New York Post

KELLY: I PROTEST!

Ex-top cop slams $6M ‘radical’ payout

- By JESSE O’NEILL

New York’s former top cop Sunday slammed the city for agreeing to pay out $6 million to protesters who were penned in, and some of them beaten or pepper-sprayed, by NYPD officers during a 2020 demonstrat­ion in The Bronx.

Ray Kelly, 81, who twice served as NYPD commission­er under Mayors David Dinkins and Mike Bloomberg, said the settlement agreement, signed off on by a federal judge, was “disgracefu­l.”

“All they do is settle these cases. What about going to trial on, on some of them?” Kelly told John Catsimatid­is on WABC 770 AM’s “Cats Roundtable.”

“They [the plaintiffs’ lawyers] know that the city will only throw money at these radical groups and that might amount to them as a payday — and it sure did, or it sure will,” he continued. “So it is absolutely, I think, gut-wrenching that they continue to do this.”

$12,500 a person

His comments came after the city agreed to shell out $21,500 each to the more than 300 people who were “kettled” by officers in Mott Haven on June 4, 2020, as they protested police brutality in the aftermath of the caught-on-camera cop killing of George Floyd in Minnesota.

In doling out the possibly recordbrea­king settlement, officials determined that cops had penned in demonstrat­ors before a newly imposed 8 p.m. curfew was set to lapse, and then charged at them, battering some with police batons and spraying them with Mace.

The incident came after activists had taunted the NYPD with a flyer of a burning cop vehicle and egged on fellow demonstrat­ors to violate the newly imposed curfew.

“The city was facing anarchy,” Kelly said. “The protesters were intent on provoking mayhem and grinding the city to a halt. There were several days of violent demonstrat­ions ... they violated a curfew that Mayor [Bill] de Blasio put in for two nights,” he said.

“The police were forced to take aggressive action and make arrests. And, by the way, nobody spent any time in . . . jail as a result of those arrests.”

Individual­s who were arrested that night are set to receive an additional $2,500 under the settlement.

The NYPD had defended the tactics, with then-Commission­er Dermot Shea claiming they were “executed nearly flawlessly.” Shea also noted that some of the demonstrat­ors were found to be brandishin­g hammers, lighter fluid, gas masks and fireworks.

“In the citywide riots that lasted for quite awhile in The Bronx, in Manhattan and Brooklyn, about 1,000 cops all told were injured,” Kelly said.

“[The mayor] should’ve taken a very hard line. He had to keep the city functionin­g, and these people were hell-bent on shutting it down.”

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