Changes in Wikipedia Pages on Police-Brutality Cases Linked to NYPD: Report

Pretty much anybody can make edits to Wikipedia pages. Suggested Reading 13 Hip-Hop, R&B Remixes That Are Way Better Than the Original White Tuskegee University Player Dragged For Vile Disrespect, Attack of Alabama State’s Black Marching Band Black Celebrities Who Got Their Start on ‘Star Search’ Video will return here when scrolled back into view…

Pretty much anybody can make edits to Wikipedia pages.

Video will return here when scrolled back into view
Tramell Tillman Talks Sparring with Tom Cruise and Bringing That Severance Heat to Mission: Impossible

As it turns out, Internet Protocol addresses from the New York City Police Department have been linked to changes in Wikipedia pages about several controversial police-brutality cases, Capital New York reports.

According to the report, IP addresses in the computer network at the NYPD’s 1 Police Plaza headquarters have been linked to edits and changes (even attempted deletions) to pages surrounding cases such as Eric Garner, Sean Bell and Amadou Diallo, all of whom lost their lives in officer-involved incidents.

An NYPD spokesperson, Detective Cheryl Cripsin, told Capital that “the matter is under internal review.” The news site has identified at least 85 NYPD IP addresses that have edited Wikipedia pages, but it is uncertain as to how many people are involved.

The IP addresses have also been used to edit posts on stop and frisk and other controversial topics.

Specific changes made to the entry relating to the death of Staten Island dad Eric Garner, according to Capital, include the word “chokehold” being changed twice, once to “respiratory distress” and in another case to “chokehold or headlock.”

Read the full report at Capital New York.

Straight From The Root

Sign up for our free daily newsletter.