New York Post

NYC’s Safest Year Yet

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Proving yet again that smart policing makes a huge difference, the NYPD in 2016 delivered record lows in crime — continuing a decades-long local trend even as other major US cities lost ground. The numbers are stunning:

“Index crime” — the total number of incidents in seven major-offense categories — fell 4.1 percent, to a record low of 101,606. Of those categories, only felony assaults saw a slight rise, up 2 percent.

Every borough, and most precincts, saw index-crime drops.

Most impressive: a 12 percent dip in shootings, putting the total at 998 — the first time it fell below 1,000 since the department started collecting stats in the early ’90s.

Homicides also fell 4.8 percent — to 335, versus 352 in 2015 — a hair above the modern low of 333 in 2014.

But this isn’t merely about numbers; it’s about lives saved, property protected — and giving New Yorkers the peace of mind to go about their daily lives, knowing they’re safe.

This, when cities from Los Angeles to Philadelph­ia to Baltimore face major crime spikes. Chicago’s murder rate last year was

six times New York’s. Behind the NYPD’s latest success is what Deputy Commission­er Dermot Shea terms a “confluence” of changes: better community engagement under new Commission­er James O’Neill’s “neighborho­od policing” initiative, the hiring of 2,000 more cops and greater use of new technology.

It all helps enable “precision policing,” which focuses on hard-core bad guys, as well as a sustained anti-gun effort to, as Shea puts it, make illegal firearms “radioactiv­e.”

Thanks go to the leadership of former Commission­er Bill Bratton and O’Neill, and to the work of the entire force, from other top brass to every cop on the beat.

And ex-Commission­er Ray Kelly, who in 2013 handed over the most profession­al force in NYPD history.

And, yes, to Mayor de Blasio — who lets New York’s Finest continue to work miracles. For all his past stumbles, the historymak­ing comes on his watch.

Above all, kudos to the men and women in blue for a vital job well done.

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