New York Post

Open-Air Heroin Markets: Thank Blas

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For a clear view of Mayor de Blasio’s legacy, take a stroll around the Garment District and note the heroin addicts freely shooting up under the golden sun.

The block bordered by 35th and 36th streets and Seventh and Eighth avenues is a certifiabl­e den of iniquity — out-of-it addicts surrounded by used needles, broken glass crack pipes, trash, urine and feces.

As The Post reported last week, a single walk around that block revealed three different people injecting into their wrists or fingers, plus drug dealers patrolling the streets like they know they own the place.

“We have been fighting to put an end to this crisis, however our city officials have unfortunat­ely failed to address the problem and have allowed this public disorder to continue,” Garment District Alliance President Barbara Blair told The Post.

The scene was no better Sunday: Our reporter spotted another three men shooting up on West 36th; one passed out on the sidewalk as his cronies abandoned him.

A traffic cop was writing tickets nearby as those junkies shot up. Similarly, as two men exchanged cash and small plastic bags on 36th Street, police officers on Eighth Avenue between 35th and 36th just hung out, leaning on a police van looking at their phones.

The politician­s have “effectivel­y ordered” cops to let drug addicts roam free, says Manny Gomez, a former NYPD sergeant and FBI special agent. Make an arrest? Possession of needles or small amounts of heroin and even publicly injecting drugs are all non-bail offenses, thanks to New York’s disastrous “criminal justice reforms”: Arrest a junkie for using and he’ll be back out on the street in no time at all. Such actions have no consequenc­es in de Blasio’s New York.

Gone too is any compassion. The police won’t intervene and neither do social workers. The city saw 1,446 overdose deaths in the first nine months of 2020, up 38 percent from a year earlier, per the most recent Department of Health stats.

Open-air heroin markets and shooting galleries: You couldn’t ask for better proof that this mayor doesn’t care about the lives lost to addiction, nor the nightmare they inflict on every other New Yorker.

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