New York City Mayor Adams unveils plan to end gun violence
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[January 25, 2022]
By Barbara Goldberg and Julia Harte
NEW YORK (Reuters) -New York City Mayor
Eric Adams on Monday announced a plan to end gun violence in a city
reeling from the fatal shooting of a police officer and a spate of
violent crimes, as he promised to increase police officers in New York's
most violence-plagued communities.
Adams, a former police captain, said the plan would deliver on his
November election campaign pledge by deploying more officers, stemming
the flow of guns into the city, and appointing anti-gun violence
coordinators in every city agency.
"We are turning our pain into purpose," he said at a news conference
following a series of highly publicized, lethal crimes in the city since
he was sworn in on Jan. 1.
Two police officers were shot in Harlem on Friday while responding
to a domestic violence call, leaving one dead and the other in critical
condition. Two other officers were shot in separate incidents last week
in other parts of the city.
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As in many U.S. cities, murders and gun violence have surged over the
past two years in New York. Experts say the trend partly reflects the
social disruption from the pandemic and its effect of reducing the
number of police officers on duty.
The city counted 488 murders last year, up 5.6% over 2020 following a
47% jump a year earlier, the biggest year-to-year percentage increase
ever recorded in the country's most populous city. That spike ended a
fairly steady decline in murders since 1990, when the number peaked at
2,245.
Shootings doubled from 2019 to 1,532 in 2020, and increased 2% in 2021,
according to city statistics.
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New York City Mayor Eric Adams told a news conference on Monday that
he would implement an aggressive plan to end gun violence in the
city, following the fatal shooting of a police officer and a spate
of violent crimes.
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will within three weeks put more police officers on patrol in 30 of
the city's 77 precincts where 80% of the city's violence occurs,
Adams said. The officers, identifiable as New York Police Department
employees, will have body-worn cameras and "enhanced" training and
oversight.
Travelers into New York City will be screened for illegal guns with
facial recognition technology at new "spot checks" at various entry
points.
City authorities confiscate illicit firearms on a regular basis,
with 6,000 removed in 2021, but new guns enter the city at a faster
rate, according to Adams.
"We have become the dumping ground," he said.
Adams encouraged prosecutors to "triage gun cases" to ensure they
are the first cases brought to court, and urged lawmakers to reduce
the number of guns that a person must traffic before they can be
charged with a felony.
A former Brooklyn borough president, the Democrat won election on a
platform that promised to improve public safety through investment
in more aggressive policing.
Adams' stance clashed with the "defund the police" rallying cry
heard at protests against racism and police brutality since 2020.
But it echoed calls for tougher policing from Democratic mayoral
candidates countrywide in 2021, who feared being painted as soft on
crime by Republican opponents.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago and Barbara Goldberg and
Julia Harte in New YorkEditing by Matthew Lewis, David Gregorio and
Richard Chang)
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