Friday, February 24, 2023

THE POST DOES NOT UNDERSTAND IT'S A 'CRIME OF POVERTY' WHEN A BUNCH OF BLACKS SWARM INTO LUXURY STORES FOR A SHOPLIFTING RAID

‘Crime of poverty’ excuse is devastating NY small businesses 

 

February 23, 2023

 

Items locked inside a Duane Reade drugstore. Convenience stores have locked up a large percentage of their items as shoplifting soars throughout the city.  

 

Are you upset, like “1619 Project” chief Nikole-Hannah-Jones, at the “demeaning” way drugstores “lock up everything”? Distressed that Midtown merchants are deploying K-9 units to deter thieves?

Horrified by the homicide that followed alleged shrimp-stealing at the Fish Express Fish Market? Saddened by the case of bodega clerk Jose Alba, who killed in self-defense in another escalated-from-shoplifting incident?

Welcome to the progressive dystopia, created by lefties who imagine that all shoplifting is a “crime of poverty” and so should effectively go unpunished. Thanks to New York’s criminal-justice “reforms,” district attorneys find it near-impossible to jail these perps, so the same relative handful (but growing number!) of suspects keep on re-offending.

As a result, shoplifting complaints across the city surged to more than 63,000 in 2022, up 45% over the 2021 level and almost 275% from the first decade of the century. And ever-more merchants don’t even file complaints, since it seems pretty pointless.

 Shoplifter is arrested at a Manhattan TargetShoplifting complaints across the city surged to more than 63,000 in 2022, up 45% over the 2021 level.

 

Meanwhile, more brazen thieves opt for multimillion-dollar smash-and-grabs and other luxury-store raids.

It’s not just the no-bail laws, by the way: Other “reforms” oblige prosecutors to do endless paperwork for every case they mean to bring to court — leading them to give up on some felonies, as well as most misdemeanor crimes.

Of course, it’s not to put food on the table, or any other “crime of poverty”: Mostly, we’d wager, the thieves’ profits go to buy drugs.

 Items locked inside a Duane Reade in Manhattan.Retailers have begun hiring private security patrols and deploying facial-recognition tech.

 

“People who say that we’re criminalizing the poor — they’re wrong,” noted Mayor Eric Adams noted last week. Instead, “poor and low-income New Yorkers are being unemployed because we’re losing those businesses in our city.”

Retailers who don’t close down are doing everything from hiring private security patrols to deploying facial-recognition tech, along with all the locked-up toothpaste, deodorant and so on.

Meanwhile, progressives in the Legislature are determined to nix Gov. Kathy Hochul’s modest fix to the no-bail law, scrapping the confusing requirement for judges to apply the “least restrictive” means to ensure a defendant returns to court. Instead, they’re looking to “reform” some more by eliminating a few last mandatory-minimum penalties for those who still get convicted.

As far as the left’s concerned, New York’s only crime problem is some people are winding up behind bars. And they wonder why so many small businesses are shutting down in the neighborhoods they represent.

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