New York City Mayor Eric Adams said he's cracking down on crime in the city's subway system by deploying 1,000 additional off...
New York City Mayor Eric Adams said he's cracking down on crime in the city's subway system by deploying 1,000 additional officers as well as teams of health workers to address rampant homelessness on the transit system.
Adams announced the new Subway Safety Plan initiative on Friday with Gov. Kathy Hochul, who said the state would deliver 600 new psychiatric beds another another 500 beds at shelters in the city to try and provide help for those currently living in the subways, many of whom suffer from severe mental illness.
It comes amid a spate of shocking crimes in NYC, including the death of a Deloitte advertising executive killed after she was pushed in front of a train in an unprovoked attack at Times Square Station in January.
The state will also be investing $9 million a year to recruit psychiatrist and nurses as Adams said a 30 teams of service and health workers would also be deployed to work alongside officers at the subway.
'Let's be clear on this, [the homeless] are not dangerous,' Adams said. 'The vast majority are not dangerous, but we have to be honest about the number of individuals dealing with mental health crises. They are dangerous to themselves and dangerous to New Yorkers.'
The plan comes after a breakdancer was stabbed by a homeless man yesterday and in the wake of Michelle Go's murder, where the 40-year-old was pushed beneath a train last month by a homeless man with a history of mental illness.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams announced the new Subway Safety Plan initiative on Friday as a way to crackdown on crime and violence in the city's transit system
Gov. Kathy Hochul said the state was investing more than $39 billion on beds to address mental health needs in New York, including 1,100 beds for the city
The city has deployed an additional 1,000 officers to patrol the subway system starting Friday
Adams said NYPD officers would be deployed on the A, E, 1, 2, N and R lines and that service workers would be part of 'End of the Line' teams with officers to make sure the trains are cleared during their final stops.
The health workers would be there to help the mentally-ill and guide them to the city's support services, while the officers are directed to enforce laws against laying down, sleeping, outstretching, littering, drug use and aggressive behavior towards riders.
'No more smoking, no more doing drugs, no more sleeping, no more doing barbecues on the subway system,' Adams said.
'No more just doing whatever you want. No, those days are over… The system was not made to be housing, it's made to be transportation.'
Hochul added, 'We will accomplish what new Yorkers deserve, and that is a safe ride on our subway system while also recognizing the very real humanitarian crisis that has been unfolding before our eyes for far too long.'
Officers have been tasked with enforcing rules against sleeping and outstretching on the train
There will be 'End of the Line' teams to empty out subways and remove sleeping passengers
Health workers will be with the officers to help out mentally ill homeless people
Psychiatrist and nurses will also point the homeless to the city's support services
40-year-old consultant Michelle Go killed after a homeless man shoved her in front of a subway car in January. Her murder started calls for safety in NYC's subway system
The plan also involves an expansion of Kendra's Law, a 1999 statue that allows judges to force outpatient treatment for mentally ill people.
The initiative has drawn worry from advocates of the homeless who fear it could be used to target a vulnerable population.
'We are terrified about what is to come,' Josh Dean, executive director of Human. NYC told the Gothamist.
'Aggressive NYPD targeting of homeless New Yorkers does not solve homelessness — it just moves it. We need to take an entirely different approach, centered around housing, around compassion, and around building trust. We cannot more strongly condemn today's plan and the dehumanizing rhetoric that accompanied it.'
Adams and Hochul's plan comes after a spate of crimes have plagued New York City's subway system, which services about 3 million people every day.
On Thursday a 22-year-old unnamed man, was performing on the train when he was stabbed twice in the leg and once in the arm.
Police say the victim was stabbed by an unknown individual while on the train at the 14th Street and 3rd Avenue L-train subway station in Manhattan just after 2 p.m.
The suspect fled after leaving the train at the 1st Avenue subway stop. The victim stayed on the train before getting off at the Bedford station in Brooklyn's Williamsburg.
The victim was then taken to Bellevue Hospital in Brooklyn, where he was said to be in stable condition.
The suspect was described by police as a man in his 40s. They believe that he is homeless.
It remains unclear what led to the stabbing. The incident is under investigation.
WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT
An investigation is underway after a 22-year-old man was stabbed while aboard an L train
Police say the victim was stabbed by an unknown individual just after 2 p.m. at the 14th Street and 3rd Avenue subway station
Police set up camp outside the 1st Avenue L train station in Brooklyn
The platform was temporarily closed off at the station
The most notable incident involved Michelle Alyssa Go, 40, a senior manager at consulting conglomerate Deloitte.
She died on January 15 died after Simon Martial allegedly shoved her off the platform at West 42nd Street and Broadway at around 9:40 am.
When Martial, who has a lengthy criminal history, was asked by a reporter if he had been the one to push Go, he seemingly admitted to killing the subway rider and said: 'Yes, because I'm God. Yes, I did it. I'm God. I can do it.'
Speaking to the New York Post last month, Martial's older sister, Josette Simon, from Georgia, argued that her brother belonged in a mental health facility and should have been kept off the streets.
Nearly all types of crime are on the rise in New York City
Nearly every single police precinct in New York City has seen spikes in crime so far this year - including five in which the rate has doubled, new data from the NYPD shows
According to the recently released crime data - which takes into account offenses occurring up until the week ending on February 6 - robberies have soared by almost 35 percent when compared to the same period in 2021.
Rape has also increased by more than 35 percent and overall crime in the Big Apple has skyrocketed by 41.65 percent, according to the data.
Murders, meanwhile, are down 13 percent at this time over last year, while shootings have increased by a startling 30 percent.
New NYPD data shows that nearly every police precinct in New York City has seen spikes in crime this year - including five in which the rate has doubled.
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