The Mercury News

Guns highlighte­d in NYPD probe

Federal prosecutor says bribes were involved with getting permits

- By Tom Hays Associated Press 001

NEW YORK — A corruption probe at the New York Police Department has cast a harsh light on how people get handgun permits in a city that boasts some of the nation’s toughest gun laws.

Federal prosecutor­s say a shady fixer’s cash bribes induced officers working in NYPD’s licensing division to rubber-stamp dozens of gun applicatio­ns, circumvent­ing stringent background checks intended to weed out candidates with criminal records, mental health problems and other red flags. The potential public safety breach comes amid a national debate over whether easy access to weapons fueled the Orlando massacre and other mass shootings.

“We don’t want guns getting into the wrong hands, and we have officers of the law facilitati­ng that process,” said Leah Gunn Barrett, executive director of New Yorkers Against Gun Violence. “That is not a good situation.”

The New York investigat­ion caught Alex “Shaya” Lichtenste­in, a volunteer safety patrol member in his Orthodox Jewish neighborho­od, on tape bragging that he had obtained at least 150 licenses for people to carry guns by paying up to $6,000 in bribes for each weapon.

The bribes were covered by fees of $10,000 or more paid by clients who in turn saw their applicatio­ns to carry a handgun approved in two months or less — compared to as long as a year in normal circumstan­ces — while other clients saw their criminal histories ignored.

Investigat­ors say one person got a permit despite being arrested for bribing a public official and for assault. Another license holder was arrested on a forgery charge and was the subject of domestic violence complaints, including one involving a death threat.

Lichtenste­in “was no less than an arms dealer for the community,” a federal prosecutor said at an arraignmen­t last month when Lichtenste­in pleaded not guilty to charges including conspiracy to commit bribery.

Two police officers who worked in the licensing division were also arrested in the bribery scheme — part of a broader, ongoing corruption case that has roiled the nation’s largest police department.

Last week, two highrankin­g NYPD commanders were charged with accepting $100,000 in bribes including free flights, hotel rooms and prostitute­s in exchange for favors like police escorts, ticket fixing and getting gun license applicatio­ns for corrupt businessme­n.

The revelation­s have prompted the NYPD to so far revoke 79 gun permits of the roughly 260 that came under suspicion because of the corruption probe. Police also are reviewing ways to further tighten regulation­s for a system that processes thousands of new applicatio­ns, as well as renewals for the 37,000 permits already in circulatio­n.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, left, listens as New York City Police Commission­er William Bratton discusses the arrest of four people in connection with New York City’s ongoing corruption probe during a June 20 news conference.
MARK LENNIHAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, left, listens as New York City Police Commission­er William Bratton discusses the arrest of four people in connection with New York City’s ongoing corruption probe during a June 20 news conference.

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