New York Post

Jumaane’s Chutzpah

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Public Advocate Jumaane Williams last week wrote Police Commission­er Dermot Shea demanding answers about “rumors” that the NYPD “is taking part in a deliberate slowdown,” implying that this is the explanatio­n for the “horrific rise in shootings across every borough.” What effing chutzpah.

Williams has devoted much of his career to handcuffin­g the NYPD. As a blistering critic of stop-and-frisk, he led the City Council to pass the Community Safety Act in 2013 over then-Mayor Mike Bloomberg’s veto, installing an Inspector General over the department and creating a “ban on racial profiling” — one in a long series of police “reforms,” all authored or backed by Williams, that leave officers second-guessing their every move, with ever-growing fears that their lives will be ruined simply because they did their jobs in a way that doesn’t meet standards that ignore street reality.

The capper was the new law that criminaliz­es not just police use of “chokeholds,” but a large variety of physical contact with a perp — even one violently resisting arrest.

Last month, as the council moved to “defund the NYPD,” Williams threatened to block city property-tax collection­s if he didn’t think the cuts were deep enough. Then he complained that a budget that eliminated the entire next NYPD class of recruits to shrink the force by 1,000-plus still allowed for a chance of hiring new cops.

Beat officers, especially, have gotten the message: Avoid trouble.

Don’t act on any mere suspicion or instinct to check out possible criminal activity. Leave the obvious gang-bangers alone — the gangs all have lawyers ready to make your life hell. Beware of any physical contact. Unless explicitly ordered, stay out of areas where a crowd might surround you screaming the instant you try to act on a clear violation.

“Deliberate slowdown,” Mr. Advocate? No, this is the result of your deliberate demands — the end of the aggressive policing that you’ve been complainin­g about non-stop for the last decade.

You got exactly what you wished for, Jumaane — and the whole city’s paying the price.

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