Mayor Bill de Blasio announced today that Bratton will retire next month, and that James O'Neill, the department's top chief, will succeed him.
Bratton had said last month that he would not remain head of the NYPD past the end of de Blasio's first term in 2017. Bratton's resume is unmatched in local law enforcement.
He began his career as a patrolman in Boston in 1970 and went on to lead law enforcement agencies in Boston, Los Angeles and New York.
His current tenure at the NYPD was his second. In the first one under Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in the early 1990s, he was credited with driving down crime with a widely copied, data-driven, crime-fighting strategy before his brash style made him an annoyance to the mayor, who forced him out.
On Bratton's watch, the NYPD has drastically scaled back its "stop-and-frisk" strategy, but stepped up enforcement against of so-called "quality of life" offenses.
Critics said that approach still unfairly targeted minorities and came into play in the chokehold death of Eric Garner during his arrest for allegedly selling loose cigarettes on a Staten Island block. Garner, who was black, was unarmed; Officer Daniel Pantaleo, who put his arm around Garner's neck, is white.
Then Officers Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos were ambushed and shot dead by a gunman who had announced online he planned to kill police in retaliation for Garner's death.
In an extraordinary display of scorn, officers turned their back on the mayor at a hospital on the night of the December 2012 killings and again at the officers' funerals.
The tensions between the mayor and police eased, but officers have been under scrutiny this summer as concern about police-minority relations has welled anew here and elsewhere.
