
DA Alvin Bragg put criminals first — I'll end era of excuses
Not on the subway. Not in the street. In the courthouse itself.
It's hard to imagine a clearer sign of how broken our justice system has become under Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.
The place where consequences are supposed to be delivered has now become one more place where criminals act without fear.
In any other city, this would be shocking. In New York, it feels familiar.
This is what happens when a DA spends three years telling violent offenders there's always another excuse, another downgrade, another way out — and signals, on Day 1, that avoiding consequences is the office's top priority.
Bragg's notorious 'day one memo' wasn't just internal guidance; it was a manifesto.
It told prosecutors to avoid seeking jail time in the vast majority of cases, to downgrade serious felonies like armed robbery to misdemeanors, and to simply stop prosecuting certain crimes altogether.
Fare evasion, resisting arrest, trespassing were suddenly off the table. Even when the law said otherwise, Bragg instructed his staff to stand down.
That memo sent a clear message: consequences don't matter.
And the results have been just as clear, with repeat offenders cycling through the system, emboldened criminals targeting stores and subway riders, and an entire city worn down by lawlessness and fear.
That's why my first act as district attorney will be to rescind Bragg's memo and replace it with my own.
I call it the 'People's Plan for Public Safety': a focused, commonsense framework to restore accountability and protect Manhattan neighborhoods.
The plan is built around three simple principles.
First, prosecute violent crime fully and fairly. Manhattan families have the right to feel safe in their homes, on their blocks and in the subways.
Under my plan, violent felony crimes including robbery, assault and weapons charges will be treated with the seriousness they deserve.
I'll empower prosecutors and instruct them to pursue felony charges and real consequences, not discourage and prohibit them from doing their jobs.
Second, fix what's broken in our bail system.
New Yorkers understand that bail reform went too far. It tied the hands of judges and made it harder to hold even dangerous repeat offenders.
New York is now the only state in the union in which a judge may not consider a defendant's 'dangerousness' when setting bail.
We've all seen the stories: individuals with long rap sheets released again and again — until someone else gets hurt.
My office will work with state lawmakers and the NYPD commissioner to restore judicial discretion and make sure pretrial release decisions account for real-world risks.
Third, stand with law enforcement and the public.
I will rebuild trust between prosecutors and police, while keeping both accountable to the people they serve.
Manhattan needs a DA's office that's willing to work with officers to keep our streets safe — not one that second-guesses every arrest, refuses to prosecute suspects who resist our cops, and undermines any effort to restore and maintain order.
To rebuild the quality of life we have lost under Bragg, we must go back to crime-fighting basics.
Every morning, the NY POSTcast offers a deep dive into the headlines with the Post's signature mix of politics, business, pop culture, true crime and everything in between. Subscribe here!
No more catch-and-release.
No more revolving doors for career criminals.
No more policies that confuse compassion with chaos.
On Day 1 of my term, the era of excuses ends, and the era of accountability begins.
I say this not just as a candidate, but as a mother raising four kids in Manhattan — and a former public defender who's worked in these courtrooms.
I've seen what happens when the system fails, and I know what it will take to fix it.
Because Bragg's memo didn't just alter how cases are handled; it changed the entire expectation of justice in Manhattan.
It told victims they wouldn't be our top priority.
It told criminals they wouldn't be punished.
And it told law enforcement they'd be fighting crime with one hand tied behind their back.
That's why on my Day 1, I will remind every would-be offender that in Manhattan, we don't hand out permission slips for crime.
We will make accountability the standard again, restore the rule of law — and, at long last, protect the public.
Maud Maron is a candidate for Manhattan district attorney and a former Legal Aid Society public defender.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
3 hours ago
- CBS News
NYPD investigating after off-duty officer carjacked in Bronx, sources say
An investigation is underway after sources told CBS News New York that an off-duty police officer was carjacked in the Bronx. It happened just before 11 p.m. on Saturday on Ward Ave. near Bruckner Blvd. in Soundview. According to police, a 27-year-old man was in his car when someone grabbed him and forcibly pulled him out of the vehicle. Sources told CBS News New York that the victim is a police officer who was off duty at the time of the incident. Overnight into the early morning hours of Sunday, the New Rochelle Police Department received a call about a car crash. When they arrived at the scene, they discovered that it was the same vehicle involved in the carjacking earlier in the night. No one was inside the crashed vehicle when officers arrived. According to police, so far no arrests have been made. The name of the off-duty officer who was carjacked was not released. It is also not known what department he worked for. No additional details on the incident are currently available. Slashing in midtown Manhattan In an unrelated incident Saturday night, the NYPD is also investigating a slashing that took place in midtown Manhattan. It happened Sunday around 2:30 a.m. outside a bar on West 51st Street near the corner of 8th Ave. When police arrived, they found a man had been slashed on the left arm. He was taken to the hospital in stable condition. NYPD did not say if anyone has been arrested in the incident.


New York Post
3 hours ago
- New York Post
Unlike Zohran Mamdani, most Dems want prosperity — not class warfare
Liberals and progressives are celebrating Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani's primary victory as proof that New York City is ready for a 'democratic socialist' revolution. They're badly in need of a history lesson: Every socialist revolution has failed and set back the goals it meant to accomplish. Everywhere it has been tried, socialism has meant economic decay at best and mass death at worst. The global death toll from socialism and communism is roughly 100 million souls. Whether the victims died in Stalinist gulags, Mao's Great Leap famine or Pol Pot's 'killing fields,' the underlying logic was the same: When the state owns everything, the individual owns nothing — not even his life. Mamdani's own platform may seem more anodyne, but it is a distilled sampler of socialism's greatest failures: nationalized businesses (public utilities), price controls (rent freezes, 'affordable' everything) and government-run retail. Meanwhile, capitalism's ledger shows no mass graves — only the lifted living standards of billions. Even China's rise from Mao-made famine to middle-class affluence began the day Deng Xiaoping opened markets and let peasants keep what they grew. Mamdani promises city-run groceries to 'bring down prices,' as if 8 million New Yorkers will flock to a public-owned store without remembering Venezuela's empty-shelf socialism. He proposes a rent freeze, forcing down the price of housing. Berlin's leftist government tried the same stunt with its 2020 Mietendeckel: Apartment listings collapsed 41.5% in a single year. He proposes fare-free buses. Tallinn, Estonia, made transit free in 2013; a Royal Institute of Technology audit found ridership rose barely 3% and car traffic scarcely fell, even as taxpayers picked up the heavy bill. He proposes no-cost child care. Quebec's celebrated '$5-a-day' day care ballooned in cost and delivered a 'sizeable negative shock to non-cognitive skills' that lingered into adolescence, per the National Bureau of Economic Research — along with higher crime and lower life satisfaction. All this is funded, naturally, by punishing 'the rich' — until they decamp to Florida, just as over a million wealth-holders fled Fidel Castro's Cuba, 6 million Venezuelans (most college educated) abandoned Nicolás Maduro's 'Bolivarian miracle' and 15% of Russia's millionaires bolted in a single year once Vladimir Putin's neo-Soviet expansion started. The socialist mayoral hopeful's web site also touts 'public ownership of utilities,' a polite phrase for state takeover of the power grid. Another of Mamdani's proposals is boosting the city's minimum wage to $30 an hour by 2030 — an 82% jump. Every morning, the NY POSTcast offers a deep dive into the headlines with the Post's signature mix of politics, business, pop culture, true crime and everything in between. Subscribe here! That would saddle small employers with entry-level labor costs near $65,000 a year, forcing many to lay off staff, automate or close — and leave fewer rungs on the ladder for new workers. Then there's policing. This may be the part of Mamdani's platform that is most acutely not what it seems. In 2020, Mamdani embraced 'defund the police' during the city's summer of riots. Now he says he merely wants to shift funds to a new Department of Community Safety. Here's the irony socialists rarely acknowledge: Every successful socialist leader, from Venezuela's Hugo Chávez and Maduro Venezuela to Colombia's Gustavo Petro and Mexico's Claudia Sheinbaum's Mexico, has depended on a stronger, more intrusive police force to enforce rationing, suppress dissent and make those neat five-year plans look 'orderly.' Finally, his 'Trump-proofing' proposal — getting ICE out of NYC and ending any cooperation with the feds — sounds like an open invitation for gangs like the Tren de Aragua and MS-13. Do New York City socialists expect everyone to hold hands and sing Kumbaya? Mamdani's agenda is doomed to fail because it doesn't understand that NYC's problem is not capitalism but its own government. High costs in New York stem from layers of policy that strangle them: restrictive zoning locks 75% of residential land into one- and two-family lots, prevailing-wage and union rules push subway construction to an eye-watering $2 billion to $3 billion per mile, and the New York City Housing Authority's $80 billion repair backlog shows what happens when government runs housing. Add the nation's heaviest big-city tax burden and miles of red tape, and you've got an economy in which prices climb and paychecks stall. Why are Democrats doing this to themselves? Part of the answer is Donald Trump. An unconventional Republican back in the White House has driven many liberals to think the best response is a hard-left hook. But backing Mamdani's agenda clashes with that of the majority of Democratic voters who value prosperity over class warfare — among them the millions of Latinos who've escaped socialism, support Democrats and now face a party willing to impose on them the very ideas that prompted them to flee. Santiago Vidal Calvo is a policy analyst at the Manhattan Institute. The views are his own and not those of the Manhattan Institute.


New York Post
4 hours ago
- New York Post
DA Alvin Bragg put criminals first — I'll end era of excuses
A Manhattan courthouse became a crime scene last month when a man with multiple open criminal cases slashed two law enforcement officers in the neck and face — inside the very building where justice is supposed to be enforced. Not on the subway. Not in the street. In the courthouse itself. It's hard to imagine a clearer sign of how broken our justice system has become under Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. The place where consequences are supposed to be delivered has now become one more place where criminals act without fear. In any other city, this would be shocking. In New York, it feels familiar. This is what happens when a DA spends three years telling violent offenders there's always another excuse, another downgrade, another way out — and signals, on Day 1, that avoiding consequences is the office's top priority. Bragg's notorious 'day one memo' wasn't just internal guidance; it was a manifesto. It told prosecutors to avoid seeking jail time in the vast majority of cases, to downgrade serious felonies like armed robbery to misdemeanors, and to simply stop prosecuting certain crimes altogether. Fare evasion, resisting arrest, trespassing were suddenly off the table. Even when the law said otherwise, Bragg instructed his staff to stand down. That memo sent a clear message: consequences don't matter. And the results have been just as clear, with repeat offenders cycling through the system, emboldened criminals targeting stores and subway riders, and an entire city worn down by lawlessness and fear. That's why my first act as district attorney will be to rescind Bragg's memo and replace it with my own. I call it the 'People's Plan for Public Safety': a focused, commonsense framework to restore accountability and protect Manhattan neighborhoods. The plan is built around three simple principles. First, prosecute violent crime fully and fairly. Manhattan families have the right to feel safe in their homes, on their blocks and in the subways. Under my plan, violent felony crimes including robbery, assault and weapons charges will be treated with the seriousness they deserve. I'll empower prosecutors and instruct them to pursue felony charges and real consequences, not discourage and prohibit them from doing their jobs. Second, fix what's broken in our bail system. New Yorkers understand that bail reform went too far. It tied the hands of judges and made it harder to hold even dangerous repeat offenders. New York is now the only state in the union in which a judge may not consider a defendant's 'dangerousness' when setting bail. We've all seen the stories: individuals with long rap sheets released again and again — until someone else gets hurt. My office will work with state lawmakers and the NYPD commissioner to restore judicial discretion and make sure pretrial release decisions account for real-world risks. Third, stand with law enforcement and the public. I will rebuild trust between prosecutors and police, while keeping both accountable to the people they serve. Manhattan needs a DA's office that's willing to work with officers to keep our streets safe — not one that second-guesses every arrest, refuses to prosecute suspects who resist our cops, and undermines any effort to restore and maintain order. To rebuild the quality of life we have lost under Bragg, we must go back to crime-fighting basics. Every morning, the NY POSTcast offers a deep dive into the headlines with the Post's signature mix of politics, business, pop culture, true crime and everything in between. Subscribe here! No more catch-and-release. No more revolving doors for career criminals. No more policies that confuse compassion with chaos. On Day 1 of my term, the era of excuses ends, and the era of accountability begins. I say this not just as a candidate, but as a mother raising four kids in Manhattan — and a former public defender who's worked in these courtrooms. I've seen what happens when the system fails, and I know what it will take to fix it. Because Bragg's memo didn't just alter how cases are handled; it changed the entire expectation of justice in Manhattan. It told victims they wouldn't be our top priority. It told criminals they wouldn't be punished. And it told law enforcement they'd be fighting crime with one hand tied behind their back. That's why on my Day 1, I will remind every would-be offender that in Manhattan, we don't hand out permission slips for crime. We will make accountability the standard again, restore the rule of law — and, at long last, protect the public. Maud Maron is a candidate for Manhattan district attorney and a former Legal Aid Society public defender.