NYC police arrest man after officers were pelted during a snowball fight
[February 27, 2026]
By MICHAEL R. SISAK and PHILIP MARCELO
NEW YORK (AP) — A social media content creator was arrested Thursday
after New York City police said he was one of a number of people who
pelted officers with snow and ice during a massive snowball fight in
Washington Square Park this week.
Gusmane Coulibaly, 27, was charged with obstructing governmental
administration, a misdemeanor, and harassment, a non-criminal violation.
He appeared in handcuffs and wearing an olive-green sweat suit during
his arraignment Thursday evening in Manhattan criminal court. He wasn't
asked to enter a plea, and was released, pending his next court date on
April 9.
Coulibaly didn't speak during the brief hearing, which was attended by
at least a dozen uniformed police officers and police union officials.
But George Vomvolakis, his attorney, told the judge that the
“circumstances surrounding his arrest have been politicized.” He
suggested Coulibaly was caught in the middle of a rift between the
police department and City Hall.
“I don’t want to minimize what happened to the officers, but I think the
police department is using this because of their dislike or disdain for
the mayor,” Vomvolakis said. “I think they’re taking it out on Mr.
Coulibaly. They want to pick a fight with the mayor.”
Mayor Zohran Mamdani, a Democrat, played down the fracas earlier this
week as a “snowball fight that got out of hand” and suggested he did not
think criminal charges were warranted.
Monday’s snowball fight, which appeared to be organized by social media
content producers, caused a chaotic scene as a large crowd amassed at
the popular park to wing snowballs at each other during a winter storm.

Prosecutors said in court that officers arrived at the park after a 911
call about a disorderly group, including people climbing on a roof.
Video from the incident shows a large group of people following police
officers, showering them with snowballs and jeering, as they retreat to
their vehicles outside the park. Videos also showed officers shoving at
least two people to the ground while getting hit from all directions by
snowballs.
“The notion that this was a playful snowball fight obviously is not
true,” Patrick Hendry, a police union president, told reporters after
the proceeding. “This was an attack on the uniform that these police
officers wear so proudly every day. They came after these police
officers, pelting them with ice, rocks.”
Hendry said he was disappointed prosecutors didn’t charge Coulibaly with
assaulting an officer — the felony offense police originally proposed.
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Gusmane Coulibaly, left, listens as his lawyer, George Vomvolakis
speaks to members of the media after Coulibaly's initial court
appearance, Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026, in New York, on charges
alleging he threw a snowball at a police officer. (AP Photo/Michael
Sisak)

“It sends a horrible message to these police officers right here
that the mayor is not going to have our backs,” he said, standing
alongside other officers. “You’re putting a target on these police
officers’ backs.”
Vomvolakis maintained there was no evidence that rocks or ice were
packed into the snowballs.
“What I saw in the video didn’t look like an attack," Vomvolakis
said. "Did it go a little past, you know, jokes and fun? Was it
possibly a little disrespectful to the police? Yes.”
Assistant District Attorney Victoria Notaro said video showed
Coulibaly throwing a snowball that struck Officer Nicholas Johnson
in the face, but prosecutors did not find evidence showing that the
officer’s injuries were caused “directly by this defendant’s
conduct.”
The officer sustained injuries including redness, tenderness and
pain to his eye, head and neck, Notaro said.
“We will continue to investigate,” she added.
Vomvolakis said Coulibaly is a content creator who makes “elaborate
videos” including a recent one in which he approached a stranger in
a Bronx subway, acted as if he knew him and said he was owed money.
That interaction got Coulibaly arrested for attempted robbery — a
charge that Vomvolakis said he was confident would be dismissed.
Coulibaly has hundreds of thousands of followers across Instagram,
TikTok, YouTube, Snapchat and other social media platforms, where he
posts under the moniker Diaper Man.
The city's police department has released images of three other
people it is seeking in connection with the snowball fight. Police
Commissioner Jessica Tisch has called the treatment of officers at
the fight “disgraceful” and “criminal.”
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Associated Press reporter Anthony Izaguirre in Albany, New York,
contributed to this report.
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