New York Post

A spritz of sanity

- RIKKI SCHLOTT

NEW York has a truly asinine law on the books: It’s illegal to ship pepper spray here. But it’s not illegal to own it or use it in certain cases of self-defense.

I’m calling on lawmakers, as well as Mayor Adams and Gov. Hochul: It’s time to give constituen­ts easy access to basic self-defense.

I know it firsthand as a young woman living in Manhattan. Last May, I wrote about an encounter with a menacing man who chased and threatened me. I managed to scare him off by brandishin­g my sparkly pepper-spray keychain — which I had to purchase in New Jersey.

It hasn’t even been a year since that incident, and I’ve been targeted once again.

During a 6 p.m. walk in Greenwich Village this past weekend, I found myself staring down a menacing man who started shouting at me. I tried to cross the street, but he blocked my path and proceeded to chase me into moving traffic.

My fight-or-flight instinct kicked in, and I made a run for it. He managed to slap me in the rear as I ran past.

I didn’t have to use the pepper spray I had in my hand. But had the situation gone sideways, it would have been my only hope to fight back against a much larger attacker.

I’m thankful that, in both scary encounters, I had my pepper spray on me. I wish every vulnerable New Yorker could carry a canister.

In 2023, New Yorkers can get just about anything delivered to their doors via Amazon — including axes and some seriously sharp Japanese knives. Even machetes can be ordered with next-day delivery.

But in our state, you can’t buy pepper spray online and have it shipped here. And finding it in person is exceptiona­lly difficult; thanks to restrictio­ns, only a handful of pharmacies sell it.

My friends ship pepper spray to my dad’s home in New Jersey, and he regularly visits me with packages addressed to 20-somethings longing for a sense of safety on the streets.

Safety is in demand

SABRE, the manufactur­er of the pepper spray NYPD officers carry, has seen a huge increase in demand from NYC residents, according to SABRE CEO David Nance. But the company cannot ship them here or to Massachuse­tts.

“At the end of the day they just want personal safety,” Nance told The Post of would-be customers. “Pepper spray allows individual­s to protect themselves at a safe distance, which means they don’t have to get hands-on with an attacker.”

Meanwhile, in New York City, we’re experienci­ng a huge surge in crime — including a 15-year record for felony crimes and an 18% spike in serious assaults. Violent crime against the elderly in the city has been on the rise for years. And the Asian-American community was rocked by a 900% surge in hate crimes from 2019 to 2020.

Community activist and Chinatown Block Watch founder Karlin Chan has heard from many desperate Asian Americans unable to get their hands on pepper spray. So, he took matters into his own hands and has handed out more than 6,000 donated canisters to vulnerable New Yorkers since the pandemic started. Already, he’s had six people tell him they’ve used it to defend themselves against attacks.

Chan told The Post the law is “ridiculous” and agrees it should be repealed: “There’s fear in the city, and people need to feel safe somehow. It’s legal to own and have and use, but it’s illegal to ship? It doesn’t make any sense.”

For the sake of New Yorkers’ safety, this law needs to be repealed, and I’m calling on New York’s lawmakers to do so.

This is low-hanging fruit. It is not a partisan issue.

 ?? ?? SELF-DEFENSE IN A CAN: After two disturbing Manhattan encounters in less than a year, The Post’s Rikki Schlott is fed up with having to ship pepper spray to her dad’s house in New Jersey — because it’s illegal to mail it to New York.
SELF-DEFENSE IN A CAN: After two disturbing Manhattan encounters in less than a year, The Post’s Rikki Schlott is fed up with having to ship pepper spray to her dad’s house in New Jersey — because it’s illegal to mail it to New York.

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