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Big Apple top cop slams exclusion of LGBT cops in uniform at NYC Pride March as ‘deeply offensive'
Big Apple top cop slams exclusion of LGBT cops in uniform at NYC Pride March as ‘deeply offensive'

New York Post

time20 hours ago

  • Politics
  • New York Post

Big Apple top cop slams exclusion of LGBT cops in uniform at NYC Pride March as ‘deeply offensive'

This Pride is a damn shame. NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch ripped organizers of this weekend's city Pride March for banning LGBT cops from participating in uniform even though the festivities are relying on police for security. 3 There will be a police presence at the event Sunday. Brigitte Stelzer Advertisement 'It is deeply offensive that for the fifth year in a row, the NYPD's gay officers' action league is banned from fully participating in the New York City Pride March,' the top cop said during a press briefing Friday. 'It is the height of hypocrisy that uniformed officers are fit to line the parade route and keep everyone safe, but they are unable to march in their own uniform and under their own banner.' The event organizer, Heritage of Pride, first informed the Gay Officer Action League (GOAL) in 2021 its members would not be allowed to march in the parade during a wave of George Floyd anti-cop sentiment. Advertisement The ban was supposed to initially last four years before the organization would reconsider its prohibition. Det. Brian Downey, president of GOAL, argued the policy makes 'queer officers vanish, while the same institution is asked to secure the march.' 3 Gay members of the New York City Police Department prepare to march in the annual Queens Gay Pride Parade in 2023. Corbis via Getty Images 'The ones being asked to stay out of sight are us, the gay, the trans, the queer, and our allied officers who have risked everything to serve both this city and this community. It is not about safety, it is about exclusion' Downey said. Advertisement 'We've heard the justifications. We've heard that it's about safe spaces and community trauma, and we respect and we acknowledge that that trauma is real. But this policy does not create safety. It creates friction and fiction.' Heritage of Pride said in a statement it rejected GOAL from marching because the law enforcement group wanted its officer to march with 'the concealed carry of their firearm.' 'GOAL, the Gay Officers Action League, asked for an exception to our weapon policy so their members could march in their full dress uniforms – which includes the concealed carry of their firearm,' a Pride spokesperson said. 'Our membership voted this year to continue our policy for all Marchers without any exceptions for GOAL or other organizations.' Advertisement The Post has sought further comment from GOAL. Tisch said she had 'productive' talks with Heritage of Pride ahead of the parade, but at the '11th hour' she was told cops could not march in uniform two weeks ago. 'I was shocked,' she said, adding organizers did not provide a reason for the prohibition. Mayor Eric Adams said at the briefing he doesn't understand the logic. 3 Tisch and Adams both criticized the decision. Matthew McDermott 'I truly support what GOAL is pushing for,' Hizzoner said. 'The organizers made this decision, members of the LGBTQ+ community and the city — they are not making that decision.' Tisch, during briefing mainly focused on security, said there are no known, credible threats to the parade that is set to start at 11 a.m. or related events this weekend. She said her department has been working with law enforcement partners and organizers to keep attendees safe.

NYPD expands quality-of-life pilot program citywide to tackle daily nuisances
NYPD expands quality-of-life pilot program citywide to tackle daily nuisances

Yahoo

time16-06-2025

  • Yahoo

NYPD expands quality-of-life pilot program citywide to tackle daily nuisances

NEW YORK — The NYPD's stepped-up focus on quality of life infractions is being expanded to all corners of the city, Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch and Mayor Eric Adams announced Monday. The citywide expansion follows a two-month pilot program in six NYPD precincts that resulted in more than 2,700 parking summonses issued, nearly 3,500 abandoned vehicles removed from the streets and about 200 e-bikes, mopeds and scooters seized because they were either illegal or used to commit crimes. The officers involved, assigned to Q Teams in the Quality of Life Division created earlier this year, have made a difference, Tisch said, dealing with the 'exact conditions that New Yorkers were calling about daily.' 'Because these teams are positioned where the complaints are, they're getting there faster,' Tisch said at a press conference at the 69th Precinct stationhouse in Canarsie. 'They're cutting response times an average of 16 minutes.' Adams said the initiative is critical to convincing New Yorkers there is order on the streets. 'We have been successful in bringing down crime,' he said. 'Now we need to match it with people feeling safe.' Critics have called the initiative a return to zero-tolerance 'broken windows' policing. But Tisch has repeatedly refuted that assertion, noting Monday that years ago, when serious crime was much more of a problem, such quality of life enforcement was viewed as 'a pretext to prevent more serious crime.' 'In 2025, this is not about preventing something worse,' she said. 'It's about improving daily life.' The citywide rollout starts in Manhattan on July 14, then moves to the the Bronx on July 21, to Brooklyn a week later and reaches Queens on Aug. 11 and Staten Island on Aug. 18. The Quality of Life divisions will launch in public housing commands Aug. 25. 'The vast majority of New Yorkers haven't been the victim of crime. Most haven't even witnessed one,' Tisch said. 'But what they've lived with is something harder to measure, the gradual breakdown of the things that make a neighborhood feel like home. So this isn't about making arrests, it's about making a difference.'

NYPD expands quality-of-life pilot program citywide to tackle daily nuisances
NYPD expands quality-of-life pilot program citywide to tackle daily nuisances

Yahoo

time16-06-2025

  • Yahoo

NYPD expands quality-of-life pilot program citywide to tackle daily nuisances

NEW YORK — The NYPD's stepped-up focus on quality of life infractions is being expanded to all corners of the city, Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch and Mayor Eric Adams announced Monday. The citywide expansion follows a two-month pilot program in six NYPD precincts that resulted in more than 2,700 parking summonses issued, nearly 3,500 abandoned vehicles removed from the streets and about 200 e-bikes, mopeds and scooters seized because they were either illegal or used to commit crimes. The officers involved, assigned to Q Teams in the Quality of Life Division created earlier this year, have made a difference, Tisch said, dealing with the 'exact conditions that New Yorkers were calling about daily.' 'Because these teams are positioned where the complaints are, they're getting there faster,' Tisch said at a press conference at the 69th Precinct stationhouse in Canarsie. 'They're cutting response times an average of 16 minutes.' Adams said the initiative is critical to convincing New Yorkers there is order on the streets. 'We have been successful in bringing down crime,' he said. 'Now we need to match it with people feeling safe.' Critics have called the initiative a return to zero-tolerance 'broken windows' policing. But Tisch has repeatedly refuted that assertion, noting Monday that years ago, when serious crime was much more of a problem, such quality of life enforcement was viewed as 'a pretext to prevent more serious crime.' 'In 2025, this is not about preventing something worse,' she said. 'It's about improving daily life.' The citywide rollout starts in Manhattan on July 14, then moves to the the Bronx on July 21, to Brooklyn a week later and reaches Queens on Aug. 11 and Staten Island on Aug. 18. The Quality of Life divisions will launch in public housing commands Aug. 25. 'The vast majority of New Yorkers haven't been the victim of crime. Most haven't even witnessed one,' Tisch said. 'But what they've lived with is something harder to measure, the gradual breakdown of the things that make a neighborhood feel like home. So this isn't about making arrests, it's about making a difference.'

Torching of 11 NYPD vehicles in Brooklyn ‘connected' to LA protests, mayor says
Torching of 11 NYPD vehicles in Brooklyn ‘connected' to LA protests, mayor says

American Military News

time16-06-2025

  • American Military News

Torching of 11 NYPD vehicles in Brooklyn ‘connected' to LA protests, mayor says

A vandal torched 11 NYPD police cars in a Brooklyn parking lot just down the street from a police stationhouse early Thursday, police said. At a press conference at the lot near the 83rd Precinct stationhouse on Knickerbocker Ave. and Bleecker St. in Bushwick, Mayor Eric Adams and Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch decried the brazen act of vandalism, which the mayor tied to the ongoing anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles. 'This is unacceptable,' Adams said. 'We have stated over and over again, everyone has a right to peaceful protest. You do not have a right to destroy property of the City of New York. We have reasons to believe the person who participated in this act is connected to some of the protests that's taking place in Los Angeles and throughout the entire country,' he added. But when asked what evidence he had connecting the vandalism to the unrest in LA, Adams did not elaborate. The marked and unmarked NYPD vehicles were set ablaze inside the lot around 1:30 a.m. Thursday, cops said. The FDNY managed to put out the blaze within a few minutes. No injuries were reported, but the vehicles suffered extensive damage, according to officials. Tisch did not offer a motive for the crime, but said that preliminary investigation has turned up surveillance footage of a masked suspect, who is dressed all in black, entering the lot after hopping a fence around 12:40 a.m. Around 40 minutes later, an officer from the 83rd Precinct caught the perpetrator in the act of committing the crime, or 'in flagrante delicto,' as Tisch put it. The officer 'interrupted the perpetrator as he was setting fire to a number of vehicles, at which point the perpetrator threw a piece of plywood and fled through an alleyway,' Tisch said. Investigators believe the vandal poured gasoline on the police cars before setting them on fire. 'On scene we found three vehicles that did not sustain fire damage with unignited fire-starter rolls and haystack bundles scattered across the rear passenger tires, the front tires and the windshield,' Tisch said. 'In total, we found 12 unignited fire-starter balls and 10 unignited haystack bundles, as well as a torch-style lighter — all are legal to possess and can be purchased at stores like Home Depot.' The vandal also busted the windshields of some of the vehicles that weren't torched, a police source said. 'We are in the process of conducting a massive camera canvass at this time,' Tisch said. The incident is being investigated by the NYPD's elite Arson Explosion Investigation Squad. The NYPD could not say if the perpetrator was connected with the protests in LA, as the mayor asserted, but tensions between the Brooklyn neighborhood and police are running high for several reasons. The attack happened just hours after protesters held a 'Speak Out' at the stationhouse, during which they blasted the cops for their treatment of Puerto Rican Day Parade celebrants at after-parties in the neighborhood on Sunday night and Monday morning. Community leaders called for calm as the vandalism stokes growing tensions between the NYPD and Brooklyn residents. City Councilmember Sandy Nurse, D-Bushwick, called the cars' torching 'completely unacceptable.' 'Actions like this have no place in our neighborhood,' Nurse wrote on X Thursday. 'Our community is already under stress with ICE present. Now is the time to de-escalate, stand together and work through our challenges peacefully.' City Councilwoman Jen Gutiérrez, who also represents Bushwick, agreed with Nurse and called for cooler heads to prevail. 'We cannot stand up to this and any other threat with more violence,' Gutiérrez posted. 'We must de-escalate and keep our families safe.' Precinct officers are being accused on social media of having been heavy-handed as they broke up Puerto Rican Parade after-parties in Bushwick on Sunday. 'On Sunday evening, NYPD pigs from the 83rd Precinct launched a fascist offensive against the community of Bushwick, NYC, attacking Puerto Ricans and non-Puerto Ricans during peaceful celebrations during the Manhattan and Brooklyn Puerto Rican Day Parades,' one post noted. 'The first attack happened around the Bush Dyke Bar around 8 p.m. Victims of this unnecessary raid reported being slammed to the ground, resulting in hospitalizations.' In a second incident, cops shut down an after-party at Mood Ring on Myrtle Ave. The incident resulted in at least one hospitalization, BKMag reported. An NYPD spokesman said cops were called to the second venue around 12:20 a.m. Monday after getting a 311 call about a disorderly group outside. Officers tried to disperse the crowd, but several people refused to leave, the spokesman said, adding that at least one partier assaulted a cop trying to move the crowd along. Police took five people into custody. Three were hit with criminal charges, and two were given summonses for disorderly conduct, officials said. The criminal charges ranged from assault and resisting arrest to obstructing government administration and criminal mischief, cops said. 'The NYPD did not shut down the premises and no enforcement action was taken inside the establishment,' the NYPD spokesman added. 'The NYPD entered the establishment only to speak with management.' The NYPD was aware of the Wednesday night protest, but it wasn't immediately clear if it was connected to the arson incident hours afterward. _____ Vandals torched 11 NYPD police cars in a Brooklyn parking lot down the street from a police stationhouse early Thursday, police said. The brazen act of vandalism happened just hours after protesters held a 'Speak Out' at the 83rd Precinct stationhouse on Knickerbocker Ave. and Bleecker St. in Bushwick, decrying the cops for their treatment of Puerto Rican Day Parade celebrants at after-parties in the neighborhood on Sunday night and Monday morning. The NYPD was aware of the Wednesday night demonstration, but it wasn't immediately clear if the two incidents were linked. The marked and unmarked NYPD vehicles were set ablaze inside the lot around 1:30 a.m. Thursday, cops said. The FDNY managed to put out the blaze within a few minutes. No injuries were reported, but the vehicles suffered extensive damage, officials said. Two men dressed in black were seen fleeing the scene. Investigators believe someone poured gasoline on the marked police cars before setting them on fire. A torch lighter was found on the scene. Vandals busted the windshields of some of the vehicles they didn't torch, a police source said. Palm-sized wads of kindling were found in the wheel wells of at least one car. Cops were scouring the area for surveillance video that captures the vandals walking to the lot, which is just down the block from the stationhouse. Community leaders called for calm as the vandalism stokes growing tensions between the NYPD and Brooklyn residents. City Councilmember Sandy Nurse, D-Bushwick, called the torching 'completely unacceptable.' 'Actions like this have no place in our neighborhood,' Nurse wrote on X Thursday. 'Our community is already under stress with ICE present. Now is the time to de-escalate, stand together and work through our challenges peacefully.' City Councilwoman Jen Gutiérrez, who also represents Bushwick, agreed with Nurse and called for cooler heads to prevail. 'We cannot stand up to this and any other threat with more violence,' Gutiérrez posted. 'We must de-escalate and keep our families safe.' Precinct officers are being accused on social media of having been heavy-handed as they broke up Puerto Rican Parade after-parties in Bushwick on Sunday. 'On Sunday evening, NYPD pigs from the 83rd Precinct launched a fascist offensive against the community of Bushwick, NYC, attacking Puerto Ricans and non-Puerto Ricans during peaceful celebrations during the Manhattan and Brooklyn Puerto Rican Day Parades,' one post noted. 'The first attack happened around the Bush Dyke Bar around 8 p.m. Victims of this unnecessary raid reported being slammed to the ground resulting in hospitalizations.' In a second incident, cops shut down an after-party at Mood Ring on Myrtle Ave. The incident resulted in at least one hospitalization, BKMag reported. An NYPD spokesman said cops were called to the venue around 12:20 a.m. Monday after getting a 311 call about a disorderly group outside. Officers tried to disperse the crowd, but several people refused to leave, the spokesman said, adding that at least one partier assaulted a cop trying to move the crowd along. Police took five people into custody. Three were hit with criminal charges, and two were given summonses for disorderly conduct, officials said. The criminal charges ranged from assault and resisting arrest to obstructing government administration and criminal mischief, cops said. 'The NYPD did not shut down the premises and no enforcement action was taken inside the establishment,' the NYPD spokesman added. 'The NYPD entered the establishment only to speak with management.' ___ © 2025 New York Daily News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

NYPD braces for NYC anti-Trump ‘No Kings Day' mass protests on Saturday
NYPD braces for NYC anti-Trump ‘No Kings Day' mass protests on Saturday

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

NYPD braces for NYC anti-Trump ‘No Kings Day' mass protests on Saturday

NEW YORK — Scores of city cops are expected to be out on the streets Saturday to monitor and police the thousands of demonstrators attending Saturday's anti-Trump 'No Kings Day' events, Mayor Eric Adams and Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said, giving protesters fair warning that if they break the law, they will be arrested. 'New Yorkers have different emotions right now, and they have a right to express those emotions. But you don't have a right to engage in violence or lawlessness,' Adams said at a Friday press conference at NYPD Headquarters. 'Do not come tomorrow if you want to bring about any cause of problems. New Yorkers should be able to express their concerns without violence or hate.' Thousands are expected to attend the 'No Kings Day' march in Manhattan on Saturday afternoon. Marchers are expected to meet at Bryant Park around 2 p.m. before they march throughout the city. Other events are scheduled in the outer boroughs and Long Island, as well. Organizers of the 'No Kings Day' events estimate that 75,000 protesters will join Saturday's protest in the city. The event is billed as a nationwide 'day of defiance' against President Donald Trump and his hardline immigration policies. It coincides with Trump's birthday and military parade in Washington, D.C. Police Commissioner Tisch said the NYPD would do everything in its power to ensure people are able to exercise their First Amendment right of free speech. 'For those who seek to peacefully exercise their First Amendment rights tomorrow, we are there to help you do just that,' she said, adding that 'agitators' milling in the crowds may make that difficult. The NYPD has been policing protests against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement tactics at Foley Square in lower Manhattan all week, Tisch said. Thousands have attended those protests, during which roughly 100 were arrested for blocking streets, resisting arrest and assaulting police officers. 'We've facilitated thousands of peaceful protests,' Tisch said Friday. 'When individuals committed crimes, we swiftly arrested them.' 'Tomorrow will be no different,' she added. 'For those intent to commit crimes, incite violence, cause property damage and attack our cops, you will be met with the full strength and determination of the greatest police department in the world.' While they are in constant contact with federal authorities monitoring the situation across the country, Tisch and Adams made it clear to them that they won't need the National Guard or a military presence to help police the protests as Trump ordered in Los Angeles last weekend. 'We made it clear to them in three simple words: We got this,' Adams said. No matter how many protesters show up, the number will pale in comparison to the 8.5 million city residents who will be spending the day going about their business, Adams said. The protesters, he said, will be a 'numerical minority' compared to the population of the city, he said. 'We're not going to romanticize what disorder does to a city. You have seen it played out across the country,' Adams said. 'We cannot allow it to happen here.' 'Our job is to make sure people can go to work and that emergency services can go where they have to go to help New Yorkers. We're not going to allow the numerical minority to impact the quality of life that they deserve.' _____

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