Author Topic: As a retired NYPD officer of 29 years, I watched the city turn on us  (Read 537 times)

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Offline Kamaji

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As a retired NYPD officer of 29 years, I watched the city turn on us

By Scott Welsh
March 10, 2022

Mayor Eric Adams was elected largely based on his promise to return order to New York City. While early indications point to his moving in the right direction, I fear that factors beyond his control will hinder reaching that goal.

I recently retired as a sergeant after serving 29 years with the NYPD. I grew up in Queens and attended Franklin K. Lane High School in Brooklyn. I still live in the city. I spent my entire career on patrol and in plainclothes Anti-Crime and Street Narcotics Enforcement Units (SNEU) in the South Bronx and Harlem.

I came on the job in 1991 when the city had more than 2,000 homicides. In the South Bronx 44th precinct where I worked, mothers routinely put blankets and pillows in the bathtub and had their babies sleep there for fear of stray bullets coming through the windows in the night. The shell shocked people of the city begged Mayor Dinkins for help. The Post exemplified this with the famous headline “DAVE, DO SOMETHING!!”

And he did. Mayor Dinkins pushed through the Safe Streets/Safe City program, putting 6,000 new cops on the street. Then, with the election of Rudy Giuliani and the appointment of Bill Bratton, there was a seismic shift in the NYPD.

Patrol cops, who were previously prohibited from narcotics or gambling arrests in a post-Knapp Commission fear of corruption, were encouraged to arrest drug dealers in their sectors. Quality of life violations were aggressively enforced. Precinct commanders were held accountable for crime. And it worked. Crime, especially homicides, plummeted. The city came back. Construction and tourism soared.

*  *  *

However, in the last few years there has been another seismic shift. This one against the police. Even those who once supported us, seem to have turned against us. I realized this while on patrol in Harlem.

One morning my partner and I were flagged down by a young woman. She told us that a male whom she didn’t know had walked up to her and repeatedly punched her in the face, breaking her nose. We called an ambulance for her, got a description, and went looking for the perpetrator. We spotted the perp, a white male, a few blocks away. As soon as we exited the car, he attacked us. After I got one cuff on his wrist, he managed to get out of our grasp and punched me in the head with my own handcuffs, opening a laceration on my forehead. We managed to get him down and cuff him, but he was still trying to fight.

So as per procedure, we called for an Emergency Service unit to bring leg restraints. As we were waiting for ESU, a crowd gathered. Building supers, people on their way to work, mothers with strollers, the people who I was there to help and protect. And they began verbally abusing us. Yelling about police brutality as I was holding down a struggling perp with blood pouring out of a cut on my head. Calling us racists despite the fact that both myself and the perp were white. Yelling “Let him go” despite not knowing that he was being arrested for assaulting an innocent woman for no reason.

*  *  *

Source:  https://nypost.com/2022/03/10/i-watched-the-city-turn-on-nypd-officers-retired-sergeant/

Offline mountaineer

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Re: As a retired NYPD officer of 29 years, I watched the city turn on us
« Reply #1 on: March 11, 2022, 05:54:54 pm »
Sad. Sounds like everything turned to crap once Rudy was out of office. All I know is that I won't visit again unless there's a significant change in law enforcement.
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Offline Kamaji

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Re: As a retired NYPD officer of 29 years, I watched the city turn on us
« Reply #2 on: March 11, 2022, 06:02:42 pm »
Sad. Sounds like everything turned to crap once Rudy was out of office. All I know is that I won't visit again unless there's a significant change in law enforcement.

To be perfectly honest, it all depends on where, when, and with whom you go.

Offline mountaineer

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Re: As a retired NYPD officer of 29 years, I watched the city turn on us
« Reply #3 on: March 11, 2022, 06:09:45 pm »
The last time I was in NYC, I walked all over the place by myself while Mr. M was attending meetings. I think I  would be a bit hesitant to wander around in 2022.
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Offline Kamaji

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Re: As a retired NYPD officer of 29 years, I watched the city turn on us
« Reply #4 on: March 11, 2022, 06:12:14 pm »
The last time I was in NYC, I walked all over the place by myself while Mr. M was attending meetings. I think I  would be a bit hesitant to wander around in 2022.

Again, during the day in particular, it all depends on where you are.  It also requires a little situational awareness and the ability to read body language.

Offline DefiantMassRINO

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Re: As a retired NYPD officer of 29 years, I watched the city turn on us
« Reply #5 on: March 11, 2022, 06:17:52 pm »
Everything is fine and dandy until kids start getting shot, like in the 1980s and 1990s.



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