NYPD’s job performance

Published: Thursday March 15, 2012 | 9:27 pm Comments 0

NEW YORK (AP):

Most city voters think the New York Police Department has been effective in fighting terrorism, and a majority say the NYPD has acted appropriately in its dealing with Muslims, according to a new poll released Tuesday that questioned respondents following a series of stories from The Associated Press about the NYPD’s surveillance of Muslims after the Sept. 11 attacks.

The Quinnipiac University survey found that 82 percent of respondents thought that the NYPD had been effective in its counter-terrorism efforts. Asked whether the NYPD dealt with Muslims fairly or targeted them unfairly, 58 percent thought the NYPD was appropriate, while 29 percent thought police were unfair and 13 percent didn’t know or had no answer.

The 29 percent is a slight jump up from the 24 percent who thought the police were unfairly targeting Muslims in a February poll.

Overall, 63 percent of those surveyed approved of way police are doing their job, although when asked about the controversial policy for stopping, questioning and frisking people, only 46 percent approved while 49 percent disapproved.

“The numbers have been consistently high,” said Maurice Carroll, director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute. “People think the cops do a good job.”

The stories from the AP reported that police monitored mosques and Muslims around the New York metropolitan area and kept tabs on Muslim student groups at universities in upstate New York, Connecticut, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

ethnic profiling

The tactics have raised questions over whether the NYPD is ignoring the civil rights of Muslims and illegally engaging in religious and ethnic profiling. The U.S. Justice Department is considering whether to investigate the NYPD’s surveillance efforts.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and police Commissioner Raymond Kelly have maintained that the NYPD’s actions are legal and necessary in a city under constant threat of another terrorist attack.

Respondents’ opinions about the NYPD and their tactics did vary according to factors like racial group or age. While 22 percent of white respondents thought the NYPD had unfairly targeted Muslims, 41 percent of black respondents did. People between the ages of 18-34 were most likely of all age groups to think it was unfair, at 40 per cent.

Of those who said they had a favorable impression of Islam, 42 percent thought the police were unfair, while 48 percent thought they were appropriate. Of those who had an unfavorable opinion of the religion, 10 percent thought police targeted Muslims unfairly, while 83 percent thought they acted appropriately.

In terms of the stop-and-frisk policy, 59 percent of white people surveyed approved of it, while only 27 percent of black people did. Blacks and Hispanics make up the vast majority of those stopped.

Quinnipiac polled 964 New York City voters from March 6-11. The margin of error is plus or minus 3.2 percentage points.



Share |



The comments on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of The Gleaner.
The Gleaner reserves the right not to publish comments that may be deemed libelous, derogatory or indecent. Please keep comments short and precise. A maximum of 8 sentences should be the target. Longer responses/comments should be sent to "Letters of the Editor" using the feedback form provided.
blog comments powered by Disqus

Related Stories

  • Guyana assures Norway that budget cuts will not affect LDCS
  • Barbados Election: Opinion poll predicts victory for Owen Arthur led BLP
  • Judge acquits NYPD cop accused of killing Jamaican teen Ramarley Graham
  • Guyanese born NYPD officer dies in car crash
  • Grenadians vote for new government
  • Print this Page
  • E-mail the Editor
smaller | larger

More Stories

  • Bellevue Hospital gets J$ 23.5 million upgrade
  • Jamaica Education Ministry to introduce solar systems in schools
  • Trinidad Government fires Caribbean Airlines board of directors
  • Regional foreign ministers disappointed at position by Guatemala on border dispute with Belize
  • Authorities seeking return of Dominican national after former magistrate’s home firebombed
  • Food for the Poor Donates Basic School to St. Ann District
  • Barbados, Jamaica, Trinidad warned about copyright infringement
  • JAMPRO to Connect Diaspora Investors with Local Businesses
  • Judge acquits NYPD cop accused of killing Jamaican teen Ramarley Graham
  • Moody's lowers Bermuda's rating
The Weekly Gleaner
(North American Edition)


Click to read full copy of
the paper

The Weekly Gleaner




Videos




    • The Gleaner Your Way
    • Mobile: Get the Gleaner on your mobile
    • RSS Feeds: Get content updates daily
    • Newsletter: Get Headline News
    • The Gleaner Archives
    • Digital Archives: Gleaner online editions 2006-2013
    • Print Archives: Print Editions 1834 - Present
    • Library: Research & Assistance
  • Gleaner Company Websites
  • Jamaica Gleaner
  • The Star
  • Go Jamaica
  • Hospitality Jamaica
  • Global Jamaica
  • Youthlink
  • Voice UK
  • Gleaner Company Websites
  • Business Directory
  • Gleaner Classifieds
  • Restaurant Week
  • Discover Jamaica
  • Go Jamaica hosting
  • Go Local
  • Sports Jamaica
  • Gleaner Links
  • RSS Feed
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Suggestion
  • Subscription
  • Terms and Conditions
Gleaner Company Logo
Copyright © 2013 Gleaner Company Ltd. All Rights Reserved. A Gleaner Company Website. Designed by GoJamaica.