
In March 2025, Boston Globe reporters Dugan Arnett and Andrew Ryan released 'Snitch City,' a multimedia investigation documenting systemic corruption within the New Bedford Police Department in Massachusetts. The podcast and accompanying print journalism expose how officers systematically exploited the confidential informant system—a practice that raises questions about police accountability in democracies globally.
Confidential informants (CIs) represent a cornerstone of modern narcotics enforcement. These individuals work undercover, providing intelligence to law enforcement in exchange for protection, payment, or reduced criminal liability. The arrangement is inherently delicate: informants are often criminals themselves, operating in environments where violence and deception are commonplace. Yet the New Bedford investigation reveals what happens when this system lacks meaningful oversight.
Among the abuses documented: officers coerced informants into cooperation, stole narcotics intended for surveillance operations, and falsified records. One officer, identified as Richard in internal proceedings, was found by an independent arbitrator to have submitted false information to the department, neglected his duties, and engaged in conduct unbecoming a law enforcement officer. Former Police Chief Paul Oliveira was identified among those who misused the informant system, though he has not publicly responded to allegations.
The case holds particular international significance because it exposes weaknesses endemic to confidential informant management across Western democracies. In Scandinavia and Europe, similar systems exist but operate under different regulatory frameworks. Denmark's police, for instance, employs informants but within a structure governed by stricter judicial oversight and Danish legal codes that mandate regular review of CI operations. The contrast illustrates how governance structures shape accountability.
What distinguishes the New Bedford case is its scale and the transparency with which journalists documented it. The Organized Crime Intelligence Bureau (OCIB), which managed New Bedford's informant network, operated with minimal external scrutiny. Officers exploited this opacity to manipulate vulnerable informants—many struggling with addiction—and pilfer drug evidence meant for prosecutions.
The consequences extend beyond individual misconduct. When police abuse informant relationships, prosecutions collapse, victims lose faith in the justice system, and communities become harder to police. In neighborhoods already skeptical of law enforcement, such revelations deepen the trust deficit.


