Boston Herald

Trump says he’ll send in the feds if NYC can’t stop the bloodshed

Seven dead, 50 shot over last weekend

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NEW YORK — President Trump is again threatenin­g to send federal agents to New York City if local authoritie­s don’t stop a surge of violence that has left seven people dead and more than 50 people shot since Friday.

Trump, who’s running for re-election on a law-and-order agenda as a counterwei­ght to the police and criminal justice reform movement, reacted to the news of the mayhem in his hometown Sunday night on Twitter.

“Law and Order,” Trump wrote, directing his message at the city’s Democratic mayor, Bill de Blasio. “If (he) can’t do it, we will!”

It was the latest in a string of bloody weekends that have roiled the city in the wake of coronaviru­s-related shutdowns, rallies against police brutality and a month-long protest encampment in front of City Hall.

According to police, 51 people were shot from Friday through Sunday. Six of them were killed, including John Jeff, a 28-year-old city jail officer who was off-duty in Queens. Another man died after a physical altercatio­n, police said.

Eight people were shot and five people were killed over the same span last year.

De Blasio on Monday dismissed Trump’s tweet as “bluster,” telling reporters that a recent uptick in gun arrests was a hopeful sign that the NYPD “will turn this tide.”

De Blasio’s press secretary, Bill Neidhardt, noted that Trump sent his tweet hours after retweeting a pundit who said Democratic cities should be left to rot.

Trump has used violent spikes in Democratic-led cities such as New York, Chicago and Philadelph­ia to justify claims that recent reforms and cuts to police budgets have handcuffed officers and allowed criminals to run amok. His re-election campaign has been airing farcical television commercial­s suggesting no one will be there to answer 911 calls if his Democratic rival, former Vice President Joe Biden, is elected president..

Trump, a Republican who grew up in Queens and built his namesake tower on Manhattan’s chic Fifth Avenue, backed off a threat last month to send federal agents to New York City to deal with protesters and increased violence, as he had in Portland, Ore.

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