Tag Archives: unarmed

Philadelphia crime: Knife-wielding man shot by SEPTA police after allegedly stabbing 3 people, including unarmed security guard – WPVI-TV

  1. Philadelphia crime: Knife-wielding man shot by SEPTA police after allegedly stabbing 3 people, including unarmed security guard WPVI-TV
  2. Suspect shot by SEPTA police officer outside Philadelphia City Hall after stabbing 3 on Walnut-Locust subway platform CBS Philly
  3. Suspect shot by SEPTA officer after allegedly stabbing 3 people, including unarmed security guard in Philadelphia WPVI-TV
  4. SEPTA officer shot a man after he stabbed 3 people at the Walnut-Locust station NBC 10 Philadelphia
  5. SEPTA police shoot knife-wielding man accused of stabbing three including SEPTA guard at City Hall: officials FOX 29 Philadelphia
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Most decorated living Aussie soldier murdered unarmed Afghan civilians, judge finds – The Times of Israel

  1. Most decorated living Aussie soldier murdered unarmed Afghan civilians, judge finds The Times of Israel
  2. Top Australian soldier Ben Roberts-Smith loses defamation case – BBC News BBC News
  3. Ben Roberts-Smith’s fall from grace | ABC News Daily Podcast ABC News (Australia)
  4. As the Ben Roberts-Smith case proves, it’s time for Australia to abandon our farcical Anzac myths The Guardian
  5. Ben Roberts-Smith committed war crimes in my country – his targets are the forgotten victims of Australia’s Afghan war The Guardian
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Modern Warfare II Has You Aim Weapons At Unarmed Civilians

“De-escalation”
Gif: Activision / Kotaku

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II may nail its core gunplay and feature some standout characters across the board, but it also features some of the series’ most questionably awful depictions of violence and military power yet. One level in particular in which tensions rise between civilians and law enforcement stands out as profoundly tone deaf, and has been widely shared online as an example of the Call of Duty series at its most appalling and absurd.

In the level “Borderline,” you take on the role of Mexican military special forces following the trail of cartel members who are wrapped up in a broader escalating narrative about terrorism. The level barely stops for air before encouraging you to shoot at and kill people climbing the border wall into the United States. You then move through a residential area in Texas where armed citizens aren’t too thrilled to see you running through their yards and houses. The game asks you to “de-escalate civilians” with your aim button, and sure enough, pressing it results in you pointing your gun at them. There’s no unique animation or line of dialogue here. You don’t pull out a badge and say “please go inside.” You simply aim a weapon at their faces.

These scenes have become a topic of conversation and critique across the internet. A few days ago, popular political streamer Hasan Piker literally paused the game after “de-escalating” to comment on how remarkably awful this scenario is. As noted by Polygon, video essayist Jacob Geller also tweeted a video of the first de-escalation, which currently sits at a million views. This is far from an overlooked moment in a broader narrative.

“Borderline” asks you to do this three times. On the third, despite your efforts to (ahem) “de-escalate,” it seems the game gives you no alternative to violence. Standing in some random Texas citizen’s living room, the civilians draw weapons of their own and start firing at you. This leads to a brief encounter with local police outside where the following dialogue is shouted at you by cops with weapons drawn.

“Drop your fucking weapons right now! Do exactly what I say or I’ll fucking shoot you. Understand? Step forward to me! I want to see empty hands above your head!”

Just as Mexican special forces colonel Alejandro Vargas (the person leading your operation) is about to get cuffed, a cop steps out to stop the arrest saying it’s “hard to tell you boys apart from the cartel.” You’re then ambushed and have to fight off a few actual cartel members who are dressed nothing like your characters. They have little-to-no tactical gear on, no military insignia, and are arguably using noticeably different weaponry. So, it seems the cops can’t tell them apart because…why now?

Surely we’re not playing into anyone’s sick fantasy here or anything.
Gif: Activision / Kotaku

This is basically the entire level. Half of it is spent aiming weapons at and killing people in private homes, then you’re viciously threatened by law enforcement and racially profiled before finally getting into a few skirmishes with the game’s “bad guys.”

I recently had a conversation about this game with a friend who served in the military. In particular we talked about another deeply uncomfortable moment of violence in the game, this one in the second level, where you gun down a person fleeing for their life and cowering in a bathroom. As he illustrated, awful things like this happen in war. But the depiction of this material, be that gunning down maimed or innocent people in a warzone or aiming weapons at civilians to “de-escalate” a situation, is a choice the developers made. And in cases like “Kill or Capture” or “Borderline,” there’s no clear alternative to these actions. This is not a recreation of a historical event, and while levels like Borderline echo contemporary events and wider conversations about how police interact with citizens, it’s worth asking what is appropriate for a game like this? Why were these the decisions made when designing these levels? What notions about how police or soldiers should act are legitimized and reinforced when presented the way they are here?

Questions of realism are beside the point. There are a remarkable number of unrealistic things in Modern Warfare II. As Polygon reports, no searchable police documentation recommends aiming a weapon at someone to de-escalate a situation. So it’s not as if they applied realistic standards to this fictional scenario.

And remember, in the level’s third de-escalation encounter, the people you’re aiming at not only do have guns, but draw them on you, indicating not only that you were right to treat civilians as hostile threats, but that as law enforcement, you’re in constant danger. Meanwhile, in real life, it’s very often the cops who are a threat to civilians, as , police shoot unarmed people, disproportionately people of color, at an alarmingly high rate in the United States. However, those who built and designed this game chose to run with this as the things you play out in a video game, in some cases with no alternative but to directly threaten the lives of innocent people. And these are the protagonists you’re playing as. There are values and messages embedded in that, whether the game’s creators intended there to be or not.

It is both of questionable taste and based on no written standards of practice for law enforcement.



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Donovan Lewis: Body camera video shows a Columbus, Ohio, police officer fatally shooting an unarmed 20-year-old Black man

Donovan Lewis, 20, died Tuesday after being shot by Columbus Police Officer Ricky Anderson, a 30-year veteran with the Columbus Division of Police assigned to the K9 Unit, according to a police statement.

The shooting is under investigation by the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation, and Anderson is currently on leave, Columbus Police Chief Elaine Bryant said at a news conference Tuesday. CNN has attempted to reach Anderson for comment and also reached out to the Fraternal Order of Police.

The shooting happened around 2 a.m. Tuesday at an apartment building where uniformed officers were serving a felony warrant for domestic violence and assault and improper handling of a firearm, Bryant said at the news conference. A news release by police indicated the male who was shot, later identified as Lewis, as the person sought in the felony warrant.

“The officers knocked on the door for several minutes … acknowledging themselves as Columbus Police officers,” Bryant said.

Police body camera video shows them knocking and calling out to occupants repeatedly for more than eight minutes. They called for “Donovan” by name several times.

Eventually, a man came to the door and was taken into custody by police, Bryant said. He told officers he’d been asleep, and they took a knife from his pocket. A second man inside the apartment was taken into custody about a minute later.

Officers asked if anyone else was inside the apartment, Bryant said, but were unable to determine that.

Anderson and a K9 were then called in by Columbus Police to see if anyone else was inside, Bryant said.

“Once the K9 officer arrived on the scene, additional announcements were made for anyone else inside to come out or the K9 was going to be released inside of the apartment,” Bryant said.

In the police body camera video, the K9 is seen barking outside a back bedroom door, then officers enter the apartment and warn they are going to send a dog in.

An officer is seen opening the bedroom door, where a man is seen on a bed.

Bodycam video shows Anderson firing a single shot at a man, later identified as Lewis, moments after opening the bedroom door.

During the news conference, Bryant showed the body camera video frame-by-frame, asserting that the moment Anderson opened fire, it appeared Lewis was holding “something” in his hand.

A vape pen was later found next to Lewis on the bed, Bryant says. Once Lewis was handcuffed, video shows, officers began rendering aid.

Lewis was taken to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 3:19 a.m., according to the Columbus Police statement.

Shooting is latest law enforcement

An attorney for Lewis’ family condemned the shooting in a statement to CNN affiliate WSYX, calling the officer’s behavior reckless.

“The bodycam footage released yesterday afternoon says it all,” the statement said. “In literally the blink of an eye, a Columbus police officer shot and killed Donovan Lewis, an unarmed young Black man who was alone in his bed in the middle of the night.”

“As a result of this entirely reckless behavior by a Columbus Police Officer, a family is left to grieve the loss of such a young soul.”

The incident was just the latest in a string of deadly and controversial law enforcement shootings involving the city’s Black residents in recent years that have prompted protests over racial injustice and a review by the US Department of Justice into the Columbus Division of Police.
A Franklin County Sheriff’s Office deputy fatally shot Casey Goodson Jr. in December 2020 as the 23-year-old tried to enter his home with a Subway sandwich. The deputy was working for the US Marshals Service Fugitive Task Force looking for violent offenders at the time, police said, but Goodson was not the individual being sought. A grand jury indicted the deputy on two counts of murder and one count of reckless homicide.
Later that month, a Columbus police officer fatally shot Andre Hill as officers responded to a report of a man who was sitting in his SUV for an extended period. The officer in that case was fired and charged with murder, and the city council later voted to approve a $10 million settlement to Hill’s family, the largest in the city’s history.
Ma’Khia Bryant, 16, was killed in another shooting last April when Columbus police responded to her foster home, where Ma’Khia had been arguing with another young woman over a messy home and unmade bed. Police body camera video showed Ma’Khia lunge at the other woman with a knife, and a grand jury later declined to indict the officer who fired the fatal shot.

Bryant, the police chief, said Tuesday officers are “put in compromising, potentially life-threatening situations” every day, “in which we are required to make split-second decisions.”

“As the chief, it is my job to hold my officers accountable, but it’s also my job to offer them support and make sure that I give that to them through the process,” Bryant said. “If they do the right things for the right reasons, we will support them. If they do something wrong, they will be held accountable.”

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Sickening Footage Shows Akron Cops Kill an Unarmed Jayland Walker in Hail of Bullets

Police in Akron, Ohio, have released heartbreaking body-camera footage showing the moment cops shot an unarmed 25-year-old Black man dozens of times as he fled.

“I won’t mince words, the video you are about to watch is heartbreaking,” Akron Mayor Dan Horrigan said at a press conference Sunday. “I am urging all of our residents to please reserve your full judgment until our investigation is complete.”

The body-cam videos shown Sunday began with officers pursuing Jayland Walker in their squad cars around 12:30 a.m. Monday after he refused to pull over for an alleged traffic violation. Police said that about 40 seconds after he fled, officers heard “the sound of a gunshot” coming out of his car door.

The car chase lasted several more minutes before Walker, wearing a ski mask, got out of his silver Buick through the passenger-side door and fled on foot. Police said cops unsuccessfully tried to detain him with tasers and the chase continued to a nearby parking lot.

There, Walker “quickly turned toward the pursing officers,” and the unleashed a barrage of gunfire on him, police said. The disturbing body-camera footage shows Walker quickly crumple to the ground as countless shots ring out.

Police Chief Stephen Mylett confirmed Sunday that Walker was “unarmed” when he was killed. Cops found a hand gun, a loaded magazine, and a gold ring in the driver’s seat of his car.

Walker still had a pulse as the officers tried to load him into the police car, Mylett added. He couldn’t say how many bullets were fired, but Walker had at least 60 wounds in his body.

Acknowledging how horrific the footage was, Horrigan urged residents to protest peacefully.

“I fully support our residents right to peacefully assemble,” the mayor said at the press conference. “But I hope the community can agree that violence and destruction are not the answer.”

Since Walker’s June 27 killing, the eight Akron police officers involved have been placed on leave and the city has canceled its Fourth of July festivities. Protesters have surrounded city buildings, demanding justice and the release of the body camera footage.

The Walker family’s lawyers said they were livid with how police presented the videos on Sunday, insisting he was portrayed as a villain in their descriptions of the footage. Bobby DiCello, the lead attorney representing the family, said Mylett was an “armchair quarterback,” using “snapshots in time” as he picked apart the footage.

“They want to turn him into a masked monster with a gun,” DiCello said.

His colleague Ken Abbarno echoed that sentiment, urging the police to be more transparent with what happened during Walker’s pursuit.

“The officers will need to account for every single action that they did,” Abbarno said. “We live in a society where we can never see this happen again.”

DiCello said he died after being shot nearly 100 times, and they’ve demanded police take witness statements from the officers involved in the shooting. The officers have not been named.

“The Walker family is praying for peace, they are asking for peace, they are praying for accountability,” Abbarno said after the footage was released Sunday afternoon. “We cannot villainize Jayland.”

“We are done dying like this,” another attorney, Paige White, said. “Nobody should ever suffer the fate that Jayland Walker did.”

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Russian soldier Vadim Shishimarin accused of war crimes pleads guilty to killing unarmed Ukrainian civilian

The first Russian soldier to face trial for war crimes in Ukraine pleaded guilty on Wednesday to shooting and killing an unarmed 62-year-old civilian. Vadim Shishimarin, 21, who was part of a Russian tank unit captured by Ukrainian forces in early March, just days after the war began, faces a possible sentence of life in prison.

Shishimarin appeared Wednesday at a district court in Kyiv. At a preliminary hearing last week, prosecutors said Shishimarin had been driving in a private vehicle with other soldiers, which they had stolen in an attempt to escape after their column came under attack by Ukrainian forces a few days after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on February 28.

Russian army Sergeant Vadim Shishimarin, 21, is seen behind a glass during a court hearing in Kyiv, Ukraine, May 18, 2022.

Efrem Lukatsky/AP


They drove to the village of Chupakhivka, where they came upon the victim, a 62-year-old man riding a bicycle and talking on his phone.

Prosecutors said Shishimarin was ordered to shoot the civilian to stop him from telling Ukrainian defenders about the Russians’ location. They said Shishimarin fired several shots out of his open car window at the victim’s head, killing him instantly.

Ukrainian officials say the shooting was captured on video by the country’s State Security Service, but that video has not been seen by CBS News.


Captured Russian soldier now faces courtroom for war crimes

03:31

“I was ordered to shoot,” Shishimarin said in a confession video shown last week by prosecutors, which appeared to have been edited by Ukrainian authorities. “I shot one (round) at him. He falls. And we kept on going.”

Ukraine’s National Security Service called Shishimarin’s video statement “one of the first confessions of the enemy invaders.”

Ukraine, along with the U.S. and others in the international community, has accused Russia of committing atrocities against civilians during its war on Ukraine, and says it has identified over 10,000 possible war crimes.

Russia has denied targeting civilians and accused Ukraine of staging atrocities.

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Ukraine war: Russian soldier pleads guilty to killing unarmed civilian, in first war crimes trial

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A Russian soldier pled guilty to murder charges Wednesday in Ukraine’s first war crimes trial since Russia’s invasion began.

Vadim Shishimarin, 21, is accused of murder in the death of a 62-year-old unarmed civilian on Feb. 28, just four days after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began. Shishimarin has testified that he only fired at the civilian on orders from a superior. He faces a maximum sentence of life in prison.

“I was ordered to shoot,” Shyshimarin said of the incident. “I shot one [round] at him. He falls. And we kept on going.”

HOUSE PASSES $40 BILLION UKRAINIAN AID PACKAGE

Kremlin officials said they had no information about the trial in a Wednesday statement. Ukraine first held preliminary hearings in Shishimarin’s case on Friday.

“We still have no information,” Kremlin spokesman Dimitry Peskov told Agence France Presse. “”And the ability to provide assistance due to the lack of our diplomatic mission there is also very limited.”

Russian army Sergeant Vadim Shishimarin, 21, is seen behind a glass during a court hearing in Kyiv, Ukraine, Wednesday, May 18, 2022.
(AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky)

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President Joe Biden and other world leaders have called for Russian President Vladimir Putin to face a war crimes trial for Russia’s conduct in the invasion.

The accusations reached a boiling point when Russian forces conducted a hasty withdrawal from around Kyiv last month, leaving behind evidence they had slaughtered civilians and forced others to dig mass graves in the town of Bucha.

Ukraine has yet to begin a trial directly related to the Bucha atrocities.

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Aurora Cops Arrested After Striking Unarmed Man With Pistol

Kyle Vinson cried for help with a bleeding head after two Colorado officers held him down and one hit his head with a gun multiple times and threatened to shoot him.

Posted on July 28, 2021, at 2:26 p.m. ET



Aurora Police / Via youtube.com

Officer John Haubert seen choking Kyle Vinson while he bleeds from his head.

Two police officers in Colorado were arrested Tuesday after disturbing video showed one of them using his gun to repeatedly hit an unarmed man on his head, choke him, and threaten to shoot him, as the man bled from his head and pleaded for his life.

The other officer was accused of failing to stop her colleague from using excessive force.

“You’re killing me, bro!” Kyle Vinson, 29, cried out multiple times after Aurora police officer John Haubert pistol-whipped him several times while trying to place him in custody following a trespassing call on Friday afternoon.

The graphic video showed streaks of blood running down Vinson’s head while he gasped for air and cried that he couldn’t breathe, as Haubert yelled, “If you move, I will shoot you.”

“Don’t hurt me,” Vinson pleaded with the officers. “Don’t shoot me, bro.”


Aurora Police Department via AP

Haubert, 39, was arrested on charges of attempted first degree assault, second degree assault, felony menacing, official oppression, and first degree official misconduct.

The three-year veteran of the Aurora police department has been put on administrative leave without pay pending an expedited internal affairs investigation.

Officer Francine Martinez, a six-year veteran, was arrested on misdemeanor charges of failing to intervene and report use of force by a police officer, as is required by a police accountability bill that was passed after George Floyd’s murder last summer. She has been put on administrative leave with pay. Both officers have bonded out of jail, authorities said.

The Aurora police department released body camera footage of the incident Tuesday with police chief Vanessa Wilson criticizing the two officers for what she called a “very despicable act.”

“We’re disgusted, we’re angry,” Wilson said a press conference Tuesday. “This is not police work. We don’t train this… this was a criminal act,” she said.

Wilson apologized to Vinson, calling him the victim of a “horrific” act. She said that when she saw the body camera footage she welled up with tears and anger.

“This video will shock your conscience,” the chief said. “It’s very disturbing.”

The two officers responded to a call for trespassing on Friday when they encountered three men, all of whom had outstanding arrest warrants. When two of the men fled the area, Haubert immediately pointed his gun at Vinson who remained sitting on the ground and did not resist.

The video shows Haubert and Martinez attempting to arrest Vinson, who repeatedly yells that he did not have a warrant and didn’t know why he was being put into handcuffs.

“We don’t believe he knew that he actually had an existing warrant,” Wilson said at the press conference. Vinson had allegedly failed to submit urine tests, did not complete treatment for court-ordered domestic violence counseling, and failed to report to probation meetings, the AP reported.

The two officers order Vinson to roll onto his stomach with his face pressed to the ground while Haubert keeps his gun pressed against Vinson’s head, the video shows.

“You guys have the wrong guy,” Vinson is heard telling the officers.

“Help, help,” he shouts out before Haubert begins hitting his head with a gun during the struggle.

After other officers arrive at the scene, Vinson is heard begging for water.

“I was just fighting for my life, man,” he is heard saying. “You guys beat me up.”

“I was going to shoot him but I didn’t know if I had a round in it or not,” Haubert told a sergeant after the incident, according to court documents obtained by the Associated Press.

Authorities said Vinson had several large welts and an abrasion on his head that required six stitches.

The Aurora police chief called for peace in the city and urged the community not to paint the police department with a “broad brush.”

The department has a history of excessive force allegations, most notably for the in-custody death of 23-year-old Elijah McClain in August 2019.

McClain, a Black man, died after officers placed him in a chokehold and injected him with ketamine while arresting him for acting “suspicious” during his walk home from a grocery store.

Last August, Aurora police officers apologized for holding a Black family at gunpoint and handcuffing them facedown on a hot concrete parking lot after mistaking their car for a stolen vehicle.

During Tuesday’s press conference, Wilson attempted to reassure the community that her department was focused on reform and training and that officers would be fired “if this is how they police.”

“This was an anomaly,” she said. “And I’m just thankful Mr. Vinson is alive.”

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NYC GOP mayoral candidate argues decades of unarmed patrol experience outpaces Democrats’ political play

As crime in New York City regresses toward the crisis level seen in the 1970s, Republican mayoral candidate Curtis Sliwa argues his decades of experience leading the unarmed patrol group the Guardian Angels has prepared him far better than Democratic opponent Eric Adams to tackle worsening violence across the Big Apple a year after the onset of the “defund police” movement. 

President Biden included Adams, a retired NYPD captain and current Brooklyn borough president, in a roundtable discussion on gun violence at the White House this week – even though Adams barely won his Democratic primary and there is still a general election in November, Sliwa told Fox News. 

“To me, his invitation was purely political,” Sliwa said. “It’s almost as if they decided we don’t want to hear from the Republican, even though in this arena Curtis Sliwa has more credentials than anyone who attended that White House conference, especially Eric Adams.”

Sliwa, unlike other attendees at the roundtable, has a unique perspective as he is personally a victim of gun violence. He was shot five times in June 1992 on the orders of John Gotti Sr. to John Gotti Jr. and the Gambino crime family, and therefore went through four federal trials. 

BIDEN SCORCHES ‘DEFUND POLICE’ MOVEMENT BY PUMPING FUNDS BACK TO NYC 

“I understand the problems of gun violence having experienced it,” Sliwa, who was once shot with a .38 Special handgun, said. “You say ‘gun control, gun control’ because that’s always what comes out of these sessions. That would have done nothing to have stopped the gunman.” 

Sliwa described a huge escalation of crime in the late 1970s as a result of cutback in the budget, New York City was on the brink of a “fiscal collapse.” Fast forward to the present day after New York City first became the ground zero for the coronavirus in the U.S. last year, and then saw widespread “defund police” demonstrations. The current rising violence has also been largely attributed to NYPD disbanding its plainclothes unit in June 2020. 

The Republican candidate for mayor for New York City, Curtis Sliwa, joins hundreds of police, fire, hospital and other first responder workers  in a ticker tape parade along the Canyon of Heroes to honor the essential workers who helped navigate New York through Covid-19 on July 07, 2021 in New York City. 
(Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

A 17-year-old newspaper delivery boy at the time, Sliwa was recognized by President Nixon at the White House for his bravery after allegedly saving six people from a burning building on his route, the NY Daily News reported in 1971, according to newspaper archives. Sliwa later was honored by the New York City sanitation commissioner for forming a neighborhood cleanup crew called the “Rock Brigade.” 

Speaking to Fox News, Sliwa described how as a night manager at a McDonald’s in the Bronx in the late ’70s, he then convinced his staff to start patrolling the subway line they rode into work, as uniformed officers weren’t patrolling the 4 train, or what was known as the “mugger’s express.”  

The Guardian Angels was an unarmed patrol that made citizen’s arrests when necessary to prevent assaults, fights and things that could lead to further violence, Sliwa said. Having believed their work would earn them the Congressional Medal of Honor, Sliwa said he was surprised when New York City Mayor Ed Koch at the time “vilified” them, calling the group the “Hell’s Angels” as vigilantes. 

Police unions also had their members believing our presence would affect their own job security, “so they began a period of harassment against us,” Sliwa said. As the Bronx was burning down and people were evacuating, gangs who seized control also saw their patrol as adversaries. 

Portait of four members of the Guardian Angels’ as they stand in a subway station, New York, New York, mid 1980s.
(Oliver Morris/Getty Images)

“No matter where we turned, if it wasn’t gang members who were a problem for us, it was police,” he said. “And yet all we were trying to do was keep people safe and secure.”

In 1985, communities requested the services of the Guardian Angels, as violence continued in the parks and subway system, but their relationship with police remained strained. And the problem did not improve under another Democratic Mayor David Dinkins’ administration. It wasn’t until Rudy Giuliani became mayor that the Guardian Angels were really embraced. 

Portrait of American anti-crime activist and founder of the Guardian Angels Curtis Sliwa, as he poses at the 161st Street subway station, New York, New York, mid 1980s.
(Photo by Oliver Morris/Getty Images)

Currently about 200 volunteers strong, the Guardian Angels continue to patrol the subway systems, as police often stay stationed on platforms or junctions instead of patrolling moving trains. The watch also been called upon by the Asian community to create patrols to combat the rise in hate crimes seen earlier this year in areas like Chinatown, Flushing, Queens and Sunset Park, Brooklyn. 

Even what once were known as higher-end neighborhoods in Manhattan, such as Upper East Side, Upper West Side, Chelsea and Little Italy, have called on the Guardian Angels for assistance in recent months, which Sliwa said has never been requested before in response to the growing problems. 

“I hold the mayor completely responsible for this because he’s taken a wrecking ball to our police department,” Sliwa said. 

Sliwa argued that Mayor Bill de Blasio rejected federal COVID-19 support that could have been used to bolster the police department twice, and Adams insinuated in remarks made at the White House he also would not necessarily use federal funding to hire more police if he becomes mayor.  

“You can’t be for rectifying the crime problem if you’re not going to accept help in hiring police. Without more police, none of this can be achieved,” Sliwa said. “Although Eric Adams professes to be law and order, how can he claim that title when he told the president, ‘No?’”

Sliwa speaks to the media in Times Square following another daytime shooting in the popular tourist destination on June 28, 2021 in New York City. Sliwa and Democrat Eric Adams are both running on a “tough on crime” platform as New York City, like other big cities, is witnessing a surge in violent crimes. 
(Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

When contacted by Fox News about this feature, a spokesman for de Blasio said the mayor has never turned down federal funds for the NYPD.

“Curtis Sliwa is wrong. About most things really,” de Blasio’s press secretary Bill Neidhardt wrote in an email to Fox News. “New York City has never turned down federal COVID relief funds or federal law enforcement funds.” 

Agents for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) are “housed directly in NYPD headquarters for crying out loud,” Neidhardt continued. “Getting a basic fact like that wrong shows just how out of his depth Curtis is.” 

Sliwa said the NYPD is currently 4,000 officers short of the 38,000 needed to effectively function, pointing to how the force has been depleted by mass early retirements in response to low morale and skilled officers being recruited elsewhere. De Blasio’s spokesman did not acknowledge those numbers. 

“My response was, the city needs to take the money now, hire police officers, train them and get them out to the streets, subways and parks as quickly as possible because we’re in a crime emergency situation, and the one thing that’s not being addressed here is the hiring of more police,” Sliwa said. 

As COVID-19 vaccines have become more widely accessible, many corporate offices based in Manhattan are faced with the decision of calling back some or all of their workforce around September. But as Biden’s Department of Justice sends strike forces to New York City and elsewhere to combat gun trafficking, rampant violence on the city’s subway systems still poses a dangerous risk for commuters.

Three unidentified Guardian Angels pose for a photo on November 7, 1987 at an event at which the Guardian Angels present radio personality Howard Stern with an award to thank him for his support at the Boerum Place subway stop in New York City, New York.
(Catherine McGann/Getty Images)

The subway system has homeless people using the underground area and trains for shelter, and emotionally disturbed individuals having psychotic episodes or dealing with drug or alcohol addiction often attack riders, according to Sliwa. Gangs also roam the subways, often instructing younger recruits to attack women, slash people or push them in front of trains as some sort of initiation. 

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“If you don’t deal with those problems, you’re not going to be able to encourage people to go back into the empty office buildings and work because they’re not going to want to take the risk,” he said. 

The Guardian Angels also do outreach with homeless people and the emotionally disturbed, helping them find unlocked restrooms or escorting them to get their medication or mental healthcare at the hospital, as Sliwa argues that service is not being done by city or state agencies. 

Fox News also reached out to Adams for comment but did not hear back before publication. 

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