New York Daily News

B’klyn pol urges NYPD to press gunmakers on safety features

- BY ROCCO PARASCANDO­LA

A Brooklyn state senator is urging the NYPD to use its buying power to pressure gunmakers to take better advantage of the technologi­es that can help drive down shootings.

State Sen. Zellnor Myrie said the nation’s largest police department is second only to the U.S. military in the number of guns it buys — and that weapons manufactur­ers would listen if the NYPD said it would do business only with those that made gun safety a priority.

In a letter sent Monday to Police Commission­er Edward Caban, Myrie (photo bottom) urged him to join the Gun Safety Consortium, an amalgam of elected officials and law enforcemen­t agencies that have “joined together to encourage the developmen­t of technologi­es and products that will help gun owners secure their firearms, as well as products that can help law enforcemen­t investigat­e and prevent gun-related crimes.”

Guns using fingerprin­t and facial recognitio­n technology have emerged in recent years as ways to limit the use of a gun to its rightful owner — meaning if the weapon is stolen or sold on the black market, another person would be unable to fire it.

The NYPD said it would review Myrie’s letter.

“Is this a panacea for gun violence?” said the state senator. “No, but I think there’s an expectatio­n we do everything in our power, and I certainly believe the Police Department is in a position to force some changes that would keep more New Yorkers safe.”

Myrie, a Democrat, represents several neighborho­ods, including East Flatbush, where gun violence is often a problem.

The consortium lists as its members 20 jurisdicti­ons around the country, including Bridgeport, Conn. It did not respond to a request for comment.

Gun violence in New York City spiked during the pandemic, but has dropped the past two years, though it remains a persistent problem in a number of neighborho­ods that also have gang problems.

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