“Officer Mora and his partner, Officer Jason Rivera, showed courage in the face of imminent danger to protect New Yorkers,” state Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement. “Their bravery exemplified their commitment to protecting the city they loved. Both will forever be remembered as heroes who dedicated their lives to making New York safer and stronger.”
Mora was also praised for his heroism, not only for his duty to protect but for being an organ donor.
Mora “will live on in the heart of every New York City police officer from this day forward,” said Patrick Lynch, the president of the Police Benevolent Association union, adding that the officer “showed us what it means to carry out our mission with courage, skill and humanity.”
New York City’s plan to combat gun violence
The officers will patrol in unmarked vehicles while wearing clothing identifying officers as law enforcement, Adams announced Monday, adding that the new unit will be in addition to those already on the streets since August who patrol in unmarked vehicles while wearing police uniforms.
Some critics derided plainclothes units for years as counterproductive and argued they were a relic from the stop-and-frisk era of policing, used instead as a bludgeoning tool that more negatively affected Black and brown communities.
In an undated letter Rivera wrote to his commanding officer, he recalled seeing his brother being stopped and frisked by police.
“I asked myself, why are we being pulled over if we’re in a taxi? I was too young to know that during that time, the NYPD was pulling over and frisking people at a high rate,” Rivera wrote, noting his perception of that policing bothered him.
Later, he said he learned the department began trying to change its interactions with the community.
“This was when I realized I wanted to be part of the men in blue; better the relationship between the community and the police,” Rivera wrote. “Coming from an immigrant family, I will be the first to say that I am a member of the NYPD, the greatest police force in the world.”
The shootings unfolded as the officers responded to a domestic call around 6:15 p.m. Friday, officials said.
A woman called 911 and reported she was having a dispute with one of her sons inside her apartment, police said. Three NYPD officers arrived and encountered the mother and another son, who directed two of the officers to a room in the back of the apartment.
The other son — the suspect — was waiting, and when the door swung open, shots were fired, hitting both officers. The suspect, identified as 47-year-old Lashawn McNeil, was shot and mortally wounded by a third officer when he tried to escape.
Rivera and Mora became the fourth and fifth NYPD officers to have been shot this month, but the only two to lose their lives.
Mayor’s anti-gun plan critiqued
More specifically, the plan will focus on the 30 precincts where 80% of the violence occurs, Adams said.
The mayor wants to tackle the flow of guns into the city after officials pointed out that the weapon used in Friday’s shootings was a Glock 45 stolen from Baltimore.
While the mayor’s plan was praised by some advocacy groups, his desire to reinstate plainclothes units has received some criticism.
On Monday, the Legal Aid Society, Brooklyn Defender Services, The Bronx Defenders and The Neighborhood Defender Service of Harlem and Queens Defenders joined forces to speak out against the unit’s return.
“Today’s announcement gives the community members who live with the legacy of hyper-aggressive policing no comfort that Mayor Adams’s Anti-Crime Unit will be different from its predecessors,” the groups said in a joint statement. “The Mayor must focus on addressing long standing problems with NYPD’s culture of impunity before he doubles down on strategies that will only perpetuate the harms of that culture.”
Still, the mayor defended the police approach, saying his team has done the proper analysis “and now we’re going to deploy that.”
Adams noted that he asked New York City’s five district attorneys to prioritize gun violence and gun-related crimes. He proposed a weekly meeting between all district attorneys, the NYPD commissioner and the deputy mayor of public safety.
CNN’s Mark Morales, Eric Levenson, Shimon Prokupecz, Dakin Andone, Theresa Waldrop, Rob Frehse, Brynn Gingras, Travis Caldwell and Emma Tucker and Laura Ly contributed to this report.