Brooklyn Borough President and former NYPD captain Eric Adams daringly ran on a law-and-order mayoral platform,
earning the Democratic nod in a field populated with progressives bent
on defunding the police. Once he clinches City Hall, he needs to deliver
on his promise of safety — and that means listening to law enforcers.
Adams acknowledges what some so stubbornly resist: Demonizing cops
and hamstringing their public-safety efforts allow criminality to
flourish. Shootings and homicides are on the rise in cities across the
nation. Recruitment and retention of officers have become difficult for
departments already forced to deal with budgets slashed by the #Defund
movement.
The NYPD is experiencing painful staffing shortfalls, as cops are
retiring in droves. The Post reported in April that “more than 5,300
NYPD uniformed officers retired or put in their papers to leave in 2020 —
a 75 percent spike from the year before.” A wider exodus would break
the department.
If Adams wants to make good on his campaign promises and emerge as
the historic leader who staved off a return of the city’s bad old days,
he needs to take the following steps:
1) Begin by publicly defending the honorable policing profession.
Sane people understand this to mean support for good cops and holding
accountable the minuscule share of officers who tarnish the badge. The
mayor should use the bully pulpit City Hall affords to call out the
current trends of harassment, taunting, baiting and targeting police,
often used to create viral video clips by nauseating clout-chasers.
Adams might also share his personal experience of being part of the
miraculous, NYPD-led effort of the 1990s that once allowed Gotham to
stake its claim as nation’s “safest big city.”
2) Untie cops’ hands. Under the guise of criminal-justice reform,
activists have pressured weak-kneed politicians into implementing
unreasonable restrictions that make an already dangerous profession even
more dangerous.
Violent confrontations are sometimes inevitable when cops confront
desperate, non-compliant subjects. But when police are prohibited from
employing certain control holds or restraining techniques, the balance
is dangerously tilted against them — and, therefore, against public
safety.
3) Challenge the state Legislature on its dangerous bail and
discovery “reforms.” New York will become safer when judges are once
more afforded discretion to jail violent, recidivist offenders
pending trial.
New York state’s discovery “reforms,” meanwhile, are downright insane.
Publicizing information related to witnesses, informants and undercover
officers, while disposing of the anonymity related to grand-jury
witness protections, is dangerous. It is having a crippling effect on
the criminal-justice system.
4) Fund the police. Even leftist city councils like the ones in
Minneapolis and Seattle have been forced to reverse course after
pledging to dismantle their police budgets. #DefundPolice is a slogan,
not a solution, and it’s a slogan even lefties are now running away
from.
Mayor de Blasio is learning that painful lesson now and has begun to
walk back support for police budget cuts. The irony is lost on no one
when local defund advocates implement cuts and then are shamefully
forced to appeal for state and federal assistance to combat the crime
surge.
America’s safest big city needs a well-funded police force.
Thus far, New York City’s mayor-in-waiting has struck all the right
chords with his pro-cop and anti-crime campaign. If, as expected, he
moves into Gracie Mansion following inauguration on Jan. 1, will Eric
Adams make good on his commitment to public safety? Politics often
requires delicate needle-threading: to seek compromises and balance
competing equities. Yet, the restoration of law and order in NYC — for
residents, commuters and tourists alike — must be the new mayor’s
priority No. 1.
1 comment:
This is actually a good, solid, thought out piece of work.
bob walsh
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