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.”

Charged with turning around a struggling Florida program, the three-time A-10 Coach of the Year leaves URI after a historic run that delivered a school-record 28 wins and the Rams’ first NCAA tournament berth in three decades
It takes around 40 gallons of sap to make just one gallon of syrup
Only charitable organizations can legally host bingo games in Rhode Island. Lawmakers consider a bill that would allow the game at casinos
An experiment in participatory budgeting — a process where voters directly decide how to spend public money — got off to a promising start in Providence, until the entire staff working on the project was suddenly laid off
Why a prosperous nation struggles to feed hungry people
Massachusetts acquisitions drag down bottom line as federal funding cuts loom