New York - A data analysis found no link between enforcement of low-level quality-of-life crimes and the felony crime rate, the office charged with overseeing New York City’s police department said Wednesday.

The report took pains to make clear it was not commenting on the New York Police Department’s overall “broken windows” policing approach, but critics of the policy said the findings were proof that going after low-level crimes as a way of deterring larger ones doesn’t work. The NYPD called the report flawed.

The inspector general for the police, which is part of the city’s Department of Investigation and independent of the NYPD, looked at data for offenses like public urination and public drinking from 2010 to 2015, as well as felony arrest data. In that period, the number of summonses and misdemeanor arrests issued for those acts decreased, but there was no increase in felony crime.

DOI Commissioner Mark Peters said the report wasn’t questioning whether or not quality-of-life crimes should be addressed by police, but was looking specifically at whether going after them made a difference in felonies.... Read More: VIN