NYPD Uses Twitter Tip To Shut Down Gang Meeting

NYPD

The New York City Police Department arrested more than 50 suspected gang members Wednesday after they used Twitter and other social networks to arrange a “Crips Holiday.”

The New York Daily News reports that police learned the alleged Crips members were using Twitter to call for a gathering at Amersfort Park in East Flatbush, Brooklyn Wednesday. Members of the NYPD’s Gang Unit teamed up with officers from the 63rd Precinct, the borough task force and the Emergency Service Unit, arriving at the park at about 7:30 p.m, police told the Daily News.

Police officers told the crowd — largely dressed in blue shades affiliated with the gang — to leave the park, but the group refused. That’s when the police arrested 56 of them. While police said they didn’t know what the alleged gang members’ intentions were, a 9-mm. Taurus pistol was discovered in the park.

“The potential for danger was there,” a law enforcement source told the Daily News.

The NYPD has been getting more involved in monitoring social media for criminal activity. Earlier this month, the department announced the creation of a new juvenile justice unit, which mines social media to find information about “troublesome house parties, gang showdowns and other potential mayhem.”

And other law enforcement officials around the U.S. are also starting to use social media to track criminal activity. Police used a combination of Facebook profiles and school yearbooks to identify perpetrators in a flash mob incident that took place in Germantown, Maryland, on Aug. 13. The Boston Police Department has integrated Twitter into its daily routine, and a conference titled “Social Media, The Internet and Law Enforcement” (SMILE) is supposed to be held in Dallas this September.

Image courtesy of Flickr, Vincent Desjardin

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NYPD Creates Unit To Track Criminals Via Social Media


Advertisers won’t be the only ones watching your Facebook activity with interest. Now, the New York Police Department will be checking it out, too.

The NYPD on Wednesday announced it formed a new unit to track people who discuss their crimes on Facebook, Twitter and MySpace. The unit will “mine social media, looking for info about troublesome house parties, gang showdowns and other potential mayhem,” according to the New York Daily News.

Other law enforcement agencies have used Facebook and Twitter to keep people informed of criminal activity. Such programs include digital “wanted” posters, police blotter blogs and the use of online tipsters. The Boston Police Department has used Twitter to monitor chatter around the city since 2009, and the FBI employed Facebook, YouTube and Twitter outreach to apprehend longtime fugitive James “Whitey” Bulgur in June.

Image courtesy of Flickr, Vincent Desjardin

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