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Edward A. Caban (born September 8, 1967) is an American police officer who served as the New York City Police Commissioner from 2023 to 2024, having been appointed by Mayor Eric Adams, and resigning amidst federal corruption investigations into the Eric Adams administration. [1] [2] He was the first Latino to serve as Commissioner of the NYPD. [3]
Governor Benjamin Odel, on Friday, February 22, 1901 signed a bill abolishing the bipartisan board of four Police Commissioners and the office of Chief of Police, substituting them for a single Commissioner to be in charge of the force. Michael Cotter Murphy, the NYPD's first Police Commissioner, would be sworn in shortly thereafter. [3]
Police officers on an NYPD marine unit in New York Harbor in 2006 NYPD officers on scooters The New York City Police Department (NYPD) is structured into numerous bureaus and units. As a whole, the NYPD is headed by the Police Commissioner , a civilian administrator appointed by the Mayor , with the senior sworn uniformed officer of the service ...
The NYPD appointed its first Black officer in 1911 [17] and the first female officer in 1918. [citation needed] NYPD sergeant searching a cruiser covered in debris during 9/11. During Richard Enright's tenure as commissioner, the country's first Shomrim Society, a fraternal organization of Jewish police officers, was founded in the NYPD in 1924 ...
The NYPD’s hot-headed Deputy Commissioner of Public Information — who once called a New York Post reporter a “f–king scumbag” — was demoted this week, police sources said. Tarik ...
The NYPD has been in turmoil with three different commissioners in a year and top officials stepping down and the news of Chief Maddrey’s resignation has sent the agency reeling amid federal and ...
Caban, the son of Puerto Rican parents, served as commissioner for 13 months, making history as the NYPD’s first Latino commissioner. He has been with the NYPD for 32 years.
She became the first female commissioner of the New York Police Department, [15] [16] and its third black commissioner. [17] She oversaw 35,000 uniformed officers and 18,000 civilians. [ 18 ] [ 19 ] [ 20 ] On January 1, 2022, Sewell was officially sworn in as first female commissioner of the New York Police Department since it was founded 176 ...