High-ranking NYPD chiefs asked to join subway patrols

The NYPD’s highest-ranking chiefs at the moment are using the rails as a part of Mayor Eric Adams crackdown on subway crime, The Publish has discovered.

Below the brand new coverage, initiated by Adams, dozens of uniformed police chiefs will likely be cut up into pairs to enterprise into the underground — two per eight-hour shift, police sources stated.

“Mayor needs the subways to really feel protected,” stated one high-ranking cop. “Chiefs on the subway will spur vital presence, on the very least, on the outset. The flip aspect is these results are all the time momentary.”

Greater than 100 chiefs — together with one-, two-, three- and four-star chiefs — will likely be required to signal out and in with the NYPD Transit Bureau earlier than and after their scheduled subway shifts, in response to an e mail despatched to NYPD brass Monday and obtained by The Publish.

The e-mail directed the highest cops to “journey the trains at some point of your transit tour and report any circumstances.”

Chris Monahan, president of the Captains Endowment Affiliation, stated inserting chiefs on trains was “the fallacious method in dealing with the scenario within the subway.”

NYC Mayor Eric Adams
Police Union heads argue Mayor Eric Adams’ coverage will waste invaluable assets.
Robert Miller

“They'd be higher served of their communities to sort out crime and high quality of life points. The NYPD has sufficient assets to deal with the present issues,” Monahan stated in a press release.

“Extra emphasis needs to be centered on the elected officers who've determined to not prosecute violent criminals, modified legal guidelines that enable felons to go free, and decriminalized minor offenses which have saved subway ridership protected for years.”

Metropolis Corridor deferred to the NYPD, which didn't instantly return a request for remark.

The brand new directive comes as Adams seems to be to fight a surge in subway violence.

The NYPD reported a slight bump in felonies on the subways in January in comparison with December, regardless of considerably decrease ridership due to the Omicron variant, in response to The Publish’s evaluation of police and MTA figures.

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