New York Daily News

Spike in slays leads troubling crimes trends

- BY ROCCO PARASCANDO­LA, BRITTANY KRIEGSTEIN AND JOHN ANNESE

the family’s silver car.

“RIP My best friend, will never find another and can’t,” read one of the notes. “Will be missed forever.”

Allen — who said she moved her family to Connecticu­t three years ago hoping for a safer, quieter life — waited 24 hours to tell Johnson’s three younger brothers their sister was gone.

“The 9-year-old, he can’t stop crying,” Allen said. “The 11-year-old just keeps everything inside.”

“The baby, that’s her favorite,” the mom said of her 7-year-old son, who spent all day Sunday in Johnson’s bed. “He said, ‘I can’t sleep, I’m just thinking about Tyana.’ ”

Just days before Johnson was killed, she asked her mom for a little cash to help pay expenses and continue her studies — but she also made her mother a promise.

“[She said], ‘Mom, when I reach 21, you don’t have to work no more.’ ” Allen recalled. “I’m like what do you mean? [She said], ‘Because I’m going to be a millionair­e.’

“So I’m like, ‘All right, let’s see.’ But [now] we’re not gonna see that, right?”

Johnson will be buried on June 27 in the Bronx.

“It’s just not right, it’s not fair. I feel like I’m dreaming,” Allen said. “I don’t know if I have any more tears. I just sit there, and I cry and I cry and I pray.”

“I’m just lost,” she said. “Tyana was supposed to bury me, not me burying Tyana.”

A bloody four-week stretch has helped drive murders up by more than 25% across New York compared to a year ago, according to NYPD statistics.

The city saw 38 killings over the past four weeks compared to 19 over the same time frame last year. So far, there have been 32 more murders this year than in the same period in 2019, with 159 through Sunday.

Shootings have also increased this year, with 394 as of Sunday compared to 317 in the same period last year.

The spike continues a trend that started at the beginning of New York’s coronaviru­s lockdown in March, and has persisted as anti police-brutality protests raged across the city following the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

The overall number of the top seven index crimes — murder, rape, robbery, felony assault, burglary, grand larceny and auto theft — is down slightly this year by about 2%. But that’s because the category that sees the most crimes, grand larceny, is down by nearly 19%.

“I think that that can mask some storm clouds,” Police Commission­er Dermot Shea said.

He attributed the jump in part to the state’s bail reform laws, which require suspects be released without bail on virtually all misdemeano­r and several felony charges, most of them non-violent.

“We’ve had a very interestin­g, to say the least, six months, between bail reform, COVID for six months, and now the fallout from Minneapoli­s,” Shea said. “When you look at the last month or so, we are trending in a very difficult direction in terms of gun violence specifical­ly, and that has had the impact on the homicides.”

Burglaries have climbed citywide by 47% for the year so far, with 6,595 incidents versus 4,480 in the same period in 2019.

Auto thefts continued a year-long trend of increases with more than 60% over the same period in 2019.

 ??  ?? Natasha Allen, outside her Seymour, Conn., home on Monday, wears T-shirt honoring her daughter, Tyana Johnson (inset, bottom left), who was killed by stray shots in a Bronx park while celebratin­g her college graduation Friday. Below, notes of condolence on her car. Allen asked suspects (inset left) to turn themselves in.
Natasha Allen, outside her Seymour, Conn., home on Monday, wears T-shirt honoring her daughter, Tyana Johnson (inset, bottom left), who was killed by stray shots in a Bronx park while celebratin­g her college graduation Friday. Below, notes of condolence on her car. Allen asked suspects (inset left) to turn themselves in.
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