Report Says New Bedford Police Must Improve Transparency and Accountability

A new consultant’s review criticizes NBPD’s handling of narcotics and internal affairs, urging stricter oversight of confidential informants and clearer performance metrics

Police cruisers outside a police station in New Bedford.
Police cruisers outside a police station in New Bedford.
File photo/Ocean State Media
Share
Police cruisers outside a police station in New Bedford.
Police cruisers outside a police station in New Bedford.
File photo/Ocean State Media
Report Says New Bedford Police Must Improve Transparency and Accountability
Copy

The New Bedford Police Department still needs to do more to increase accountability and transparency, according to a consultant’s report released by the city on Wednesday.

The 71-page report by 21st Century Policing Solutions found that the NBPD has failed to increase the enforcement of transparency and disciplinary policies related to the narcotics and internal affairs departments.

Among the reforms recommended: providing the community with “performance metrics” for the narcotics unit; strengthening policies on confidential informants; and barring the use of underage informants.

The report by 21st Century Policing Solutions comes after the Boston Globe’s reporting earlier this year chronicled abuses by NBPD. And isn’t the first critical evaluation of NBPD confidential informant enforcement policies. In 2023, the consulting firm Jensen Hughes conducted a $120,000 study that included a review of internal data and various interviews.

The 51-page study delineated five “key issues of concern” within NBPD: problems around reduced staffing, increased demands for service, staffing for patrol shifts, the treatment of female officers, and a perception among officers that the city administration “does not respect police.”

The House speaker is expected to apply for a vacancy on the state’s highest court — but Common Cause says he may be blocked by Rhode Island’s revolving door law
Stephanie Savell, director of the Costs of War project at Brown University, says much of the United States’ massive defense budget could be better spent on education, health care and green energy
Providence City Councilor Ana Vargas supported rent control during her election campaign. As she prepared to vote on it, she received the largest political donations of her career
Prescription for preserving landmark labor and delivery unit comes with a $4.9M price tag
U.S. District Court judge Melissa DuBose accused lawyer Kevin Bolan of hiding the criminal record of an undocumented immigrant
A new Rhode Island KIDS COUNT report warns that rising child poverty is straining families across the state — and the effects on children’s mental health and education could be long-lasting