New York Post

Adams: Cops, do your jobs

Suspects ‘reform’ slowdown

- By TINA MOORE and JORGE FITZ-GIBBON tmoore@nypost.com

Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams is demanding the NYPD prove it’s not dragging its feet fighting crime in the wake of police reforms maligned by department brass and law-enforcemen­t unions.

Adams (inset), himself a retired police captain, said he has gotten complaints from cops on the beat and residents who said they were forced to go to precinct station houses in person when officers didn’t respond to calls for help — only to be brushed off, he told The Post Sunday.

“The increase in crime is one thing, but not responding to crime is another thing,” he said, referencin­g a rise in shootings, murders and burglaries gripping the city this year.

“And that is what we must determine. We can’t have police not responding to jobs,” Adams said. “We’re penalizing certain communitie­s based on the action of what people believe elected officials have done. And that can’t happen.”

In a letter to Police Commission­er Dermot Shea released Sunday, the beep told the top cop that officers have a duty to hustle when summoned, and asked the department to determine “if recent policy changes have caused an unofficial slowdown.”

“New York City cannot have a police force that is either not responding to calls or delaying response to calls due to fear,” Adams wrote.

“While NYPD leadership may not agree with the City Council’s actions regarding police reform, this cannot be used as an excuse for reduced response time from the NYPD.”

Mayor de Blasio last week signed a series of City Council-passed measures allowing prosecutor­s to criminally charge police who use chokeholds or sit, kneel or stand on a suspect’s chest and back.

The legislatio­n came amid nationwide backlash against police following the May 25 police-custody death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, who died after being pinned down by the neck while repeatedly pleading, “I can’t breathe.”

New York City has been plagued by an rise in shootings and a precipitou­s drop in arrests this year.

NYPD data released last week show that citywide arrests for major crimes over a 28-day period were down by 62 percent over the prior month, compared to the same time period last year.

Meanwhile, shooting incidents had spiked by more than 210 percent over the same month from last year.

The city’s new reforms have also prompted several neighborin­g department­s to issue decrees barring their officers from law-enforcemen­t activities within the five boroughs, including Nassau County and Westcheste­r County.

Adams said the new NYPD restrictio­ns are no excuse for lax policing. He said each precinct has an integrity unit that has 911 response times available and wants to have those numbers compiled and released.

“There were many bills and laws that were passed while I was a police officer that I didn’t like,” he said. “But I was a profession­al, and that’s what our police must maintain.”

Adams said he has not gotten a reply to his letter to Shea.

Police officials did not respond to a request for comment.

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