Saturday, February 15, 2020

Felony crimes made big jumps this year in the "Safest Big City", especially in the "World's Borough"


New York City experienced its worst January for serious crime in five years, according to NYPD data set for release Tuesday and expected to show an ongoing spike that department officials attribute to the state's new bail reform law.


The latest Compstat data through Feb. 2, shows that total overall serious felonies — such as homicide, burglary, robbery and auto theft — are up 16.4% over the same period in 2019. The increase is 6% when compared to 2015, the data shows.


After years of steady declines in crime, the city has seen double digit increases in burglaries, grand larcenies and auto theft — the latter up 70% over 2019 — since Jan. 1. Robberies and felonious assaults saw single digit increases. A positive trend within the data shows homicides down nearly 20% since the same period last year and a decrease in rapes by 18%, according to the latest data.

 In January, serious felonies citywide continued to rise throughout the month. NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea is scheduled to talk about the overall upward trend Tuesday during his monthly crime briefing. He is again expected to call on the legislature in Albany to tinker with the bail law, which took effect Jan. 1. The new law eliminates bail for most nonviolent crimes.

Ridgewood Post

Crime across the city and in the borough of Queens jumped significantly in the first month of 2020 — which top NYPD brass attributes to bail reform.


Major crimes spiked 20 percent in the first 26 days of the year in Patrol Borough Queens North — which includes Long Island City, Sunnyside, Astoria, Jackson Heights, Ridgewood, Forest Hills and Flushing — as compared to the same period in 2019.


There were 758 serious crimes from Jan. 1 through Jan. 26, 2020 in Queens North; up from 629 during the same period in 2019, according to NYPD data.
Major crimes climbed 31 percent for the same 26-day period from the year prior in Patrol Borough 

Queens South — which includes the Rockaways, Jamaica, Queens Village and south. There were 712 crimes committed from Jan. 1 through Jan. 26, 2020; up from 543 in 2019, according to NYPD data.

Queens Chronicle

 
Days before a new civilian patrol was set to begin in the neighborhood, a 60-year-old man was robbed and severely beaten in broad daylight in the Cityline section of Ozone Park that borders on Brooklyn.

Graphic photos of the victim, Shahab Uddin, bleeding profusely from the face, posted on Facebook sparked residents to call an emergency meeting of the Ozone Park Residents Block Association this week to deal with what they are characterizing as a neighborhood “crime wave.”


“The brutality of this crime really got to me,” Sam Esposito, head of the OPRBA and a former police officer, told the Chronicle.


Uddin was walking home from Liberty Avenue on 76th Street at around 11 a.m. Sunday when he was attacked from behind by a lone assailant who beat him and stole his cell phone and wallet, his family said.


He has been hospitalized since then, unconscious with severe facial wounds and bruises, according to Esposito.


It is the second time in three months someone in the largely Bangladeshi community near the border with Brooklyn has been badly beaten in an unprovoked attack.


In November, a man on his way to work was set upon by a group of young men at the elevated A-train station at Liberty Avenue and 80th Street, a few blocks from the site of Sunday’s assault.


That attack spawned a neighborhood rally that drew several hundred people to protest what was called poor police coverage in a crime-prone section of Ozone Park.


Crime has “been going up over the last 18 months and we knew it,” said Esposito.


The most recent crime stats seem to bear him out.


In January, when crime citywide rose sharply, the 106th Precinct — which covers Ozone Park and Howard Beach — saw robberies jump 58 percent over last year. Felonious assaults were up 57 percent.

Although the bail reform laws are a major factor in this precipitous rise in crime, the New Bad Days have been here for quite some time.


24 comments:

Anonymous said...

I don't know why everyone is getting so worked up over this. The city overwhelmingly voted for politicians who campaigned on suppressing the police, and giving criminals/ illegals more rights. Why is there now an issue when crime goes up? This is what most of the city wants.

If election day was tomorrow most would re elect each and every politician who enacted this law.

Anonymous said...

It’s not bail reform, it’s the entire CJ reform. Remember arresting/prosecuting/sentencing those who commit crimes is racist. This is the city that everyone wanted. Enjoy.

Anonymous said...

Ozone Park is full of illegals Mike Miller want the State Police, better if would get ICE in there
, oops no dice sanctuary city

Anonymous said...

Friends and family get upset at me, when they complain about stuff like this and I reply with “So, who’d you vote for?”

Anonymous said...

New York Post Story -
The Trump administration is deploying special tactical officers from US Customs and Border Patrol to sanctuary cities, including New York, in order to assist ICE with cracking down on undocumented immigrants, officials and law enforcement sources said Friday.

Anonymous said...

We are beginning to see the end of mindless knee jerk liberalism.

Anonymous said...

Everyone should read Anonymous #1 ... and read it again!!

Anonymous said...

I wouldn't book a trip to NYC unless I was an Illegal Alien! Oh! And a felon!

Anonymous said...

To Anonymous #3: Mike Miller is a spineless, useless blob of metastasized fat cells who devalues honesty itself! The REAL criminal who State Police should be locking up is Fathead Miller himself. HE, and his entirely 'Useful Idiot' staff are a collective waste of skin, depleting the earth of precious oxygen!

❝The self-righteous rule out the possibility that THEY are what has gone wrong.❞ ——Mason Cooley

My dearest possums, the Free Market does not exist in New York City, New York State, nationally AND the world-at-large! Anyone who has got anything is THERE because they can help the puppeteers and monstrously failed political scourges (NOT public servants) of New York City government, New York State government, national jurisdictions and beyond.

❝There's simply no polite way to tell people they've dedicated their lives to an illusion.❞ ——Daniel Dennett

❝The worst illiterate is political illiterate; he hears nothing, sees nothing, and takes no part in political life. He doesn't seem to know that the cost of living, the price of beans, of flour, of rent, of medicine all depends on political decisions. He even prides himself in his political ignorance, sticks out his chest and says he hates politics.

He doesn't know, the imbecile, that from his political non-participation comes the prostitute, the abandoned child, the robber, and worst of all, corrupt officials, the lackeys of exploitative multinational corporations.❞ ——Bertolt Brecht, February, 10, 1898 - August 14, 1956

❝A bureaucrat is the most despicable of men, though he is needed as vultures are needed, but one hardly admires vultures whom bureaucrats so strangely resemble. I have yet to meet a bureaucrat who was not petty, dull, almost witless, crafty or stupid, an oppressor or a thief, a holder of little authority in which he delights, as a boy delights in possessing a vicious dog. Who can trust such creatures?❞ ——Marcus Cicero

❝The masses have never thirsted after truth. Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master; whoever attempts to destroy their illusions is always their victim.❞ ——Gustave Le Bon (1841-1931)

❝The people will not revolt. They will not look up from their screens long enough to notice what’s happening❞ ——George Orwell (Big Brother character from Orwell's book, '1984')

❝The world is in greater peril from those who tolerate or encourage evil than from those who actually commit it.❞ ——Albert Einstein

❝The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false-face urge to rule it.❞ ——H. L. Mencken

❝To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist; that is all.❞ —―Oscar Wilde

❝The cost of sanity in this civilization, is a certain level of alienation.❞ —―Caitlin Johnstone

❝The system cannot be fixed by the system.❞ —―Tom Morello

❝Sooner or later, the people in this country are going to realize the government does not give a fuck about them. The government doesn't care about you or your children or your rights or your welfare or your safety. It simply doesn't give a fuck about you.❞ ——George Carlin

❝In order to rally people, governments need enemies. They want us to be afraid, to hate, so that we will rally behind them. And, if they do not have a REAL enemy, then they will invent one in order to mobilize us.❞ ——Thich Nhat Hanh

❝This planet is obviously being used as an insane asylum by other planets.❞ ——George Bernard Shaw

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acLW1vFO-2Q

Anonymous said...

❝If you do not take an interest in the affairs of your government, then you are doomed to live under the rule of fools.❞ ——Plato

❝The people don't have a voice because they don't have information.❞ ——Gore Vidal

❝Always beware of the fact that the only thing hindering an all out revolution is your fear of losing the scraps they throw at you.❞ ——Gore Vidal

Anonymous said...

Where does this guy find the quotes?

Anonymous said...

Mayor Bill de Blasio’s latest nomination to the MTA board is Convicted FALN leader Oscar Lopez Rivera ! And you wonder why crime is going up in NYC ! The Far Left is destroying us from within !!!

Anonymous said...

'Mayor Bill de Blasio’s latest nomination to the MTA board is Convicted FALN leader Oscar Lopez Rivera'

What does a terrorist from San Juan, Puerto Rico know about trains, mechanical & electrical engineering, block signaling, computers and electronics?
Nobody on that board should be there without degrees and hands on experience in those fields.
deBlasio must be the stupidest mayor in this country's history including that liberal shithole called California

Anonymous said...

Can't understand why crime is on the upswing. Why? Just because we welcome in illegal aliens and criminals like MS 13? Just because we are a sanctuary city? Just because a hundred serious crimes now require no-bail to be released? Just because criminals and illegals can obtain drivers licenses and will now vote? Why? Why? Why?

Anonymous said...

Crime in Maspeth up big time....4 muggings inside of 14 days.

And did anyone see the video of last nights rampage/brawl at Maspeth Pizza House on the Maspeth Citizens app???

Anonymous said...

>Mayor Bill de Blasio’s latest nomination to the MTA board is Convicted FALN leader Oscar Lopez Rivera !

No, his appointment is the apparatchik who decided that a terrorist who murdered New Yorkers would be a fitting marshal for a NYC parade.
Rivera might actually be a better choice. Blow it all up.

Anonymous said...

Problem's crossing the red lights by the Queensburough bridge tonight, these squeegee men with what looked like broken off windshield wiper blades, buckets, rags and newspaper were fighting over lanes of traffic and spitting at each other.

Anonymous said...

Which is why we need to elect James Quinn for Borough President.
He does not support the closing of Rikers.
He warned us that the bail reforms are going to make the public unsafe.
He is for Law and Order.

We need to send a message to the pols that there are consequences for your irresponsible choices.

TommyR said...

Having just returned from Japan. The difference btw the two Cities is, well, a Tale of Two Cities level of difference, and actually has very little to do with racial homogeneity and much more to do with a somewhat higher levels of civic engagement but mor-eso, expectations for standards of service.

Anonymous said...

I don't know, Tommy! You're pretty vague there. Actually, Japan is a homogeneous country, in totality. Racially, for sure. I can't understand why you apologists go away to these utopian cities and then even bother to return to New York. New York is definitely in a bad way, but if the people who live in NYC would break out of their voting pattern, they could make changes. Maybe they like it the way it is!

Anonymous said...

Leave half a car space in front of you and the Squeegees won't approach for fear of being run over. (Lesson from the 1980s).

Anonymous said...

In Tokyo, the homeless sleeping on park benches manage to all disappear at 6am

Anonymous said...

The Giuliani Pataki margin of victory left because of 9/11 and the financial crisis.
New residents used to register to vote for school board elections.
You need to get your new neighbors registered to vote.
If they chose to live in your neighborhood they will vote like you.
1990 turnout was mediocre 1/3 now abysmal 1/7.

Anonymous said...

Read a book called "new lies for the old." Then you will understand why this is happening. It's almost complete maybe we have another 10 years if we are lucky.

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