Dartmouth College (AB, 1996), Harvard University (MPA, 2004), John Jay College, CUNY (MA, 2007), The Graduate Center, CUNY (MPhil, 2012 & PhD, 2020)
Website
www.brandondelpozo.com www.policeandthestate.com
Brandon del Pozo (born 1974) is an assistant professor of Medicine and Health Services, Policy, and Practice (Research) at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, and a research scientist at Brown University Health.[1] He is also a faculty member of the Master of Science Program in Addiction Policy and Practice at the Georgetown University's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.[2]
Prior to research, del Pozo was the chief of police of Burlington, Vermont for four years,[3] and served with the New York City Police Department from 1997 to 2015.
Del Pozo has been funded by the National Institutes of Health to investigate how public systems, policies, and law affect the health and safety of individuals and communities.[15] He also conducts research on the normative commitments of government, especially police.
Some of his research that has gained mainstream attention compares the risks of violence faced by military-aged males in select U.S. cities with the wartime risks of injury and death faced by soldiers deployed to combat in Iraq and Afghanistan,[16][17] finds that police opioid seizures are spatiotemporally associated with increased overdose rates in their aftermath,[18] concludes that crime and disorder did not increase in the areas where New York City opened the nation's first government-sanctioned safe injection sites,[19] provides evidence that fentanyl accounts is the prime driver of the US overdose crisis more so than changes in drug enforcement,[20] and assesses efforts to dispel misinformation that police officers can quickly overdose and die from touching the synthetic opioid fentanyl.[21][22]
His normative work has centered on the need to balance criminal justice and drug policy reforms with the public safety goals of reducing crime and maintaining order,[23] noting that public support for reforms in affected communities has hinged on delivering public safety in tandem with public health initiatives.[24] In 2022, Cambridge University Press published del Pozo's book The Police and the State: Security, Social Cooperation, and the Public Good.[25][26] It offers an account of the role of police in a pluralist democracy, attempting to reconcile the work of Hegel, John Rawls, Elizabeth Anderson, and Charles Mills, who sat on his dissertation committee.
Police career
Del Pozo started his career in the New York Police Department (NYPD) as a patrol officer in East Flatbush, Brooklyn in 1997 and attained the rank of deputy inspector, commanding the 6th and 50th Precincts in Manhattan and the Bronx,[27][8] and serving overseas as an intelligence officer for the Arab world and India, based in Amman, Jordan.[27] In 2015, del Pozo was nominated to be the chief of police of Burlington, Vermont.[28] His appointment was contested by activists due to his prior work with the NYPD,[29] but his nomination was approved by the Burlington City Council.[30]
Opioid addiction and overdose reduction
The mayor of Burlington directed del Pozo to create a strategy[31] for addressing the opioid crisis, using a public health approach.[32] He directed patrol officers to carry Naloxone,[33] created of the city's Opioid Policy Coordinator position, and staffed the police department with an epidemiologist and biostatistician.[34] The positions vetted police work for public health outcomes and assisted the city in formulating policies and programs to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with opioid use.[35]
Del Pozo's strategies also reflected the need for people with opioid addiction to have access to the medications proven to treat it,[36][37] including prisoners,[38] and he set a policy where his department would not arrest people for unprescribed possession of buprenorphine.[39][40] In 2020, the city of Philadelphia took the same position toward buprenorphine, citing Burlington's approach.[41] Under his strategy, the city coordinated efforts to link people to buprenorphine treatment at the local syringe service program and hospital emergency department,[42] and assisted in efforts to eliminate waiting lists for access to treatment.[43]
In 2018, the rest of Vermont saw a 20% increase in opioid overdose deaths, while Burlington's county saw a 50% decline, to the lowest levels since the state began keeping records.[44] The reduction was sustained through the end of 2019.[45]
De-escalation
In the winter of 2016, after a Burlington police officer killed Phil Grenon, a man who attacked the police with knives after a standoff,[46] del Pozo piloted the Police Executive Research Forum's (PERF) use of force guidelines and de-escalation curriculum.[47][48][49] The Reveal, a production of American Public Media, aired a segment about the incident: "When Tasers Fail."[50]
In 2018, del Pozo gave the highest award in the department to an officer who was in the path of a robbery suspect fleeing in a vehicle and would have been justified in opening fire on the vehicle, but chose not to,[51] saying that restraint was a valuable quality in a police officer.[52] He also investigated the Vermont State Police Academy for allegations that officers were being struck unexpectedly in the head during training, causing a pattern of concussions.[53] The academy settled a suit with an injured student and ceased delivering unexpected blows to the heads of its recruits.[54]
Overseas intelligence
After the 9/11 terror attacks, the NYPD selected del Pozo to create its first intelligence post with the Arab world, based out of Amman, Jordan in 2005.[55] Embedded with the Jordanian National Police, he responded to suicide bombings at Jordanian hotels executed by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and an attack on a Roman amphitheater.[56] He also responded to two attacks in Mumbai, India: a 2006 bombing of seven trains on the city's commuter rail,[57][58] and the 2008 Lashkar-e-Taiba-led attack on downtown Mumbai itself, where gunmen attacked hotels, transportation hubs, tourist areas, and a Jewish cultural center. Del Pozo reported his analyses to the NYPD and other agencies,[59] assessing how these attacks could be replicated by exploiting vulnerabilities in New York City,[60] and what measures could be taken to prevent them.[61] His role was unique in that there was no other U.S. intelligence officer conducting work on behalf of a municipal police department in either region.[62]
Recognition
In May 2016, PERF awarded del Pozo its annual Gary Hayes Memorial Award for innovation and leadership.[7]
Resignation
Del Pozo resigned as chief on December 16, 2019, after disclosing that he had used an anonymous Twitter account to tweet at a critic of the city for an hour about the person's criticism of outdoor dining, the city's AmeriCorps program, and the renovation of public parks.[63][64] He told The New York Times that the incident "taught me that nothing good ever comes from letting social media criticism get under your skin."[65]
Bicycle accident
In 2018, while training for the Lake PlacidIronman 70.3, del Pozo was seriously injured in a bicycle accident, including three skull fractures, brain hemorrhaging, a partially collapsed lung, and seven other fractures.[66] He was transported by emergency airlift to the ICU at the UVM Medical Center.[67][68] After eight weeks of convalescence, he returned to full duty.[69] Citing concussion symptoms, del Pozo took a second medical leave in the summer of 2019.[70][71]
Personal life
Del Pozo married Sarah Carnevale in 2002 and has two sons.[72] He wrote and directed a narrative short film, Sunday 1287,[73] which screened at the Middlebury and Vermont International Film Festivals.[74] The film was based on a crime he investigated while commanding a precinct in the New York borough of the Bronx. An outdoors enthusiast, he has climbed New Hampshire's 48 highest mountains,[75] completed the Lake Placid Half Ironman and other triathlons, and written for publications about cycling and climbing.[76][77]
References
^ abdel Pozo, Brandon. "Researchers@Brown". Brown University. Retrieved November 30, 2022.
^Comiskey, John (2010). EFFECTIVE STATE, LOCAL, AND TRIBAL POLICE INTELLIGENCE: THE NEW YORK CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT'S INTELLIGENCE ENTERPRISE. Monterey, CA: The US Naval Postgraduate School. p. 71.
^Dahl, Erik J. (July 3, 2014). "Local approaches to counterterrorism: the New York Police Department model". Journal of Policing, Intelligence and Counter Terrorism. 9 (2): 81–97. doi:10.1080/18335330.2014.940815. ISSN1833-5330. S2CID154127041.
^Brandon del Pozo '96 | Jan – Feb 2016. "Climb Every Mountain". Dartmouth Alumni Magazine. Retrieved February 22, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)