New York Post

Didn’t go far enough on bail reform: Dem

- By BERNADETTE HOGAN, HALEY BROWN and GABRIELLE FONROUGE

New York lawmakers Monday said “we need to do more” after The Post revealed that four suspects busted by Mayor Adams’ new anti-gun unit were back on the street within hours.

“We took the easy way out, and we took it around the edges, but it’s not enough,” said a Democratic state senator who spoke on the condition of anonymity, referring to Albany’s ill-fated efforts to curb crime by making modest changes to the state’s 2020 bail-reform law.

“We took a good first step, but we didn’t complete everything. We need to do more.”

On Sunday, The Post detailed arrest data from the NYPD’s new Neighborho­od Safety Teams — a pillar of Mayor Adams’ fight to curb gun violence — and revealed that four suspects caught with firearms were cut loose thanks to bail reform and lax judges.

City Councilman Joe Borelli (R-SI) said Monday that cops are

“doing their job” by arresting people with guns, but that their work is still being hampered by the larger criminal-justice system.

“We can talk about ‘gun violence’ all we want, but if we don’t lock people up with those guns, it’s all lefty talking points,” Borelli seethed. “The debate over bail reform in this year’s budget involved questionin­g what could leaders get away with without actually hurting them at the polls.”

Nick Langworthy, state GOP chairman, said his colleagues across the aisle have done “nothing to actually make New Yorkers safer. The only thing they cared about was creating a talking point to solve their political problem, while violent crime continues to rage on our streets.”

Rep. Nicole Malliotaki­s (R-SIBrooklyn) held a press conference in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, on Monday afternoon announcing increased patrols by the Guardian Angels, following an uptick in crime reported in her district.

“I think in general people feel a comfort from the Guardian Angels,” Malliotaki­s told reporters of the patrols. “But what do I think people really want? More cops on the street.”

Curtis Sliwa, who founded the anti-crime group and unsuccessf­ully ran against Adams during the 2021 mayoral election, said getting crime under control is critical to the Big Apple’s recovery.

“The constant assaults, the vandalism — the crimes getting reported to me in Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights, this entire area of southern Brooklyn, it is not what we’re used to in the Guardian Angels for 43 years,” Sliwa said.

He said teams of Guardian Angels will be in the neighborho­ods starting Wednesday to meet with business owners and residents and ride the subways.

 ?? ?? WRONG WAY: Reacting to The Post’s coverage of city violence, Mayor Adams says the city and the country have gone too far “to the left.”
WRONG WAY: Reacting to The Post’s coverage of city violence, Mayor Adams says the city and the country have gone too far “to the left.”
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