NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly says that the city's murder rate keeps dipping, and is already down by 33% in the first two months of 2013, and credits the decrease in part to his department's increased focus on social media to catch gang members. "My idea, the Crew Cut concept, focuses on this directly," Kelly told the Post in an interview, referring to Operation Crew Cut, which used the Facebook activity of alleged gang members to string together charges of organized crime. New units called Strategy Enforcement Teams work with officers focused on narcotics and gangs to track criminal activity. "In each initiative, [Strategy Enforcement Teams] help us monitor social media and we gather information we can use on these groups."

Operation Crew Cut yielded 49 arrests of alleged local gang members in East New York, and conspiracy charges were used to arrest them, much like with a mafia case. “If you have a victim who is assaulted, they won’t talk to police,” a police source tells the Post. “But when gang members threaten each other on Facebook, that’s enough to get a conspiracy charge.”

One of Kelly's deputies who is most adept at the practice, Deputy Inspector Joseph Gulotta, the commander of Brooklyn's 73rd Precinct, combs Facebook and social media for "hours each week" and confiscated more guns last year (199) than any other precinct in the city. After an article praising Gulotta's work was published in the Daily News, he was threatened on Facebook, and a 19-year-old surrendered shortly after.

It's worth noting that when we asked Kelly about the department's posture towards monitoring social media last summer, he responded, "[The NYPD] only monitors social media for specific investigations. That's the world we live in."

In the interview, Kelly also praises the department's new domestic violence units for helping to curb violent crime. “Domestic violence is a key component to addressing violence and addressing murder," he says. Buried in the last paragraph, we're also assured that "Kelly also credited stop-and-frisk," among other initiatives for a drop in crime, despite the drop in the practice (and the murder rate) last year.