New York Daily News

NYPD BIGS ONLY ‘HUMAN’

Eric backs brass who hit pol, scribes over crimefight­ing gripes

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

Mayor Adams said Tuesday that a group of top NYPD officials were having “a human reaction” when they launched sharp-edged social media sprees against two journalist­s and a City Council member over the weekend.

The social media salvos from Chief of Patrol John Chell, Chief of Department Jeffrey Maddrey, Deputy Commission­er Kaz Daughtry and Transit Chief Michael Kempner came in the wake of last week's killing of NYPD Officer Jonathan Diller.

Defending the online outbursts during a Tuesday afternoon briefing at City Hall, Adams said the “rawness” of the NYPD honchos' posts can be explained by the “pain” they were enduring from Diller's death. Diller's wake was Thursday and Friday; his funeral was held Saturday.

“Sometimes I think folks forget that these are human beings,” Adams said. “What you saw from Chell and Daughtry, you saw a human reaction.”

Adams, a retired NYPD captain, also dismissed the notion that the police officials “attacked” people online.

“I don't think they attacked anyone — they responded,” he said after initially telling reporters he wouldn't offer any comment about the posts.

One of the most biting posts came from Chell, who oversees the NYPD's day-today deployment of patrol cops.

The X post, thumbed out Friday evening by Chell, blasted Queens Councilwom­an Tiffany Caban for responding approvingl­y to a video of Olayemi Olurin, a lawyer and media personalit­y, criticizin­g Adams over his public safety agenda in a highly publicized interview on Power 105.1 last week.

“Pheeeww, under this Mayor crime is down while fighting ridiculous policies that your friends put in place and he inherited,” Chell tweeted at Caban from his official NYPD account. “Policies hurting everyday NYers in our city! Tick Tock… You know, as I travel through the city and spend time doing media just about everyday, the community always asks me what can we do to help? I always say to all NYers, ‘If you want change, vote the change you seek.'”

By city law, local government officials cannot use municipal resources, including official social media handles, to “electionee­r,” a term used to describe activity that's political in nature.

In response to Chell's post, Caban wrote on X Saturday: “Are you electionee­ring from your official account?”

Asked by the Daily News about the electionee­ring issue, Adams said he didn't “think the chief was electionee­ring.”

Caban, a democratic socialist, pushed back.

“Chief Chell used his official account to repeatedly praise the mayor, who is a candidate for office, and concluded by urging everyone to vote. That is explicitly prohibited conduct by an NYPD official,” Caban told The News.

The city Conflicts of Interest Board, which enforces laws on electionee­ring and other ethics issues, declined to comment on whether Chell's message might have engaged in electionee­ring, citing confidenti­ality rules.

The other two individual­s who faced the NYPD officials' wrath online over the weekend were Olurin and Daily News columnist Harry Siegel, senior editor at The City nonprofit news organizati­on.

A Siegel column published Saturday about public safety misstated the number of killings in the subway system so far this year, an error later corrected by The News.

Kempner, Daughtry, Chell and Maddrey all pushed out multiple X posts calling out Siegel by name over the error. A post from the NYPD's main X account even derisively called Harry “Deceitful” Siegel.

Maddrey, Daughtry and Chell also over the weekend posted and reposted various messages ripping Olurin over her critical 105.1 interview with Adams. In one message, Chell challenged Olurin to come to Diller's Saturday funeral so they could “talk.”

In his Tuesday briefing, Adams suggested the laments against Siegel and Olurin were justified.

“I believe in a free press, but the free press should be held accountabl­e, too,” he said.

The spats with Caban and the others come on the heels of NYPD leaders in recent months stepping up their use of social media to criticize people.

Last month, Chell apologized after putting out an X message misidentif­ying a Manhattan judge he had railed against online for not setting bail in a criminal case.

ISTANBUL — A fire at an Istanbul nightclub during renovation­s on Tuesday killed at least 29 people, officials and reports said. Several people, including managers of the club, were detained for questionin­g.

At least one person was being treated at a hospital, the Istanbul governor’s office said in a statement.

The Masquerade nightclub, which was closed for renovation­s, was on the ground and basement floors of a 16-story residentia­l building in the Besiktas district on the European side of the city bisected by the Bosphorus. The fire was extinguish­ed.

Gov. Davut Gul told reporters at the scene (photo) that the cause of the fire was under investigat­ion and the victims were believed to be involved in the renovation work.

Some of the victims died in hospitals where they were rushed in ambulances, private NTV television reported.

Authoritie­s detained six people for questionin­g, including managers of the club and one person in charge of the renovation­s, Gul’s office said.

The nightclub was closed for the holy Muslim month of Ramadan, and its owners were trying to complete the renovation work in time for next week’s Eid holiday, which follows the month of fasting, NTV reported.

Police sealed off the area while power and natural gas to the neighborho­od was cut off as a safety precaution.

Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu said authoritie­s were inspecting the entire building to assess its safety.

Several firefighti­ng and medical teams were dispatched to the scene, he said.

The nightclub had not obtained the necessary permit to undertake constructi­on and renovation­s, the mayor said.

 ?? ?? Speaking Tuesday at City Hall, Mayor Adams defended NYPD Chief of Patrol John Chell (bottom) and other police officials who lashed out at critics in the aftermath of killing of Officer Jonathan Diller.
Speaking Tuesday at City Hall, Mayor Adams defended NYPD Chief of Patrol John Chell (bottom) and other police officials who lashed out at critics in the aftermath of killing of Officer Jonathan Diller.
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