NEW YORK, NY — The New York Police Department has reported that 472 of its officers have been injured throughout the city since May 28 while responding to anti-police protests that turned into violent riots.
472 cops injured from attacks by rioters since they began on May 28th, 319 of which required hospitalizations. Overall, over 7,500 cops have been injured this year, a 47% INCREASE. https://t.co/TtKsUL3Ph8
— NYC PBA (@NYCPBA) September 27, 2020
According to NYPD data, 472 law enforcement officers of various ranks were shot, stabbed, struck by vehicles or assaulted with heavy objects, such as rocks, bricks and Molotov cocktails.
NYPD Inspector Norman Grandstaff is back in command over the 71st Precinct in Crown Heights, temporarily replacing Commanding Officer Tito Romero who is suffering from an injury sustained from a violent attack during the George Floyd protests and riots. … https://t.co/LFmUgP2uZj
— COLlive News (@COLLiveNews) September 23, 2020
Even the department’s highest ranking officer, Chief Terence Monahan, had his finger broken during a clash with protesters on the Brooklyn Bridge in July.
ALERT: NYPD line-of-duty injuries skyrocket amid violent
— GlobalPandemic.NET (@GlobalPandemics) September 27, 2020
anti-police protests – Global Pandemic News | #Coronavirus #COVID19 #Protests – https://t.co/2ZQzNGpczP pic.twitter.com/ej5gEJTuJP
Of those injured, 319 officers required hospital treatment and seven, like Lt. Richard Mack, who was badly beaten while making an arrest on the Brooklyn Bridge, were admitted to hospitals.
'I bled for this city — I'd do it again tomorrow': NYPD officer injured in Brooklyn Bridge attack thanks community for support https://t.co/EbkC3hEAd2
— Washington Examiner (@dcexaminer) July 19, 2020
There were 7,528 NYPD line-of-duty injuries so far in 2020, up 47 percent from the 5,133 in 2019, NYPD data revealed.
Now we have the full story: this police officer unholstered his weapon only after his supervisor was nearly killed with a brick. #FactsMatter pic.twitter.com/6PzqgI991I
— NYC PBA (@NYCPBA) June 1, 2020
“This behavior is unacceptable and will not be tolerated,” NYPD spokeswoman Sgt. Mary Frances O’Donnell told The New York Post.
20 more arrests in shooting incidents and homicides last week, and 41 more gun arrests this weekend alone.
— Commissioner Shea (@NYPDShea) September 21, 2020
The NYPD remains laser-focused on getting individuals who carry illegal firearms off our streets — especially repeat offenders — and curbing more gun violence in NYC. pic.twitter.com/WjKVKQvuI4
NYPD Sgt. Joseph Imperatrice told The New York Post:
“The average person doesn’t hear about the daily assaults and injuries to police officers. Officers are hurt every single day whether in regards to being assigned to routine patrol or a riot location.”
Imperatrice was on the scene during protests in Soho on May 31 and June 1. The protests turned chaotic, and dozens of suspected looters were arrested. While officers were trying to make arrests, Imperatrice said they were pelted by “air mail,” a term that refers to heavy and dangerous objects being thrown at police, such as filled bottles, metal debris, rocks and bricks.
Imperatrice reported that one inspector ended up with a severely sprained hand “tackling a subject running away from the scene of a location where they had just broken storefront windows.”
Bullshit!
— Paul (@paulguynj) September 27, 2020
112 people shot in New York City in the last 2 weeks.
Not one by the NYPD.
Maybe the police aren’t the problem.
Quit playing with yourself so much, you washed-up anarchist!
The spike in injuries seems to coincide with the increase in shootings and other violent acts being reported in the city even though overall arrests are down.
Last night in the Bronx, shots were fired into a crowd of kids. These @NYPD48Pct Neighborhood Coordination Officers were around the corner & able to quickly apprehend the 14-year-old shooter and seized the illegal firearm.
— Commissioner Shea (@NYPDShea) September 24, 2020
More outstanding work from your local NYPD cops. pic.twitter.com/gSVwLoIxBd
Statistics show that there has been a 153 percent increase in shooting incidents by the public.
?WANTED for ASSAULT: On 9/21/20 at approx 7:20 PM, inside of 4077 Boston Rd in the Bronx, 3 suspects fired multiple shots at a male who then returned fire, striking a male bystander who was attempting to shield his 3 kids. Any info, call or DM @NYPDTips at 800-577-TIPS. pic.twitter.com/0CMcWsXt1m
— NYPD NEWS (@NYPDnews) September 22, 2020
Crime data from the NYPD indicates arrests this year have decreased about 39 percent overall. Arrests for murder are down 9.5 percent; for robbery, 11.1 percent; and for guns, 16.5 percent compared to the same time period in 2019.
Great job by your Housing Officers @NYPDPSA2 for arresting a teenager with this stolen illegal loaded gun in #Brooklyn. Every single one of these arrest have the potential to be deadly & your NYPD has repeatedly made them without a single shot being fired & without an injury. pic.twitter.com/zPHOqHDA6q
— Chief David Barrere (@NYPDHousing) September 23, 2020
Police Benevolent Association President Patrick Lynch said:
“The chaos that politicians are encouraging on the streets is putting cops in the hospital.
“It is not just the nearly 500 cops who have been hit with bricks and bottles or otherwise injured during supposedly ‘peaceful’ protests.
“Hundreds more are being injured because criminals are emboldened to fight cops the moment we step on the scene. They know our hands are tied.
“Every New Yorker needs to ask their elected officials how cops can protect them when we can barely protect ourselves.”
A man who was stabbed in Manhattan over the summer has died of his injuries, police announced on Thursday. https://t.co/RuLOuzWzqN
— amNewYork (@amNewYork) September 24, 2020
As we reported on Aug. 27, Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed police reform legislation into law on June 12.
The reforms included the ban on police chokeholds; the appointment of a special prosecutor in cases where civilians are either killed or hurt by police; making it a crime to make a fake, racially biased 911 call; and most prominently, a repeal of 50-a, the law that was used to shield police disciplinary records from the public.
The governor also signed an executive order requiring local governments to reinvent their police departments by April 2021. Departments that do not comply will lose state funding. Cuomo said:
“We’re not going to be a state government subsidizing improper police tactics. We’re not doing it, and this is how we’re going to do it.
“I’m going to sign an executive order today that will require local governments and police departments all across the state — about 500 — to develop a plan that reinvents and modernizes police strategies and programs in their community.”
NYPD officials and unions raised concerns this “diaphragm” provision could restrict arrest techniques and scare police away from action altogether.
.@NYCPBA chief Patrick Lynch claims the release of cop killers "is taking away from the seriousness of the crime and how it affected the families." [with @JohnFBachman on Newsmax TV: https://t.co/VlT7z8drtO] pic.twitter.com/JC4ycvliqW
— Newsmax (@newsmax) September 24, 2020
Lynch denounced the revision in a PBA statement:
“Nothing short of a full repeal can repair the damage from this insane law.
“That won’t happen, because the mayor and City Council have no intention of actually fixing this problem. They are content to blame cops for the mess they created.
“If they wanted us to be able to do our job safely and effectively, they would never have passed it in the first place.”
NY city is in real trouble. I have video of a police officer being run over by a car with the intent to kill. This mayor is just talking. Bottles, Bricks, accelerants and fireworks thrown at police. My God every life is precious please save them. https://t.co/Fof14cdWAi
— Mildred Cordero ??✝️???? (@godscreatures2) June 2, 2020
Then on July 15, Mayor Bill de Blasio signed five bills for greater police transparency and accountability, including the criminalization of police officers’ use of chokeholds.
The mayor officially banned the use of chokeholds by police officers and made it a misdemeanor crime, even though NYPD has banned its use since 1993.
NYPD officials raised concerns about the current law’s prohibition of compressing a suspect’s diaphragm by sitting, kneeling or standing on someone’s chest or back, according to NY1 News.
Politicians also suggested that the legislation has had a negative effect on police productivity, with plummeting arrests and soaring violence.
Is she serious? Don't stop people for speeding? Speeding makes a crash more likely & if a person is struck it increases injury/death. But ignore reality bcs a driver MAY get violent. WTF?
— Tori SchindlerBrooks (@Tori_S_Brooks) September 26, 2020
NYPD should stop making traffic stops, attorney general sayshttps://t.co/MQ8dyj4sAt
Queens Councilman Donovan Richards, who is the Democratic nominee for borough president, said:
“The PBA [Police Benevolent Association] and the police department do not have a right to act on pieces of legislation the Council passes that they don’t like in an active slowdown, because that’s certainly what we are feeling on the ground.
“I would be open to having a conversation about the diaphragm portion of the chokehold bill if this means the New York City Police Department would get back to work. And I don’t want to hear excuses.”
Therefore, during a daily briefing in August, de Blasio confirmed the City Council was looking to change the legislation’s language:
“Clearly, the crucial reform in the original legislation continues. Chokeholds will be illegal no matter what. As I understand, the focus here is just on some clarification on the issue of diaphragms.”
When NY1 reached out to the police officer’s union to ask if there was an intentional work slowdown, the following statement was given to the news organization:
“New York City police officers are doing our job exactly as directed. Mayor de Blasio has touted the NYPD’s reductions in arrests for years. The City Council passed a law that made it impossible to safely arrest a resisting criminal.
“It’s baffling that anybody would expect police officers to step up arrests when our city leaders have made it clear they want fewer arrests and less enforcement, not more.”
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