NYC narcotics prosecution and drug-market intelligence agency
The Special Narcotics Prosecutor's office pursues felony drug trafficking and prescription diversion cases across New York City through a task-force model with the five District Attorneys. Their tech stack—Tableau, Power BI, ArcGIS, SQL, R, plus legal research tools (Lexis/Nexis, Westlaw)—reflects a data-driven prosecution model centered on trend analysis and geographic intelligence. Active hiring in legal, data, and security roles signals expansion in investigative capacity and internal controls.
The Office of the Special Narcotics Prosecutor (SNP) is a government agency established in 1971 with citywide jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute high-level narcotics trafficking organizations and illicit prescription drug distribution networks in New York City. The office operates on a collaborative task-force model, working closely with the five District Attorneys to coordinate felony narcotics prosecutions and respond to community complaints about persistent drug activity and violence. SNP combines targeted prosecution with alternatives to incarceration as core elements of its public-health-informed strategy to reduce overdose deaths and arrests. The organization currently employs 51–200 staff across legal, data, and security functions.
SNP uses Tableau, Power BI, ArcGIS, SQL, and R for law-enforcement analytics, alongside Lexis/Nexis and Westlaw for legal research and case support.
Current projects include developing law-enforcement dashboards, monitoring drug-market trends, building digital trial presentations, generating intelligence reports, and running prevention campaigns.
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