Miami Herald

Amid crime fears, NYC sees surge in gun permit applicatio­ns

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T GRAHAM RAYMAN AND THOMAS TRACY New York Daily News

NEW YORK

Amid ongoing fear of crime, more than 13,300 New Yorkers applied for licenses to carry guns in the city last year, a neardouble increase compared to 2022 — and the New York City Police Department’s financial bottom line has been boosted by the permit surge, according to a Daily News analysis.

Spokespeop­le for the NYPD and Mayor Eric Adams’ office said in the past week that they could not definitive­ly determine what was driving the spike in gun permit applicatio­ns. It’s unclear from the gun permit data how many of the 2023 and 2024 applicatio­ns were approved and resulted in new licenses being issued.

But NYPD data shows the wave of weapon seekers started to skyrocket in the months after Sept. 1, 2022, when a U.S. Supreme Court ruling took effect that struck down a New York law that required applicants for concealed carry permits to prove they had “proper cause” to bear a weapon for self-defense purposes.

With that law invalidate­d, New York applicants can get a permit without proving a specific self-defense need, as long as there’s no other disqualify­ing reason, such as a past felony conviction.

David, a firearm consultant who helps New York gun permit seekers with the process, said the applicatio­n explosion comes as he has noticed an increasing number of clients wishing to get weapons because they’re frightened. While major crimes in the city have dipped in recent years, they remain above pre-pandemic levels.

“Definitely the most popular reason is they just don’t feel as safe as they used to, with the protests, riots, crime,” David, who spoke on condition that his last name not be used, told The News, referring to recent demonstrat­ions against Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.

The new police data reviewed by The News shows the NYPD received 13,369 gun permit applicatio­ns in 2023. That was a significan­t jump from 2022, when the department received 7,407 applicatio­ns, and 2021, when it received 4,665, according to the data.

From Jan. 1 through March 3, the most recent span for which data is available, the department received 3,358 applicatio­ns, making the total number of permit claims submitted since Jan. 1, 2023, at least 16,727. If the pace of applicatio­ns through March 3 continues, the department will see roughly the same spiked number of permit claims in 2024 as it did in 2023.

Gerald Esposito, owner of Esposito’s Custom

Guns in Queens, said he sees the increase in permit seekers as an overall good thing but worried that

New York’s current weapons training requiremen­ts for applicants are too lax.

“It’s 16 hours in the classroom and two hours on the range. I took the class, and it’s a very basic class. I would not let someone hold a gun next to me who was in that class. I was scared with some of the people in the class. One mistake could be a very bad mistake,” said Esposito, whose shop mostly caters to patrons who need customized weapons for target shooting competitio­ns. “The training needs to be beefed up or reinforced. … I would love everyone to have the right to carry a gun, but I want to be safe, too.”

Although the data reviewed by The News doesn’t spell out a specific reason for the permit applicatio­n uptick, it comes as surveys show New Yorkers continue to worry about crime in the city, which police data shows remains above pre-COVID pandemic levels.

Amid the mounting applicatio­ns, data provided by Adams’ office shows the NYPD is on track to rake in $6.3 million in gun permit applicatio­n fees this fiscal year, which started July 1, 2023, and runs through this June 30. Regardless of whether it approves an applicatio­n, the NYPD requires applicants to pay processing fees that are as much as $340 per permit.

Of the $6.3 million haul, $1.4 million is labeled in budget documents as “additional” cash raised as part of the Program to Eliminate the Gap (PEG), which was implemente­d by Adams in November to cut municipal spending and boost revenue streams amid fiscal uncertaint­ies fueled by costs associated with the city’s migrant crisis.

Adams spokeswoma­n Kayla Mamelak said the NYPD wasn’t directed to generate a specific amount of gun permit revenue as part of the PEG. She wouldn’t say whether the revenue boost was the result of any specific actions taken by the NYPD.

For next fiscal year, which starts July 1, the NYPD expects to take in $2.77 million in gun permit revenue, less than half of what’s rolling in this fiscal year, budget documents say. Mamelak wouldn’t say why the revenue is projected to drop that sharply.

The NYPD did not immediatel­y make officials from its gun permit unit available for an interview.

The gun permit data revelation­s come after a poll from the Manhattan Institute conducted this month shows 62% of likely city voters — including majorities in all racial groups and political parties — feel the city is less safe today than it was in 2020, while only 11% believe safety has improved over the same span.

NYPD data corroborat­es at least part of that sentiment.

The data shows that as of last Sunday, the number of major felonies in the city so far this year are up 39.3% in comparison with the same period in 2019. Looking at the same comparativ­e point in time, the number of shooting victims is up 16.7%, and the number of shooting incidents is up 11.1%.

Looking at the more recent past, major felonies are down in the city by 0.9% in comparison with to 2022 and down 3.1% from last year. Shooting victims and shooting incidents are down even more, having respective­ly dropped by 39.1% and 39.5% from 2022, the data shows.

Echoing David the firearms consultant, a Nassau County gun shop owner told The News that he has in his own surroundin­gs noticed more people applying for weapon permits because of “what’s going on globally.”

“It’s taken on an extra sense of urgency,” said the owner, who spoke on the condition that neither he nor his shop be named. “People are in fear of what’s going on.”

The unit that processes all city gun permits is the NYPD Licensing Division, which is housed at the police department’s Manhattan headquarte­rs.

A number of members of that unit have over the years been convicted of taking bribes in exchange for expediting permits. That includes David Villanueva, an ex-division supervisor who was sentenced to four months in prison in 2019 after admitting that he and other unit members took bribes to approve 100 gun permits that should not have been issued. Mamelak and NYPD spokespeop­le did not respond to a request for comment on whether any particular anti-corruption protocols have been enacted amid the recent surge in gun permit applicatio­ns.

 ?? Dreamstime/TNS ?? More than 16,000 New York City residents have applied to be licensed to carry guns, according to police and budget data reviewed by the Daily News.
Dreamstime/TNS More than 16,000 New York City residents have applied to be licensed to carry guns, according to police and budget data reviewed by the Daily News.

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