New York Post

‘IT’S NOT SAFE’ FOR MIGRANTS

Security overwhelme­d amid brawls & knifings at shelters

- By STEVEN VAGO, JOE MARINO, CRAIG McCARTHY and CHRIS NESI

The violence is so bad at New York City’s migrant shelters that authoritie­s are installing security cameras and considerin­g metal detectors as cops grapple with “an influx of knives — just wait till they get ahold of guns,’’ officials and law-enforcemen­t sources say.

The latest bloodshed includes a fatal stabbing Jan. 7 and Thursday’s separate massive brawl and knifing — both at the tent-city shelter on Randall’s Island.

“They’re not using metal detectors. . . . If they were, the knives wouldn’t be happening,” a security guard at the site told The Post on Friday, noting that shelter arrivals are not screened beyond having their IDs scanned.

“Everyone can have a knife, can have something. So it’s not a good environmen­t,” he said.

“The security is not good. It’s not safe. If you tell me it’s safe, it’s not. We are trying to do our best, but we are outnumbere­d,” he added.

Jose Chica, 42, a recent arrival from Ecuador, said conditions at the shelter are “dangerous.”

“There are a lot of problems here,” he said. “I don’t mess with anyone. No one.”

Security cameras were in the process of being installed at the makeshift shelter Friday morning, with discussion­s ongoing about adding metal detectors to further enhance security there and at other sites — as the city struggles with the massive influx of South and Central American migrants, more than 150,000 in total, who have arrived in New York since the spring of 2022.

‘Get real!’

A law-enforcemen­t source told The Post on Friday that it is time to get real about security measures at migrant facilities, and that failing to do so puts public safety at risk.

“We cannot continue down this road of taking in hundreds and hundreds of people without establishi­ng such security measures,” the source said. “We need to do this for the sake of the staff, migrants and New Yorkers in general.

“We can’t continue to have thousands of people congregate under such constraine­d conditions without any metal detectors or cameras. Now we’re dealing with an influx of knives — just wait till they get a hold of guns.”

The stepped-up safety measures began after a pair of knife attacks this month, including the Jan. 7 fatal stabbing at Randall’s Island that cops said sprung from a fight over a woman.

The 24-year-old victim was viciously assaulted at the shelter by four people after he talked to one of the men’s girlfriend­s, sources said. One of the attackers pulled a knife and stabbed him in the neck and chest. The victim was rushed to Harlem Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Asylum-seekers told The Post at the time that crime has festered as migrant groups have factionali­zed, splitting off into armed “camps” based on their ethnic group and country of origin.

“Everyone has a knife,” migrant Mauricio Pinto said after the stabbing.

The simmering violence has boiled over into all-out brawl on more than one occasion, most recently Thursday afternoon when two rival groups of migrants — armed with knives and rocks

— began fighting inside the shelter before the conflict spilled into the streets, sources said.

A 24-year-old man was stabbed during the chaos. He was taken by EMTs to Harlem Hospital and listed in stable condition. The attacker remained at large as of late Friday afternoon, cops said. Eighteen people were arrested.

The incident echoed another group fight Jan. 6, when violence erupted outside an East Village migrant center in Manhattan after someone attempted to cut the line of some 400 asylumseek­ers and allegedly spilled his coffee on others in the queue. One man punched the line-cutter and tumbled to the ground in the ensuing melee, witnesses said.

At least two NYPD officers were injured in the scuffle and two men were arrested.

Sky-high tensions and grim conditions have led to at least one domestic violence incident at Randall’s Island, also. A migrant allegedly struck his partner and was arrested Friday morning.

Even beyond the violence, deteriorat­ing conditions at Randall’s Island are apparently taking a frightenin­g toll. Friday afternoon, a teen girl suffered a seizure in one of the small tents erected outside the shelter for those who have been told to find another home. Police on site took her into a van and comforted her before EMS arrived.

 ?? ?? IN-TENTS VIOLENCE: A man is busted at the Randall’s Island migrant site Friday — where some migrants sleep in camping tents (right) in frigid weather as the city has seen some 150,000 asylumseek­ers arrive since spring 2022. Security guards say these sites are “not safe” as they grapple with “an influx of knives.”
IN-TENTS VIOLENCE: A man is busted at the Randall’s Island migrant site Friday — where some migrants sleep in camping tents (right) in frigid weather as the city has seen some 150,000 asylumseek­ers arrive since spring 2022. Security guards say these sites are “not safe” as they grapple with “an influx of knives.”
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