New York Daily News

Bill’s fix takes hit

Vows to add cops & vols to stem gun surge

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND With Thomas Tracy

Mayor de Blasio unveiled new measures to stop the rising tide of gun violence in the city Friday, including an increased police presence in certain areas and getting clergy and community groups more involved in mediating disputes.

The city will increase the number of police on more than 20 streets and city housing projects as part of the plan and will organize “neighborho­od walks” with community leaders and cops to show “common cause.”

“We cannot have people live in fear. We cannot have young people in the crosshairs. It’s not something we will allow in this city,” de Blasio said at a press briefing Friday. “We have to do better.”

De Blasio put specific emphasis on measures being implemente­d in Harlem, where constructi­on worker Kenneth Brown was killed in a hail of bullets Wednesday.

As of July 5, there have been 33 shootings in Manhattan North, which includes all of Harlem as well as Inwood, Washington Heights, the Upper East and Upper West sides along with parts of Midtown. During the same month in 2019, there were 11 shootings.

Accompanyi­ng the mayor at his Friday press briefing was New York Sen. Brian Benjamin, representi­ng Harlem, and Iesha Sekou (right), head of Street Corner Resources, a nonprofit “violence interrupte­r” program.

Sekou said one of the keys to her work is to de-escalate tense situations between rivals, but she raised hackles among city lawmakers after raising one scenario in which interrupte­rs might physically remove someone from a dispute.

“Sometimes you have to grab a kid up once in a while and put him in the van and just say, ‘Look, you’re not getting out until we bring this down,’ ” she said.

City Council members Joe Borelli (R-Staten Island) and Bob Holden (D-Queens) slammed Sekou for the statement, saying it highlights precisely what’s wrong with the mayor’s new approach to law enforcemen­t.

“Obviously, they’re not peace officers. They y can’t forcibly hold someone against their will,” Borelli said. “I understand it may go against their kumbaya mentality, but we need the police for that.”

Holden described such an approach as “totally absurd” and worries someone could get hurt in a scenario like the one Sekou described.

“Have you ever tried to approach a New Yorker who throws some litter out of their car? It escalates,” he said. “Somebody’s going to get shot in the head. These are gang members.”

De Blasio praised Sekou for her remarks, calling them “profound truths.” He acknowledg­ed that Sekou and others like her are putting themselves in “harm’s way” and “put their lives on the line” with the work they do.

But the implicatio­ns of that remain unclear if someone were to get hurt. When questioned, the mayor’s press office and the city Law Department would not outline exactly what violence interrupte­rs are legally empowered to do and whether they’re required to follow any specific safety protocols. City Hall spokeswoma­n Avery Cohen said that in the event of an injury or death, the nonprofit would be liable.

The mayor described the approach as a step away from an “occupying army mindset” on how to deal with violence, presumably a reference to the NYPD. Cohen said de Blasio “was describing the symbiotic relationsh­ip between communitie­s and police we’ve built over the past 6 1⁄2 years.”

“He’s speaking very generally about the paternal role government has traditiona­lly played without addressing root causes of violence,” she said.

We cannot have young people in the crosshairs. It’s not something we will allow in the city. MAYOR DE BLASIO

 ??  ?? Mayor de Blasio’s plan to, in part, use community volunteers to help control an outburst of deadly violence has come under fire.
Mayor de Blasio’s plan to, in part, use community volunteers to help control an outburst of deadly violence has come under fire.
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