New York Post

Oh, ‘poor’ them? Yes, the victims

- JASON RILEY

BEING mayor of New York comes with lots of media attention, but anyone who has held the job can tell you that the real power is in Albany, the state capital, where the governor and Legislatur­e hold major sway over everything from the subways to the public schools.

Mayor Adams was back in Albany this past month asking his state overlords to rethink bailreform measures passed in 2019 that protect crime suspects from pretrial detention. The number of shopliftin­g complaints in New York City rose by 45% in 2022 to more than 63,000, according to NYPD data. The mayor sees an obvious connection that too many of his fellow liberal Democrats willfully ignore.

In his testimony, Adams argued that soft-on-crime policies hit poor communitie­s the hardest, not only in terms of public safety but also economical­ly.

“When you do a real analysis in our pursuit of making sure people who commit crimes are receiving the justice they deserve, we can’t forget the people who are the victims of crimes,” he said.

The mayor also pushed back at the common argument made by social-justice advocates that arresting and prosecutin­g lawbreaker­s is tantamount to “criminaliz­ing” poverty.

“People who state that we’re criminaliz­ing the poor,” he said, are wrong. Moreover, crime is costing the city jobs and businesses. New Yorkers are “unemployed because we’re losing those businesses in our city. We can’t allow repeated offenders to make a mockery of the criminal-justice system.”

The belief that poverty is the root cause of crime may be popular, but it doesn’t hold up to scrutiny. For starters, most poor people aren’t criminals. In a previous era, when Americans were significan­tly poorer than they are today, crime rates were significan­tly lower. Crime during the Great Depression was lower than during the 1960s, a decade of tremendous economic growth and prosperity.

In 1960, the black-male homicide rate was 45 per 100,000. By 1990 it had climbed by more than 200% to 140 per 100,000, even though black average incomes by then were much higher, and the black poverty rate much lower, than 30 years earlier.

In a recently published book about criminal-justice reform, “Criminal (In)justice,” Rafael Mangual notes that this disconnect between crime and poverty continues today. Mangual writes that between 1990 and 2018, murders in New York City declined by 87%, a period during which the city’s poverty rate increased slightly. Black residents today “experience poverty at a lower rate (19.2 percent) than their Hispanic (23.9 percent) and Asian (24.1 percent) counterpar­ts, who account for much smaller shares of the city’s gun violence.”

Last month the local Fox station in New York did a story on how local bodegas are trying to combat the rise in customers looking for five-finger discounts. It featured footage of laundry detergent and other items that had to be kept behind the counter or chained to shelves in the aisles to deter thieves. The piece perfectly illustrate­d the concerns of Adams, a former police officer who understand­s that crime victims shouldn’t be an afterthoug­ht.

New businesses are less likely to open in unsafe neighborho­ods where the police can’t be counted on to protect private property. Existing businesses are more likely to flee the community and take employment opportunit­ies with them when they leave. Worse, those establishm­ents that remain must take more costly measures to stay open — costs that invariably are passed on to paying customers.

Mom-and-pop peril

Liberals have long alleged that merchants in ghetto neighborho­ods are exploiting their lowincome shoppers by charging higher prices. Those prices, however, reflect the cost of doing business in high-crime neighborho­ods. Decriminal­izing theft significan­tly increases the cost of opening and operating a business, especially a mom-andpop shop relying on small profit margins to begin with. Lenders are more reluctant to extend credit. Insurance premiums are higher. Security is more expensive.

In his testimony, Adams called public safety “the prerequisi­te to our prosperity” and stressed that the problem isn’t previously lawabiding New Yorkers turning to crime but career criminals running rampant with no fear of being prosecuted.

“This is critical because a disproport­ionate share of the serious crime in New York City is being driven by a limited number of extreme recidivist­s,” he said. “Approximat­ely 2,000 people who commit crime after crime while out on the street on bail.”

Adams is fighting the good fight, but he’s outnumbere­d by progressiv­e Democrats who are more concerned with racial parity in punishment than with safe streets. Cities such as New York and Philadelph­ia and Chicago have essentiall­y manufactur­ed a crime wave, and no one knows when it will crest.

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