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Crime in New York City

Crime rates in New York City have been recorded since at least the 1800s. They have spiked ever since the post-war period.[1][failed verification] The highest crime totals were recorded in the late 1980s and early 1990s as the crack epidemic surged,[2][3] and then declined continuously since the mid-1990s and throughout the 2000s.[4]

Bushwick in Brooklyn was once one of the most dangerous neighborhoods in New York City

New York City
Crime rates* (2022)
Violent crimes
Homicide5.3
Rape31.8
Robbery211.7
Aggravated assault495.4
Total violent crime744.2
Property crimes
Burglary176.7
Larceny-theft1794.8
Motor vehicle theft169.7
Total property crime2141.2
Notes

*Number of reported crimes per 100,000 population.


Source: New York State Index Crime

During the 1990s, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) adopted CompStat, broken windows policing, and other strategies in a major effort to reduce crime. The drop in crimes thereafter has been variously attributed to a number of factors, including these changes to policing, the end of the crack epidemic, the increased incarceration rate nationwide,[2][3] gentrification,[5] an aging population, and the decline of lead poisoning in children.[6]

History edit

19th century edit

Organized crime has long been associated with New York City, beginning with the Forty Thieves and the Roach Guards gangs in the Five Points area of Manhattan in the 1820s.[citation needed]

In 1835, the New York Herald was established by James Gordon Bennett, Sr., who helped revolutionize journalism by covering stories that appeal to the masses including crime reporting. When Helen Jewett was murdered on April 10, 1836, Bennett did innovative on-the-scene investigation and reporting and helped bring the story to national attention.[7]

Peter Cooper, at the request of the Common Council, drew up a proposal to create a police force of 1,200 officers. The state legislature approved the proposal on May 7, 1844, and abolished the nightwatch system.[8] Under Mayor William Havemeyer, the police force reorganized and officially established itself on May 13, 1845, as the New York Police Department (NYPD). The new system divided the city into three districts and set up courts, magistrates, clerks, and station houses.[8]

High-profile murders edit

Murder of Helen Jewett edit

Helen Jewett was an upscale New York City prostitute whose 1836 murder, along with the subsequent trial and acquittal of her alleged killer, Richard P. Robinson, generated an unprecedented amount of media coverage.[9]

Murder of Mary Rogers edit

The murder of Mary Rogers in 1841 was heavily covered by the press, which also put the spotlight on the ineptitude and corruption in the city's watchmen system of law enforcement.[7] At the time, New York City's population of 320,000 was served by an archaic force, consisting of one night watch, one hundred city marshals, thirty-one constables, and fifty-one police officers.[8]

Riots edit

1863 draft riots edit

The New York City draft riots in July 1863[10] were violent disturbances in New York City that were the culmination of working-class discontention with new laws passed by the U. S. Congress during that year to draft men to fight in the ongoing American Civil War. The riots remain the largest civil insurrection in American history (with 119 to 120 fatalities) aside from the Civil War itself.[11]

President Abraham Lincoln was forced to divert several regiments of militia and volunteer troops from following up after the Battle of Gettysburg to control the city. The rioters were overwhelmingly working-class men, primarily ethnic Irish, resenting particularly that wealthier men, who could afford to pay a $300 ($5,555 in 2014 dollars) commutation fee to hire a substitute, were spared from the draft.[12][13]

Initially intended to express anger at the draft, the protests turned into a race riot, with white rioters, mainly but not exclusively Irish immigrants,[11] attacking blacks wherever they could be found. At least 11 blacks are estimated to have been killed. The conditions in the city were such that Major General John E. Wool, commander of the Department of the East, stated on July 16 that, "Martial law ought to be proclaimed, but I have not a sufficient force to enforce it."[14] The military did not reach the city until after the first day of rioting, when mobs had already ransacked or destroyed numerous public buildings, two Protestant churches, the homes of various abolitionists or sympathizers, many black homes, and the Colored Orphan Asylum at 44th Street and Fifth Avenue, which was burned to the ground.[15]

Other riots edit

In 1870, the Orange Riots were incited by Irish Protestants celebrating the Battle of the Boyne with parades through predominantly Irish Catholic neighborhoods. In the resulting police action, 63 citizens, mostly Irish, were killed.[16]

The Tompkins Square Riot occurred on January 13, 1874, when police violently suppressed a demonstration involving thousands of people in Tompkins Square Park.[17]

20th century edit

High-profile crimes include:

1900s–1950s edit

  • April 14, 1903 – The dismembered and mutilated body of Benedetto Madonia, who had last been seen the day before eating with several high-ranking figures in the Morello crime family, the city's first dominant Mafia organization, is found in an East Village barrel, the most notorious of that era's Barrel Murders. After the NYPD arrested several members of the family tied to a local counterfeiting ring. Inspector George W. McClusky, hoping to compel their cooperation through public humiliation, had officers walk them through the streets of Little Italy in handcuffs to police headquarters, a forerunner of the perp walk that has since become a common practice in the city. It backfired, as the men were hailed as heroes by the Italian immigrant community they were paraded past. Charges against all defendants were later dropped for lack of evidence, and the killing remains unsolved.[18]
  • June 25, 1906 – Stanford White is shot and killed by Harry Kendall Thaw at what was then Madison Square Garden. The murder would soon be dubbed "The Crime of the Century".
  • June 19, 1909 – The strangled body of Elsie Sigel, granddaughter of Civil War Union general Franz Sigel, 19, is found in a trunk in the Chinatown apartment of Leon Ling, a waiter at a Chinese restaurant, ten days after she was last seen leaving her parents' apartment to visit her grandmother. Evidence found in the apartment established that Ling and Sigel had been romantically involved, and he was suspected of the killing but never arrested. No other suspects have ever been identified.
  • August 9, 1910 – Reformist Mayor William Jay Gaynor is shot in the throat in Hoboken, New Jersey by former city employee James Gallagher. He eventually dies in September 1913 from a heart attack.
  • July 4, 1914 – Lexington Avenue explosion: Four are killed and dozens injured when dynamite, believed to have been accumulated by anarchists for an attempt to blow up John D. Rockefeller's Tarrytown Kykuit mansion, goes off prematurely in a seven-story apartment building at 1626 Lexington Avenue.[19]
  • June 11, 1920 – Joseph Bowne Elwell, a prominent auction bridge player, and writer, was shot in the head early in the morning in his locked Manhattan home. Despite intense media interest, the crime was never solved (one confession to police was dismissed because the man who made it was of dubious sanity). The case inspired the development of the locked-room murder sub-genre of detective fiction when Ellery Queen realized that the intense public fascination with the case indicated that there was a market for fictional takes on the story.
  • September 16, 1920 – The Wall Street bombing kills 38 at "the precise center, geographical as well as metaphorical, of financial America and even of the financial world." Anarchists were suspected (Sacco and Vanzetti had been indicted just days before) but no one was ever charged with the crime.
  • November 6, 1928 – Jewish gangster Arnold Rothstein, 46, an avid gambler best remembered for his alleged role fixing the 1919 World Series, died of gunshot wounds inflicted the day before during a Manhattan business meeting. He refused to identify his killer to police. A fellow gambler who was believed to have ordered the hit as retaliation for Rothstein's failure to pay a large debt from a recent poker game (Rothstein, in turn, claimed it had been fixed) was tried and acquitted. No other suspects have ever emerged.
  • August 6, 1930 – The disappearance of Joseph Force Crater, an Associate Justice of the New York Supreme Court. He was last seen entering a New York City taxicab. Crater was declared legally dead in 1939. His mistress Sally Lou Ritz (22) left New York shortly after Crater's disappearance, but was found to be with her parents in Ohio.[citation needed]
  • December 24, 1933 – Leon Tourian, 53, primate of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church in America, is stabbed to death by several armed men while performing Christmas Eve services. All were arrested and convicted the following summer. The killing was motivated by political divisions within the church; the ensuing schism persists.
  • March 19, 1935 – The arrest of a shoplifter inflames racial tensions in Harlem and escalates to rioting and looting, with three killed, 125 injured and 100 arrested.[20]
  • March 28, 1937 – Veronica Gedeon, 20, a model known for posing in lurid illustrations for pulp magazines, is brutally murdered along with her mother, Mary Gedeon and a boarder, Frank Byrnes in her mother's Long Island City home. Sculptor Robert George Irwin, who left a telltale soap sculpture at the scene, was eventually arrested after a nationwide manhunt fed by widespread media coverage of the case, said to be the most intense since the Stanford White murder, which capitalized by Gedeon's risque professional work. After doubts about his sanity surfaced during trial, he was sentenced to life in prison.
  • July 4, 1940 – Two police detectives are killed, and other officers injured, when a bomb detonated as they were carrying it out of the World's Fair from the British Pavilion. No arrests were made and the case remains open;[21] investigators today believe it may have been planted by British intelligence as a false flag operation to implicate the German-American Bund and draw the U.S. into World War II, which was not going well for Britain at the time.[22]
  • November 16, 1940 – "Mad Bomber" George Metesky plants the first bomb of his 16-year campaign of public bombings.
  • January 11, 1943 – Carlo Tresca, an Italian American labor leader who led the opposition to Fascism, Stalinism and Mafia control of unions, was shot dead at a Manhattan intersection during the night. Given the enemies he had made and their propensity for violence, the list of potential suspects was long; however, the investigation was incomplete and no one was ever officially named. Historians believe the most likely suspect was mobster Carmine Galante, later acting boss of the Bonanno family, seen fleeing the scene, who had likely acted on the orders of a Bonanno underboss and Fascist sympathizer Tresca had threatened to expose.[23]
  • August 1, 1943 – A race riot erupts in Harlem after a black soldier is shot by the police and rumored to be dead. The incident touches off a simmering brew of racial tension, unemployment, and high prices to a day of rioting and looting. Several looters are shot dead, about 500 people are injured, and another 500 arrested.
  • March 8, 1952 – A month after helping police find bank robber Willie Sutton, 24-year-old clothing salesman Arnold Schuster is fatally shot outside his Brooklyn home. An extensive investigation failed to identify any suspects, though police came to believe that either the Gambino crime family or Sutton's associates had ordered Schuster killed. Schuster's family filed a lawsuit against the city, which led to a landmark ruling by the New York Court of Appeals that the government has a duty to protect anyone who cooperates with the police when asked to do so.
  • October 25, 1957 — Mafia boss Albert Anastasia was shot dead while getting a shave at a Manhattan barbershop. As with many organized-crime killings, it remains officially unsolved.

1960s edit

  • January 27, 1962 — The French Connection drug bust nets 112 pounds (51 kg) of heroin hidden inside a car shipped from France, with an estimated street value of $112 million, the biggest drug haul in U.S. history at that point. The work of detectives Eddie Egan and Sonny Grosso leading up to it was later the subject of The French Connection by Robin Moore, which formed the basis for the influential, Oscar-winning 1971 film of the same name.
  • May 18, 1962 – Two NYPD detectives were killed in a gun battle with robbers at the Boro Park Tobacco store in Brooklyn, the first time two NYPD detectives died in the same incident since the 1920s. The resulting manhunt brings in the perpetrators, including Jerry Rosenberg, who after being spared the death penalty would become one of America's best-known jailhouse lawyers.[24] The case also led to controversy over the perp walk, in which freshly arrested suspects are paraded in front of the media: Rosenberg filed a federal lawsuit over prejudicial remarks made by a detective during his, and another detective, Albert Seedman, was briefly demoted in response to outrage over a picture of him holding up the head of the other suspect, Tony Dellernia, for photographers who missed the perp walk.
  • August 28, 1963 – The Career Girls Murders: Emily Hoffert and Janet Wylie, two young professionals, are murdered in their Upper East Side apartment by an intruder. Richard Robles, a young white man, was ultimately apprehended in 1965 after investigators erroneously arrested and forced a false confession from a black man, George Whitmore, who was innocent of the crime. Whitmore was compelled to wrongfully spend many years incarcerated, but he was eventually released after his innocence was established, while Robles remains in prison as of 2013.[25]
  • March 13, 1964 – Kitty Genovese is stabbed 12 times in Kew Gardens, Queens by Winston Moseley. The crime is witnessed by numerous people, none of whom aid Genovese or call for help. The crime is noted by psychology textbooks in later years for its demonstration of the bystander effect, though an article published in The New York Times in February 2004 indicated that many popular conceptions of the crime were wrong.[26] Moseley died in prison in 2016.
  • July 18, 1964 – Riots break out in Harlem in protest over the killing of a 15-year-old by a white NYPD officer. One person is killed and 100 are injured in the violence.
  • February 21, 1965 – Black nationalist leader Malcolm X is assassinated at the Audubon Ballroom by three members of the Nation of Islam.
  • July 14, 1965 - Two children, five-year-old Eddie and four-year-old Alice "Missy", went missing. Later that day, Missy was found strangled and five days after that, Eddie was also found dead. The mother Alice Crimmins was charged for the murders.
  • April 7, 1967: Members of the Lucchese crime family, including Henry Hill and Tommy DeSimone, walked into the Air France cargo terminal at JFK airport around midnight and walked out with $420,000 in cash that had been exchanged overseas. The theft, which remained undiscovered for two days, was at the time the highest-valued cargo theft at the airport;[27] it has since been exceeded by the 1978 Lufthansa heist perpetrated by some of the same criminals, including Hill. Both are dramatized in the 1990 Martin Scorsese film GoodFellas, based on Hill's memoirs.
  • October 8, 1967 – James "Groovy" Hutchinson, 21, an East Village hippie/stoner, and Linda Fitzpatrick, 18, a newly converted flower child from a wealthy Greenwich, Connecticut family, are found bludgeoned to death at 169 Avenue B, an incident dubbed "The Groovy Murders" by the press. Two drifters later plead guilty to the murders.[28]
  • July 3, 1968 – A Bulgarian immigrant and Neo-Nazi, 42-year-old Angel Angelof, opens fire from a lavatory roof in Central Park, killing a 24-year-old woman and an 80-year-old man before being gunned down by police.[29]
  • June 13, 1969 – Clarence 13X, founder of the Nation of Islam splinter group Five-Percent Nation, was shot and killed in the early morning hours in the lobby of his girlfriend's Harlem apartment building. The crime remains unsolved.
  • June 28, 1969 – A questionable police raid on the Stonewall Inn, a Greenwich Village gay bar, is resisted by the patrons and leads to the Stonewall riots. The event helps inspire the founding of the modern homosexual rights movement.

1970s edit

  • March 6, 1970 – Greenwich Village townhouse explosion: Three members of the domestic terrorist group the Weathermen are killed when a nail bomb they were building accidentally explodes in the basement of a townhouse on 18 West 11th Street.[30]
  • May 21, 1971 – Two NYPD officers, Waverly Jones and Joseph Piagentini, are gunned down in ambush by members of the Black Liberation Army in Harlem. The gunmen, Herman Bell (now Jalil Muntaqim) and Anthony Bottom were arrested and imprisoned. Bell was released on parole in 2018.[31] As of 2019 Muntaqim remained imprisoned.[32] In 2007 the two men were also charged in connection with the 1971 killing of a San Francisco police officer.[33]
  • April 7, 1972 – Mobster Joe Gallo is gunned down at Umberto's Clam House in Little Italy. The incident serves as the inspiration for the Bob Dylan's epic "Joey" recorded in 1975.
  • April 14, 1972 – The 1972 Harlem mosque incident: Two NYPD officers responded to an apparent call for assistance from a detective at a Harlem address that turned out to be a mosque used by the Nation of Islam. What happened when they got there is still unclear, but both officers were seriously beaten, and one, Philip Cardillo, was shot. He died of the wounds six days later. Louis 17X Dupree, director of the mosque's school, was eventually tried for Cardillo's murder. After the first jury deadlocked, he was acquitted at a second trial.
  • August 22, 1972 – John Wojtowicz and Salvatore Natuarale hold up a Brooklyn bank for 14 hours, in a bid to get cash to pay for Wojtowicz's gay lover's sex-change operation. The scheme fails when the cops arrive, leading to a tense 14-hour standoff. Natuarale is killed by the police at JFK Airport. The incident served as the basis for the 1975 film Dog Day Afternoon.
  • December 1972 — The police department discloses that around 200 pounds (91 kg) of heroin, much of it seized in the French Connection busts a decade earlier, has been stolen from evidence lockers over a period of several months and replaced with cornstarch by someone who signed in under false names and nonexistent badge numbers. Several detectives were suspected of complicity in the thefts; in 2009 Brooklyn mobster Anthony Casso, serving 455 years in federal prison, intimated that he knew who had stolen the drugs.[34]
  • January 3, 1973 – The body of 29-year-old teacher Roseann Quinn is discovered, with multiple stab wounds, in her Upper West Side apartment after she failed to show up for the first day of classes in the new year. John Wayne Wilson, a man she had picked up at nearby bar on New Year's Eve, was later arrested and charged with the murder but killed himself in jail before he could be tried. The incident inspired the 1975 novel Looking for Mr. Goodbar, the source for the 1977 film of the same name starring Diane Keaton.
  • April 28, 1973 — Clifford Glover, a 10-year-old black resident of Jamaica, Queens, was shot and killed by police officer Thomas Shea while running from an unmarked car, which he thought was a robbery attempt. Shea was charged with murder, the first time an NYPD officer had been so charged for a killing in the line of duty in 50 years. He claimed that he saw a gun, a claim contradicted by ballistic evidence that showed Glover had been shot from behind. Race riots broke out following his acquittal the following year.[35] It inspired the opening verse of The Rolling Stones's song "Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)" .
  • January 24, 1975 – Fraunces Tavern, a historical site in lower Manhattan, is bombed by the FALN, killing four people and wounding more than 50.
  • December 29, 1975 – A bomb explodes in the baggage claim area of the TWA terminal at LaGuardia Airport, killing 11 and injuring 74. The perpetrators were never identified.[36]
  • July 29, 1976 – David Berkowitz (aka the "Son of Sam") kills one person and seriously wounds another in the first of a series of attacks that terrorized the city for the next year.
  • November 25, 1976 – NYPD officer Robert Torsney fatally shoots unarmed 15-year-old Randolph Evans in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. Torsney is found not guilty by reason of insanity the following year and is released from Queens' Creedmoor Psychiatric Center in 1979, only to be denied a disability pension.
  • July 13, 1977 – Dominick Ciscone, a 17-year-old aspiring mobster, is shot and killed while hanging out with friends on Smith Street in the Carroll Gardens neighborhood of Brooklyn, the only homicide to occur during that year's blackout. Police investigate several local parties Ciscone was known to have had disputes with but do not identify any suspects. Despite several promising anonymous tips to police around the killing's 20th anniversary in 1997, it remained unsolved as of 2019.[37]
  • September 14, 1977 – Variety reporter Addison Verrill, 36, was found beaten and stabbed in his Greenwich Village apartment after having spent the night in gay bars. After the killer called Village Voice reporter Arthur Bell, an acquaintance of Verrill's, and confessed, he was identified as Paul Bateson, a former radiological technician at New York University Medical Center who had appeared in that role in The Exorcist. Bateson was convicted of the murder and served 25 years in prison; police suspected him in a series of serial killings of still-unidentified gay men whose dismembered bodies were found in bags in the Hudson (inspiring a plot element in the 1980 film Cruising) but no charges were ever filed.[38]
  • October 12, 1978 – Sid Vicious, former bassist of seminal English punk band the Sex Pistols, allegedly stabs his girlfriend Nancy Spungen to death in their room in the Hotel Chelsea. He died of a drug overdose before he could be tried.
  • December 11, 1978 – Lufthansa heist: At the German airline's JFK Airport cargo terminal, an armed gang makes off with $5 million in cash and $875,000 in jewelry in the early hours of the morning. The well-planned robbery was at the time the largest cash theft ever in the United States and remains the largest theft ever at the airport. It was masterminded by members of the Lucchese crime family, including Henry Hill and Tommy DeSimone, who had pulled off the Air France robbery at the airport nine years earlier. Tensions among the gang over how to divide the money, and some members' failure to keep a low profile in the wake of the crime led to the deaths or disappearances of 10 of those involved over the next few months. Many of the killings are believed to have been committed or ordered by Lucchese soldier Jimmy Burke, though no one was ever arrested and charged (not least because many died first). The crime and its aftermath have been dramatized in the films The 10 Million Dollar Robbery, The Big Heist—and GoodFellas, Martin Scorsese's 1990 adaptation of Hill's memoirs. In 2014 Vincent Asaro, a 78-year-old Bonanno family capo was indicted on charges of receiving money from the robbery and conspiring in it. He was acquitted the following year, the only person ever tried in connection with the crime.
  • May 25, 1979 – Six-year-old Etan Patz vanishes after leaving his SoHo apartment to walk to his school bus alone. Despite a massive search by the NYPD the boy is never found and was declared legally dead in 2001.[39]

1980s edit

  • January 4, 1980 – Three Manhattan men suspected of 60 break-ins were arrested by the police.
  • March 14, 1980 – Ex-Congressman Allard Lowenstein is assassinated in his law offices at Rockefeller Center by Dennis Sweeney, a deranged ex-associate.[40]
  • December 8, 1980 – Ex-Beatle John Lennon is murdered in front of his home in The Dakota.
  • June 22, 1982 – Willie Turks, a black 34-year-old MTA worker, is set upon and killed by a white mob in the Gravesend section of Brooklyn. Eighteen-year-old Gino Bova was convicted of second-degree manslaughter in 1983.
  • November 5, 1982 – Author and artist Theresa Hak Kyung Cha was raped and killed by security guard and serial rapist Joey Sanza in The Puck Building.
  • September 15, 1983 – Michael Stewart is allegedly beaten into a coma by New York Transit Police officers. Stewart died 13 days later from his injuries at Bellevue Hospital. On November 24, 1985, after a six-month trial, six officers were acquitted on charges stemming from Stewart's death.[41]
  • October 29, 1984 – Police shoot and kill 66-year-old Eleanor Bumpurs as they try to evict her from her Bronx apartment. Bumpurs, who was mentally ill, was wielding a knife and had slashed one of the officers. The shooting provoked heated debate about police racism and brutality. In 1987 officer Stephen Sullivan was acquitted on charges of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide stemming from the shooting.[42]
  • December 2, 1984 – Caroline Rose Isenberg, a 23-year-old aspiring actress, was stabbed to death in the early morning hours after returning to her Upper West Side apartment from a Broadway show. Emmanuel Torres, the building custodian's son, was arrested at the end of the month and charged with the crime. He was convicted the following year and sentenced to life in prison. The case received considerable national media attention.
  • December 22, 1984 – Bernhard Goetz shoots and seriously wounds four unarmed black men on a 2 train on the subway who he claimed were trying to rob him, generating weeks of headlines and many discussions about crime and vigilantism in the media.
  • April 17, 1985 – Mark Davidson, a high school student, is arrested and tortured in Queens' 106th Precinct on drug dealing charges.
  • June 12, 1985 – Edmund Perry, a returning graduate of Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, is shot to death in Harlem by undercover officer Lee Van Houten, who claimed that Perry and his brother, Jonah, attacked and attempted to rob him. A grand jury declined to indict Van Houten the following month.
  • December 16, 1985 – Gambino crime family boss Paul Castellano is shot dead in a gangland execution on East 46th Street in Manhattan.
  • February 25, 1986 – 2 dead and 4 hurt, including 3 police officers, in a shootout in the Bronx.
  • July 7, 1986 – A deranged man, Juan Gonzalez, wielding a machete kills 2 and wounds 9 on the Staten Island Ferry. In 2000 Gonzalez was granted unsupervised leave from his residence at the Bronx Psychiatric Hospital.[43]
  • August 26, 1986 – 18-year-old student Jennifer Levin is murdered by Robert Chambers in Central Park after the two had left a bar to have sex in the park. The case was sensationalized in the press and raised issues over victims' rights, as Chambers' attorney attempted to smear Levin's reputation to win his client's freedom.
  • October 4, 1986 – CBS News anchorman Dan Rather is assaulted while walking along Park Avenue by two men, one of whom Rather reported kept asking him "Kenneth, what is the frequency?" as he did.[44] The mysterious question became a pop-culture catch-phrase, and inspired an R.E.M. song that Rather joined with the band in performing on Late Night with David Letterman. William Tager, who apparently believed that Rather was secretly broadcasting messages to him, was identified as one of the assailants in 1997 (though not charged because the statute of limitations had expired) following his own conviction for killing an NBC stagehand.[45]
  • November 19, 1986 – 20-year-old Larry Davis opens fire on NYPD officers attempting to arrest him in his sister's apartment in the Bronx. Six officers are wounded, and Davis eludes capture for the next 17 days, during which time he became something of a folk hero in the neighborhood. Davis was stabbed to death in jail in 2008.
  • November 24, 1986 – Two Port Authority police officers and a holdup were seriously shot and wounded in a shootout at a Queens diner.
  • December 20, 1986 – A white mob in Howard Beach, Queens, attacks three black men whose car had broken down in the largely white neighborhood. One of the men, Michael Griffith is chased onto Shore Parkway where he is hit and killed by a passing car. The killing prompted several tempestuous marches through the neighborhood led by Al Sharpton.
  • July 9, 1987 – 12-year-old Jennifer Schweiger, a girl with Down syndrome, is abducted and murdered in Staten Island by a sex offender and suspected mass murderer, Andre Rand.
  • November 2, 1987 – Joel Steinberg and his lover Hedda Nussbaum are arrested for the beating and neglect of their six-year-old adopted daughter Lisa Steinberg, who died two days later from her injuries. The case provoked outrage that did not subside when Steinberg was released from prison in 2004 after serving 15 years.
  • February 26, 1988 – A gunman shot rookie NYPD officer Edward Byrne while he was alone in a patrol car monitoring a Jamaica street where a homeowner had reported violence and threats against his house. The blatant, deliberate nature of the killing resulted in widespread outrage, with President Ronald Reagan personally calling the Byrne family to offer condolences. Four men, apparently acting on the orders of a jailed drug dealer, were arrested within a week; all involved are serving lengthy prison sentences.
  • December 21, 1988 – Transgender performer Venus Xtravaganza, featured in the documentary film Paris is Burning, was found strangled under a Manhattan hotel bed. The autopsy established that she had been killed four days earlier. No suspects have ever been named.
  • April 19, 1989 – Central Park jogger Trisha Meili is violently raped and beaten while jogging in Central Park. The crime is attributed to a group of young men who were practicing an activity the police called "wilding", with five of these teens convicted and jailed. In 2002, after the five had completed their sentences, Matias Reyes – a convicted rapist and murderer serving a life sentence for other crimes – confessed to the crime, after which DNA evidence proved the five teens innocent.
     
    The Reverend Al Sharpton leading the first protest march over the death of Yusuf Hawkins in Bensonhurst, 1989.
  • August 23, 1989 – Yusuf Hawkins, a 16-year-old black student, is set upon and murdered by a white mob in the Bensonhurst neighborhood of Brooklyn.[46]

1990s edit

 
John Gotti shortly after his arrest.
  • March 7, 1990 – Twelve-year-old Haitian immigrant David Opont is mugged and set on fire by a 14-year-old assailant, who remained anonymous because he was tried as a minor. The attack created an outpouring of support throughout the city for Opont who eventually recovered from his burns.[47]
  • March 8, 1990 – The first of the copycat Zodiac Killer Heriberto Seda's eight shooting victims is wounded in an attack in Brooklyn. Between 1990 and 1993, Seda wounds five and kills three in his serial attacks. He is captured in 1996 and convicted in 1998.
  • March 25, 1990 – Arson at the illegally operated Happyland Social Club at 1959 Southern Boulevard in the East Tremont section of the Bronx kills 87 people unable to escape the packed dance club, the city's deadliest act of arson ever.[48] Cuban refugee Julio González, who was angry about having been ejected from the club, is arrested, tried and convicted of murder and arson, making the crime also the deadliest to result from a single person's actions in the city's history. González, sentenced to 25 years to life, died in prison in 2016.
  • September 2, 1990 – Utah tourist Brian Watkins is stabbed to death in the Seventh Avenue – 53rd Street station by a gang of youths. Watkins was visiting New York with his family to attend the US Open Tennis tournament in Queens when he was killed defending his family from a gang of muggers. The killing marked a low point in the record murder year of 1990 and led to an increased police presence in New York.[49]
  • November 5, 1990 – Rabbi Meir Kahane, founder of the Jewish Defense League, is assassinated at the Marriott East Side Hotel at 48th Street and Lexington Avenue by El Sayyid Nosair.
  • December 11, 1990 - Senior mafia member, John Gotti is arrested and jailed. Other associates are also arrested.
  • January 24, 1991 – Arohn Kee rapes and murders 13-year-old Paola Illera in East Harlem while she is on her way home from school. Her body is later found near the FDR Drive. Over the next eight years, Kee murders two more women before being arrested in February 1999. He is sentenced to three life terms in prison in January 2001.
  • July 23, 1991 – The body of a four-year-old girl is found in a cooler on the Henry Hudson Parkway in Inwood, Manhattan. The identity of the child, dubbed "Baby Hope", is unknown until October 2013, when 52-year-old Conrado Juarez is arrested after confessing to killing the girl, his cousin Anjelica Castillo, and dumping her body.[50]
  • August 19, 1991 – A Jewish automobile driver accidentally kills a seven-year-old black boy, thereby touching off the Crown Heights riots, during which an Australian Jew, Yankel Rosenbaum, was fatally stabbed by Lemrick Nelson.
  • August 28, 1991 – A 4 train crashes just north of 14th Street – Union Square, killing five people. Motorman Robert Ray, who was intoxicated, fell asleep at the controls and was convicted of manslaughter in 1992.[51]
  • February 26, 1992 – Two teens were shot to death by 15-year-old Khalil Sumpter inside Thomas Jefferson High School an hour before a scheduled visit by then-mayor David Dinkins. Sumpter was paroled in 1998 at the age of 22.[52]
  • March 11, 1992 – Manuel de Dios Unanue, a Cuban-born journalist who edited several Spanish-language newspapers, was shot to death at a Queens bar. Several men were later convicted in the murder, apparently carried out at the order of the Colombian Cali cartel on whose activities de Dios had reported extensively, the first time the cartel had murdered one of its opponents on American soil.
  • December 17, 1992 – Patrick Daly, principal of P.S. 15 in Red Hook, Brooklyn, is killed in the crossfire of a drug-related shooting while looking for a pupil who had left his school. The school was later renamed the Patrick Daly school after the principal.[53]
  • February 26, 1993 – A bomb planted by terrorists explodes in the World Trade Center's underground garage, killing six people and injuring over a thousand, as well as causing much damage to the basement. See: World Trade Center bombing
  • December 7, 1993 – Colin Ferguson shoots 25 passengers, killing six, on a Long Island Rail Road commuter train out of Penn Station.
  • March 1, 1994 – During the 1994 New York school bus shooting, Rashid Baz, a Lebanese-born Arab immigrant, opens fire on a van carrying members of the Lubavitch Hasidic sect of Jews driving on the Brooklyn Bridge. A 16-year-old student, Ari Halberstam later dies of his wounds. Baz was apparently acting out of revenge for the Cave of the Patriarchs massacre in Hebron, West Bank.[54]
  • August 31, 1994 – William Tager shoots and kills Campbell Theron Montgomery, a technician employed by NBC, outside of the stage of the Today show. Tager is also identified as one of possibly two men who assaulted CBS News anchor Dan Rather on Park Avenue in 1986.
  • December 15, 1994 – Disgruntled computer analyst Edward J. Leary firebombs a 3 train with homemade explosives at 145th Street, injuring two teenagers. Six days later, he firebombs a crowded 4 train at Fulton Street, injuring over 40. Leary is sentenced to 94 years in prison for both attacks.[55]
  • December 22, 1994 – Anthony Baez, a 29-year-old Bronx man, dies after being placed in an illegal choke-hold by NYPD officer Francis X. Livoti. Livoti is sentenced to 7+12 years in 1998 for violating Baez's civil rights.[56]
  • October 20, 1995 — Wall Street investment banker Gerard Finneran, 58, of Greenwich, Connecticut, is arrested after his United Airlines flight from Buenos Aires lands at Kennedy Airport. During the flight, he had, in addition to drunkenly assaulting and threatening cabin crew when they refused to serve him additional drinks, climbed atop a serving cart and defecated on it in full view of passengers and crew.[57]
  • November 30, 1995 – Rapper Randy Walker, 27, better known as Stretch, was shot and killed by the occupants of a vehicle passing his minivan in Queens Village, New York, shortly after midnight. No suspects have ever been identified, but it is often believed to be somehow related to his onetime colleague Tupac Shakur's later death since it took place exactly one year after an apparent robbery attempt in Manhattan in which Shakur had been seriously injured.
  • December 8, 1995 – A long racial dispute in Harlem over the eviction of a black record-store owner by a Jewish proprietor ends in murder and arson. Fifty-one-year-old Roland Smith, Jr., angry over the proposed eviction, set fire to Freddie's Fashion Mart on 125th Street and opened fire on the store's employees, killing seven and wounding four. Smith also perished in the blaze.[58]
  • March 4, 1996 – Second Avenue Deli owner Abe Lebewohl is shot and killed during a robbery. The murder of this popular deli owner and East Village fixture remained unsolved as of 2013.[59]
  • June 4, 1996 – John Royster, a 22-year-old drifter, brutally beats a 32-year-old female piano teacher in Central Park, the first in a series of attacks over a period of eight days. Royster would go on to brutally beat another woman in Manhattan, rape a woman in Yonkers and beat a woman, Evelyn Alvarez, to death on Park Avenue on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. In 1998, Royster was sentenced to life in prison without parole.[60]
  • March 17, 1996 — During an argument over drug debts, Michael Alig and Robert Riggs kill fellow "Club Kid" Andre Melendez, often known as "Angel" for the winged outfits he wore during the Club Kids' heyday. After keeping his body on ice in a bathtub for several days, Alig ultimately dismembered it and threw the parts in the Hudson River, where they washed up on Staten Island the next month. The pair were not arrested until October, and would eventually serve over a decade in prison after pleading guilty to manslaughter.[61]
  • July 4, 1996 – A confrontation between a police officer and subway patron at the 167th Street station on the D train in the Bronx results in the shooting death of Nathaniel Levi Gaines, the patron. Officer Paolo Colecchia was convicted of homicide, the third time that has happened to a police officer in city history.
  • February 5, 1997 – Ali Forney, age 22, a homeless, gay, black, and transgender person who advocated for homeless LGBT youth, was found shot dead on a Harlem street. The Ali Forney Center was established in his memory. No suspects have ever been named in the case.
  • February 23, 1997 – Abu Ali Kamal, a 69-year-old Palestinian immigrant opens fire on the observation deck of the Empire State Building, killing one and wounding six before taking his own life.[62] In 2007, Kamal's daughter told the New York Daily News that the shooting was politically motivated.[63]
  • May 30, 1997 – Jonathan Levin, a Bronx teacher and son of former Time Warner CEO Gerald Levin, is robbed and murdered by his former student Corey Arthur.[64]
  • August 9, 1997– Abner Louima is beaten and sodomized with a plunger at the 70th precinct house in Brooklyn by several NYPD officers led by Justin Volpe.
  • November 7, 1997 – A Manhattan couple, Camden Sylvia, 36, and Michael Sullivan, 54, disappear from their loft at 76 Pearl Street in Manhattan after arguing with their landlord over a lack of heat in their apartment. The landlord, Robert Rodriguez, pleaded guilty to tax evasion, larceny and credit card fraud following the missing persons investigation. The couple is presumed dead; their bodies have never been found despite extensive searches.[65]
  • January 3, 1999 – Kendra Webdale, age 32, is killed after being pushed in front of an oncoming subway train at the 23rd Street station by Andrew Goldstein, a 29-year-old with schizophrenia. The case ultimately led to the passage of Kendra's Law.
  • February 4, 1999 – Unarmed African immigrant Amadou Bailo Diallo is shot and killed by four plainclothes police officers, sparking massive protests against police brutality and racial profiling.
  • February 15, 1999 – Rapper Lamont Coleman, better known as Big L, is killed in a Harlem drive-by shooting. A friend, Gerard Woodley, was arrested and charged with the murder three months later but then released; no other suspects have ever been identified. Police believe the murder was either revenge for something Coleman's brother had done, or that he was mistaken for his brother.[66]
  • March 8, 1999 – Amy Watkins, a 26-year-old social worker from Kansas who worked with battered women in the Bronx, is stabbed to death in a botched robbery near her home in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn. Her two assailants are sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.[67]

21st century edit

2000s edit

 
An NYPD vehicle stationed in Times Square in 2005.
  • March 16, 2000 – Patrick Dorismond is shot and killed by an NYPD officer in a case of mistaken identity during a drug bust.
  • May 24, 2000 – Five employees of a Flushing, Queens, Wendy's restaurant are killed and two are seriously wounded during a robbery that netted the killers $2,400.
  • May 10, 2001 – Actress Jennifer Stahl is killed with two other people in an armed robbery in her apartment above the Carnegie Deli in Manhattan. The victims were bound and shot point-blank in the head.[68]
  • September 11, 2001 – Two jetliners destroy the two 110-story World Trade Center Twin Towers and several surrounding buildings in part of a coordinated terrorist attack, killing 2,606 people who were in the towers and on the ground. It is the deadliest mass-casualty incident in the city's history. That night, Polish immigrant Henryk Siwiak was shot dead in Bedford-Stuyvesant, where he had mistakenly gone to start a new job; due to scarce police resources at that time, the crime remains unsolved. It is the city's only official homicide for that day since the terrorist attack victims are not included in crime statistics.[69]
  • October 30, 2002 – Two gunmen went into a Jamaica, Queens recording studio and shot Jason Mizell, 37, better known as Jam Master Jay, a founding member of pioneering hip hop group Run-DMC, in the head at point-blank range; he died shortly thereafter.[70] While some suspects have been identified in the years since, no one has ever been prosecuted.
  • April 24, 2003 – Romona Moore, a 21-year-old Hunter College student, disappeared after leaving home for a friend's house. The NYPD closed the case after two days. Her body was found on May 15, severely tortured; she had been kept alive for a considerable length of time after the case was closed. The two perpetrators were convicted in a second trial after a mistrial was declared following a courtroom attack by one of them. Moore's family sued the NYPD over what they felt was inadequate attention to the case compared to later cases involving young white women.[71]
  • July 23, 2003 – Othniel Askew shoots to death political rival City Council member James E. Davis in the City Hall chambers of the New York City Council.
  • October 15, 2003 — One of the Staten Island ferries crashes into the pier at St. George, killing 11. Pilot Richard Smith, who had nodded off due to the side effects of some over-the-counter painkillers he had taken, fled the scene for his home, where he was arrested after having survived two suicide attempts. He was later arrested, and pleaded guilty to manslaughter the next year, for which he was sentenced to 18 months in prison; the city's ferry director also served a year and a day after pleading guilty to the same charge.
  • January 27, 2005 – Nicole duFresne, an aspiring actress, is shot dead in the Lower East Side section of Manhattan after being accosted by a gang of youths.[72]
  • February 14, 2005 — Rashawn Brazell, 19, of Bushwick, is last seen leaving a subway station with two unidentified individuals. Several days later plastic bags with parts of his dismembered body were found around the neighborhood. In 2017, police arrested a suspect already in custody for another heretofore unsolved Brooklyn homicide and charged him with killing Brazell, who had lived across the street from at the time.[73]
  • October 31, 2005 – Fashion journalist Peter Braunstein sexually assaults a co-worker while posing as a fireman, earning him the nickname of the "Fire Fiend" from the city's tabloids. He was arrested after leading officials on a multi-state manhunt. Braunstein was later sentenced to life and will be eligible for parole in 2023.
  • January 11, 2006 – Seven-year-old Nixzmary Brown dies after being beaten by her stepfather, Cesar Rodriguez, in their Brooklyn apartment. Rodriguez was convicted of first-degree manslaughter in March 2008.[74]
  • February 25, 2006 – Criminology graduate student Imette St. Guillen is brutally tortured, raped, and killed in New York City after being abducted outside the Falls bar in the SoHo section of Manhattan. Bouncer Darryl Littlejohn is convicted of the crime and sentenced to life imprisonment.[75]
  • April 1, 2006 – New York University student Broderick Hehman is killed after being hit by a car in Harlem. Hehman was chased into the street by a group of black teens who allegedly shouted: "get the white boy". The death of Hehman echoed the death of Michael Griffith 20 years earlier in Queens.[76]
  • May 29, 2006 – Jeff Gross, founder of the Staten Island commune Ganas, is shot and wounded by former commune member Rebekah Johnson. Johnson was captured in Philadelphia on June 18, 2007, after being featured on America's Most Wanted.[77]
  • July 25, 2006 – Jennifer Moore, an 18-year-old student from New Jersey is abducted and killed after a night of drinking at a Chelsea bar. Her body is found outside a Weehawken motel. Thirty-five-year-old Draymond Coleman was convicted of the crime and sentenced to 50 years in 2010.[78]
  • October 8, 2006 – Michael Sandy, a 29-year-old man, is hit by a car on the Belt Parkway after being beaten by a group of white attackers. Sandy died of his injuries on October 13, 2006. The attack, which is being investigated as a hate crime hearkened back to the killing of Michael Griffith in 1986.[79]
     
    Memorial to Sean Bell
  • November 1, 2006 – Actress Adrienne Shelly is killed in her apartment.
  • November 25, 2006 – Four NYPD officers fire a combined 50 shots at a group of unarmed men in Jamaica, Queens, wounding two and killing 23-year-old Sean Bell. The case sparks controversy over police brutality and racial profiling.
  • July 9, 2007 – Rookie police officer Russel Timoshenko is shot five times while pulling over a stolen BMW in Crown Heights; he died five days later. A massive manhunt led to the arrest of three men a week later in Pennsylvania, who were eventually convicted of the crime. All three were carrying guns obtained illegally, which led Mayor Michael Bloomberg and other city officials to stiffen city ordinances on illegal firearm possession and seek tighter gun-control laws at the state and national level.
  • February 12, 2008 – Psychologist Kathryn Faughey is murdered in her Manhattan office by a mentally-ill man whose intended victim was a psychiatrist in the same practice.[80]
  • March 20, 2009 – WABC-AM radio personality George Weber was found stabbed to death in his Brooklyn apartment during an apparent robbery. A teenage boy who had answered an Internet ad Weber placed was later convicted of the crime.

2010s edit

  • May 1, 2010 – A bombing in Times Square was thwarted when some shopkeepers and others notified a mounted officer about a 4-wheel-drive vehicle parked illegally. The officer also noticed smoke and explosives and called for backup.[81]
  • July 22, 2010 – Five members of the Jones family were killed in an apparent case of murder-suicide arson in the Port Richmond section of Staten Island.[82]
  • February 11, 2011 – Maksim Gelman, 23 years old, went on a 28-hour rampage, killing four people and wounding five others throughout Brooklyn and Manhattan. He was sentenced to life imprisonment.[83]
  • July 13, 2011 – The body of eight-year-old Leiby Kletzky was found dismembered in two locations in Brooklyn after he was murdered by Levi Aron.[84]
  • July 31, 2012 – Ramona Moore, 35, disappears after reportedly arguing with Nasean Bonie, her building superintendent over the rent on her apartment near Crotona Park in the Bronx. Over the next two years, police eventually developed enough evidence to charge him with her murder despite the absence of her body. It was found in Orange County in 2015, the week before his trial, which would have been the first murder prosecution without a body in the borough's history, was to start.[85] In 2016, a jury acquitted Bonie, already serving time for assaulting his wife, of the murder charge but convicted him of manslaughter; he was sentenced to 25 years in prison.
  • August 24, 2012 – Jeffrey Johnson, 58, shot and killed a former co-worker before being shot and killed by police officers outside the Empire State Building. A total of 11 people, including the gunman, were shot.[86]
  • October 25, 2012 – Lucia and Leo Krim were stabbed to death by their babysitter, Yoselyn Ortega, in their Upper West Side apartment.[87]
  • December 3, 2012 – Death of Ki-Suck Han: Han, 58, of Korean descent, was pushed onto the tracks by Naeem Davis, an African immigrant from Sierra Leone, at the Times Square station before eventually being crushed by an oncoming train. The two men had bumped into each other at the turnstiles. Han was drunk and began aggressively engaging Davis. Davis eventually pushed Han away, which caused him to fall onto the tracks. Han had some time to climb back onto the platform, but was too drunk to do so.[88] His case drew controversy, especially due to a photograph that was published of Han on the tracks in the New York Post.[89] Prosecutors brought a murder charge against Davis, to which he pleaded not guilty.[90] In 2017, Davis was acquitted by a jury and released.[88]
  • December 27, 2012 – Murder of Sunando Sen: Sen, 46, of Indian descent, was pushed onto an incoming train at 40th Street-Lowery Street station in a hate crime attack by 33-year-old Erika Menendez.[91] In 2015, Menendez was sentenced to 24 years in prison.[92]
  • January 2, 2014 – Satmar Hasidic businessman Menachem Stark, 39, was kidnapped outside his office in Williamsburg, Brooklyn during a snowstorm, the intended victim of a robbery. His burned body was found in a trash bin the next day in Great Neck, New York.[93] Of the four cousins indicted in the crime, Kendel Felix was convicted of 2nd-degree manslaughter in September 2016; Irvine Henry pled guilty in February 2017 to conspiracy, hindering prosecution and tampering with physical evidence; Kendall Felix was sentenced in March 2019 to seven years in prison; and Erskine Felix, charged with kidnapping and 2nd-degree murder, was sentenced to 15-years-to-life in prison.[94]
  • July 17, 2014 – Eric Garner, a 43-year-old black man on Staten Island, died after a chokehold was applied to him during a confrontation with police over selling untaxed cigarettes. The incident, captured on cellphone video, showed that the asthmatic Garner had repeatedly called out "I can't breathe!" The case attracted national attention as it occurred three weeks before the equally racially tinged shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. A grand jury declined to indict Daniel Pantaleo, the officer involved.[95]
  • November 17, 2014 – Murder of Wai Kuen Kwok – Kwok, 61, of Asian descent, was pushed onto an incoming "D" train at 167th Street station.[96] The prepreator, 36-year-old African-American Kevin Darden, was sentenced to 18 years in prison in a plea deal after initially facing 25 years to life in prison. Darden was a habitual offender that had previously been arrested 50 times.[97] The sentence was criticised by both Kwok's family and James Muriel, the subway motorman who was at the controls of the train that struck Kwok, who stated that the incident destroyed his state of mind.[97] Kwok's death in 2014 meant that the last three victims killed in NYC by being pushed into subway tracks since 2012 were all Asian-American men.[98]
  • November 20, 2014 – A 28-year-old Brooklyn man, Akai Gurley, was shot dead by rookie NYPD officer Peter Liang during a "vertical patrol" on the staircases of Louis H. Pink housing projects in East New York. Liang was convicted of manslaughter in February 2016; he is currently appealing the verdict.[99]
  • December 20, 2014 – 2014 Killings of NYPD Officers - A gunman killed two NYPD officers and then himself in Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn.
  • May 2, 2015 – Police officer Brian Moore was shot in Queens by Demetrius Blackwell after Moore and his partner asked Blackwell to stop while walking down the street; Moore died in the hospital two days later. Blackwell was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison.
  • May 17, 2015 – Rapper Chinx and another were wounded in a drive-by shooting along Queens Boulevard; he died at the hospital later. The killing remains unsolved.[needs update]
  • August 2, 2016 – Murder of Karina Vetrano – Karina Vetrano went for a late afternoon run in Spring Creek Park. Her body was found around 11 pm, with evidence of assault and was ruled a homicide. Chanel Lewis was arrested and tried for her murder and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.[100]
  • September 2016 – 31 people are injured in a pressure cooker bombing in Chelsea, Manhattan. A bombing occurred earlier that day in Seaside Park, New Jersey, and no one was injured as a result. A suspect in both bombings was arrested the following day after a shootout in Linden, New Jersey that left him and three police officers injured.[101]
  • May 18, 2017 – 2017 Times Square car attack: Navy veteran Richard Rojas drove his car on a pedestrian zone. Alyssa Elsme, a 18-year-old domestic tourist from Portage, Michigan, was killed and 20 people were injured.
  • June 30, 2017 – Bronx Lebanon Hospital attack: A former employee, Henry Bello, shot and killed a doctor and wounded six other people at the hospital before committing suicide.
  • October 31, 2017 – 2017 New York City truck attack: A terrorist attack killed eight and wounded eleven in Downtown Manhattan
  • June 20, 2018 – Murder of Lesandro Guzman-Feliz: 15-year-old Lesandro "Junior" Guzman-Feliz was killed by members of the Dominican gang Trinitario in the Belmont neighborhood of the Bronx. The death occurred in a case of mistaken identity, in which Guzman-Feliz was mistaken for a member of a rival gang. Public outrage arose when graphic video of the killing began to circulate on the Internet. Video footage shows Guzman-Feliz being dragged out of a bodega by a group of men who repeatedly slash the victim with a machete and stab him with knives. Five individuals, all members of the Trinitario gang, were convicted of his murder in 2019.
  • October 5, 2019 – Four homeless men were beaten to death with a heavy blunt object, and a fifth was injured. They were found between 2 a.m. and 5 a.m. on the streets of Chinatown, Manhattan. A 24-year-old homeless man was arrested.[102]
  • December 11, 2019 – Murder of Tessa Majors: 18-year-old Tessa Majors, a freshman at Barnard College, was stabbed and killed during a robbery in Morningside Park.

2020s edit

  • February 12–13, 2021 – Four strangers were stabbed within a 14-hour window along the A train. Two of the victims eventually died from their injuries. Police apprehended a suspect in Upper Manhattan on February 13.[103]
  • April 23, 2021 – Killing of Yao Pan Ma: Ma, 61, of Asian descent, was randomly attacked by Jarrod Powell as he was collecting cans along Third Avenue and 125th Street in East Harlem. Ma suffered serious injuries, that eventually caused his death from a cerebral hemorrhage in a long-term care center run by The New Jewish Home on December 31, 2021.[104][105][106]
  • December 3, 2021 – Stabbing of Davide Giri, a young Italian academic from Columbia University by a member of the Everybody Killer gang.[107][108][109]
  • January 15, 2022 – Death of Michelle Go: Go, 40, of Asian descent, was killed after she was pushed into the path of an oncoming subway train by assailant Martial Simon, a black man, at Times Square–42nd Street station, causing her death. Along with the killing of Yao Pan Ma, this incident was against the backdrop amid rising anti-Chinese hate crimes in the city, as well as the country in general since 2020.[110][111][112][113]
  • February 13, 2022 – Killing of Christina Yuna Lee: Lee, 35, of Asian descent, was stabbed to death inside her apartment at Chrystie Street by assailant Assamad Nash, a black man who had followed her home from the street and into the building. The 25-year-old Nash had a record of misdemeanor arrests.[114][115]
  • February 28, 2022 – Death of GuiYing Ma: Ma, 62, was sweeping a sidewalk in Queens the previous year on November 26 when she was attacked with a rock by assailant Elisaul Perez. Ma, of Chinese descent, suffered serious injuries as a result, with permanent brain and skull damage.[116] She went into a coma for ten weeks,[117] and although she initially woke up from it in early February, she ultimately died from her injuries, due to complications of a traumatic head injury on February 28.[118][119] Ma is the fourth American of Asian descent to be killed in the city within the last two months that has been directly attributed to violence against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs).[117]
  • March 1, 2022 - Steven Zajonc, 28, physically assaulted seven Asian women in Manhattan in a matter of two hours in the evening, before he was arrested the next day and charges with hate crimes.[120]
  • March 3, 2022 - Harvey Marcelin, known lately as Marcelin Harvey and identifying as a transgender woman, was arrested for the murder and dismemberment of 68-year-old Susan Leyden, after having been previously released on other convictions of murder and sexual assault.
  • March 12, 2022 – 2022 Northeastern U.S. serial shooter: A man shot two homeless men in Manhattan, killing one. The same man is suspected in several shootings in Washington, D.C., that also targeted homeless men.[121]
  • March 13, 2022 - Two women working at the Museum of Modern Art were stabbed in a rage and severely injured by 60-year-old Gary Cabana, who was arrested two days later after fleeing and is now being tried for attempted murder.[122]
  • April 12, 2022 – 2022 New York City Subway attack: The accused Frank Robert James, a black nationalist, opened fire and shot 10 people on a northbound N train on the New York City Subway in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, and had also threw a smoke grenade. While no one was killed, a few were left with serious injuries.
  • April 16, 2022 – Murder of Orsolya Gaal: Gaal, 51, a married mother of two, was found stabbed 58 times in a duffle bag in Forest Park. A 44-year-old handyman, an illegal alien from Mexico, was arrested on April 21 as a person of interest and the two reportedly argued before Gaal was killed by the handyman in her basement.[123]
  • April 30, 2022 – Murder of Zhiwen Yan: Yan, 45, of Chinese descent, was a food delivery worker on a shift when he was shot and killed on his scooter near 108th Street and 67th Drive in Forest Hills.[124][125][126] On June 2, 2022, 51-year-old Glenn Hirsch was charged with his murder. He pleaded not guilty.[127] In August 2022 Hirsch was found dead at his home from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.[128]
  • May 11, 2022 – Death of Zinat Hossain: Hossain, 24, was killed when she was pushed under the train at Utica Avenue station by robbers who were trying to steal her bag. Hossain was a Bangladeshi student that attended Hunter College.[129]
  • May 22, 2022 – Death of Daniel Enriquez: Enriquez, 48, was riding on a Manhattan-bound Q train when he was shot and killed in what police called a random attack.[130]
  • May 25, 2022 – Killing of Victor Vega: Vega, 61, was approached by two African-American men while he was walking home at Lexington Avenue near Nostrand Avenue in Bedford-Stuyvesant. The incident, which was caught on surveillance camera, appeared to show the two men intimidating Vega before he turned towards them. One of the men then punched Vega in the face, causing him to fall and land on his back with his head under a parked car. The man then pick-pocketed an unconscious Vega and handed something to his accomplice. Vega was admitted to the Kings County Hospital Center where he subsequently died five days later.[131][132] His death has been ruled a homicide.[131]

Notable recent crime trends edit

Late-20th-century trends edit

Freakonomics authors Steven Levitt and Steven Dubner attribute the drop in crime to the legalization of abortion in the 1970s, as they suggest that many would-be neglected children and criminals were never born.[133] On the other hand, Malcolm Gladwell provides a different explanation in his book The Tipping Point; he argues that crime was an "epidemic" and a small reduction by the police was enough to "tip" the balance.[134] Another theory is that widespread exposure to lead pollution from automobile exhaust, which can lower intelligence and increase aggression levels, incited the initial crime wave in the mid-20th century, most acutely affecting heavily trafficked cities like New York. A strong correlation was found demonstrating that violent crime rates in New York and other big cities began to fall after lead was removed from American gasoline in the 1970s.[135]

Gang violence edit

In the 20th century, notorious New York-based mobsters Arnold Rothstein, Meyer Lansky, and Lucky Luciano made headlines. The century's later decades are more famous for Mafia prosecutions (and prosecutors like Rudolph Giuliani) than for the influence of the Five Families.

Violent gangs such as the Black Spades and the Westies influenced crime in the 1970s.

The Bloods, Crips and MS-13 gangs of Los Angeles arrived in the city in the 1980s, but gained notoriety when they appeared on Rikers Island in 1993 to fight off the already established Latin Kings gang.

Chinese gangs were also prominent in Chinatown, Manhattan, notably Ghost Shadows and Flying Dragons.

From the 1990s until their 2013 arrest by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in a sting operation, an Orthodox Jewish gang led by Mendel Epstein and Martin Wolmark kidnapped and tortured a number of Jewish men from Borough Park and Midwood, Brooklyn in troubled marriages to force them into granting religious divorces to their wives, some of whom Epstein charged up to $100,000 to commit the crimes.[136]

Subway crime and shoving attacks edit

 
A New York City 1 service subway car in 1973

Crime on the New York City Subway reached a peak in the late 1970s and early 1980s, with the city's subway having a crime rate higher than that of any other mass transit system in the world.[137] During the 2000s, the subway had a lower crime rate, as crime started dropping in the 1990s.[138][139]

Various approaches have been used to fight crime. A 2012 initiative by the MTA to prevent crime is to ban people who commit one in the subway system from entering it for a certain length of time.[140]

In the 1960s, mayor Robert Wagner ordered an increase in the Transit Police force from 1,219 to 3,100 officers. During the hours at which crimes most frequently occurred (between 8:00 p.m. and 4:00 a.m.), the officers went on patrol in all stations and trains. In response, crime rates decreased, as extensively reported by the press.[141]

However, as a consequence of the city's 1976 fiscal crisis, service had become poor and crime had gone up, with crime being announced on the subway almost every day. Additionally, there were 11 "crimes against the infrastructure" in open cut areas of the subway in 1977, where TA staff were injured, some seriously. There were other rampant crimes as well. For example, in the first two weeks of December 1977, "Operation Subway Sweep" resulted in the arrest of over 200 robbery suspects. Passengers were afraid of crime, fed up with long waits for trains that were shortened to save money and upset over the general malfunctioning of the system. The subway also had many dark subway cars.[137] Further compounding the issue, on July 13, 1977, a blackout cut off electricity to most of the city and to Westchester.[137] Due to a sudden increase in violent crimes on the subway in the last week of 1978, police statistics about crime in the subway were being questioned. In 1979, six murders on the subway occurred in the first two months of the year, compared to nine during the entire previous year. The IRT Lexington Avenue Line was known to be frequented by muggers, so in February 1979, a group headed by Curtis Sliwa began unarmed patrols of the 4 train during the night time, in an effort to discourage crime. They were known as the Guardian Angels, and would eventually expand their operations into other parts of the five boroughs. By February 1980, the Guardian Angels' ranks numbered 220.[142]

In March 1979, Mayor Ed Koch asked the city's top law enforcement officials to devise a plan to counteract rising subway violence and to stop insisting that the subways were safer than the streets. Two weeks after Koch's request, top TA cops were publicly requesting Transit Police Chief Sanford Garelik's resignation because they claimed that he had lost control of the fight against subway crime. Finally, on September 11, 1979, Garelik was fired, and replaced with Deputy Chief of Personnel James B. Meehan, reporting directly to City Police Commissioner Robert J. McGuire. Garelik continued in his role of chief of security for the MTA.[137] By September 1979, around 250 felonies per week (or about 13,000 that year) were being recorded on the subway, making the crime rate the most of any other mass transit network anywhere in the world. Some police officers supposedly could not act upon the quality of life crimes and were only to look for violent crimes.

Among other problems the following were included:

Transit police radios and the New York City Police radios transmitted at different frequencies, and if additional help above ground was needed, it could not be summoned because no one above ground would hear the request. Subway patrols were also rigidly scheduled, and it wasn't long before felons (and even the general riders) knew exactly when police would be on their train, or at particular stations. The public perception at the time was that the war on subway crime was failing. In October of 1979, additional decoy and undercover units were deployed in the subway.[137]

Meehan had claimed to be able to, along with 2,300 police officers, "provide sufficient protection to straphangers", but Sliwa had brought a group together to act upon crime, so that between March 1979 and March 1980, felonies per day dropped from 261 to 154. However, overall crime grew by 70% between 1979 and 1980.[143]

On the IRT Pelham Line in 1980, a sharp rise in window-smashing on subway cars caused $2 million in damages; it spread to other lines during the course of the year. When the broken windows were discovered in trains that were still in service, they needed to be taken out of service, causing additional delays; in August 1980 alone, 775 vandalism-related delays were reported.[144] Vandalism of subway cars, including windows, continued through the mid-1980s; between January 27 and February 2, 1985, 1,129 pieces of glass were replaced on subway cars on the 1, 6, CC, E, and K trains.[145] Often, bus transfers, sold on the street for 50 cents, were also sold illegally, mainly at subway-to-bus transfer hubs.[146] Mayor Koch even proposed to put a subway court in the Times Square subway station to speed up arraignments, as there were so many subway-related crimes by then. Meanwhile, high-ranking senior City Hall and transit officials considered raising the fare from 60 to 65 cents to fund additional transit police officers, who began to ride the subway during late nights (between 8 p.m. and 4 a.m.) owing to a sharp increase in crime in 1982. Operation High Visibility commenced in June 1985, had this program extended to 6 a.m., and a police officer was to be present on every train in the system during that time.[147]

On January 20, 1982, MTA Chairman Richard Ravitch told the business group Association for a Better New York that he would not let his teenage sons ride the subway at night, and that even he, as the subway chairman, was nervous riding the trains.[148] The MTA began to discuss how the ridership issue could be fixed, but by October 1982, mostly due to fears about transit crime, poor subway performance, and some economic factors, ridership on the subway was at extremely low levels matching 1917 ridership.[149] Within less than ten years, the MTA had lost around 300 million passengers, mainly because of fears of crime. In July 1985, the Citizens Crime Commission of New York City published a study showing this trend, fearing the frequent robberies and generally bad circumstances.[150] As a result, the Fixing Broken Windows policy, which proposed to stop large-profile crimes by prosecuting quality of life crimes, was implemented.[151][152] Along this line of thinking, the MTA began a five-year program to eradicate graffiti from subway trains in 1984.[153]

To attract passengers, the TA tried to introduce the "Train to the Plane", a service staffed by a transit police officer 24/7. This was discontinued in 1990 due to low ridership and malfunctioning equipment.

In 1989, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority asked the transit police (then located within the NYCTA) to focus on minor offenses such as fare evasion. In the early nineties, the NYCTA adopted similar policing methods for Penn Station and Grand Central Terminal. When in 1993, Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Police Commissioner Howard Safir were elected to official positions, the Broken Windows strategy was more widely deployed in New York under the rubrics of "zero tolerance" and "quality of life". Crime rates in the subway and city dropped,[154] prompting New York magazine to declare "The End of Crime as We Know It" on the cover of its edition of August 14, 1995. Giuliani's campaign credited the success to the zero-tolerance policy.[155] The extent to which his policies deserve the credit is disputed.[156] Incoming New York City Police Department Commissioner William J. Bratton and author of Fixing Broken Windows, George L. Kelling, however, stated the police played an "important, even central, role" in the declining crime rates.[157] The trend continued and Giuliani's successor, Michael Bloomberg, stated in a November 2004 press release that "Today, the subway system is safer than it has been at any time since we started tabulating subway crime statistics nearly 40 years ago."[158]

Shoving attacks edit

Shoving attacks has become a noticeable problem ever since the 2000s, leading to multiple murders, as the subway lacks platform screen doors. In 2022, the New York City subway chief told commuters to stay off the platform edge as much as possible.[159] The MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber stated that are also looking into "making changes to subway platforms", and that "these (shoving) incidents are unacceptable and have to stop."[159] In 2022, the MTA announced that it will be trialing platform doors at three subway stations.[160]

Child sexual abuse in religious institutions edit

Two cases in 2011 – those of Bob Oliva and Ernie Lorch – have both centered in highly ranked youth basketball programs sponsored by churches of different denominations. In early 2011, Oliva, a long-time basketball coach at Christ the King Regional High School, was accused of two cases of child sexual abuse.[161]

In Manhattan, Father Bruce Ritter, founder of Covenant House, was forced to resign in 1990 after accusations that he had engaged in financial improprieties and had engaged in sexual relations with several youth in the care of the charity.[162]

In December 2012, the president of the Orthodox Jewish Yeshiva University apologized over allegations that two rabbis at the college's high school campus abused boys there in the late 1970s and early 1980s.[163][164]

Nightlife legislation edit

In New York City, legislation was enacted in 2006, affecting many areas of nightlife. This legislation was in response to a number of murders which occurred in the New York City area, some involving nightclubs and bouncers. The city council introduced four pieces of legislation to help combat these problems, including Imette's Law, which required stronger background checks for bouncers. Among the legislative actions taken were the requirement of ID scanners, security cameras, and independent monitors to oversee problem establishments.

It also enacted the following plan:

  • Create a city Office of Nightlife Affairs.
  • Find ways to get more cops to patrol outside clubs and bars.
  • Combat underage drinking and the use of fake IDs.
  • Foster better relationship among club owners, the NYPD and the New York State Liquor Authority
  • Raise age limit for admittance into a club or bar from 16 to 18 or 21.
  • Develop a public-awareness campaign urging patrons to be safe at night.
  • Examine zoning laws to help neighborhoods that are flooded with clubs and bars.

A new guideline booklet, NYPD and Nightlife Association Announce "Best Practices,[165] was unveiled on October 18, 2007. This voluntary rule book included a 58-point security plan drafted in part by the New York Nightlife Association, was further recommended by Police Commissioner Ray Kelly and Speaker Christine Quinn. Security measures included cameras outside of nightclub bathrooms, a trained security guard for every 75 patrons and weapons searches for everyone, including celebrities entering the clubs. The new regulation resulted in stricter penalties for serving underage persons.[166][167][168]

The Club Enforcement Initiative was created by the NYPD in response to what it referred to as "a series of high-profile and violent crimes against people who visited city nightclubs this year", mentioning the July 27 rape and murder of Jennifer Moore. One article discussed the dangers of police work and undercover investigations.[169]

In August 2006, the New York City Council started initiatives to correct the problems highlighted by the deaths of Moore and St. Guillen.[170][171] There was also discussions about electronic I.D. scanners. Quinn reportedly threatened to revoke the licenses of bars and clubs without scanners.[172]

In September 2011, the NYPD Nightlife Association updated their Safety Manual Handbook. There is now a section on counterterrorism; this addition came after the planned terrorist attacks on certain bars and clubs worldwide.[173]

Administration edit

Mayors edit

Crime in New York City was high in the 1980s during the Mayor Edward I. Koch years, as the crack epidemic hit New York City, and peaked in 1990,[4][174] the first year of Mayor David Dinkins's administration (1990–1993), but then began to decline; the number of murders fell from the 1990 peak to a level close to Koch's worst year of 1989 by Dinkins's final year of 1993. The decline accelerated dramatically during the first term of Mayor Rudolph Giuliani (1994–1997), the number of murders falling by sixty percent, and continued to decline, though at much slower rates, during both his second term (1998–2001) and Mayor Michael Bloomberg's three terms (2002–2013).[citation needed]

Scholars differ on the causes of the precipitous decline in crime in New York City (which also coincided with a nationwide drop in crime which some have termed the "Great American Crime Decline").[175] In a 2007 paper, economist Jessica Reyes attributes a 56 percent drop in nationwide violent crime in the 1990s to the removal of lead (a neurotoxin that causes cognitive and behavioral problems) from gasoline.[175] The Brennan Center for Justice has estimated that between 0% and 5% of the drop in crime in the 1990s may be attributed to higher employment; 5% to 10% of the drop may be attributed to income growth; and 0% to 10% of the drop from increased hiring of police officers.[175]

The Brennan Centre has also stated that the introduction of "compstat" procedures, being a combination of targeted enforcement at crime hot spots and the imposition of greater managerial accountability on police command staff, is the only tactic which has led clearly to subsequent reductions in crime. As law professor Lawrence Rosenthal reported, this was introduced during Giuliani's first term as mayor, together with stop-and-frisk.[176] Economists Steven Levitt and John J. Donohue III argue that the drop in crime in New York City, as in the United States generally, to the legalization of abortion following Roe v. Wade (see legalized abortion and crime effect).[175]

David Dinkins edit

 
David Dinkins

The rates of most crimes, including all categories of violent crime, made consecutive declines from their peak in his first year, 1990, during the last 36 months of his four-year term. The 30-year upward spiral was ended and a trend of falling rates was initiated that continued beyond his term and accelerated under his successor.[177] Despite the actual abating of crime, Dinkins was hurt by the perception that crime was out of control during his administration.[178][179] Dinkins also initiated a hiring program that expanded the police department nearly 25%. The New York Times reported, "He obtained the State Legislature's permission to dedicate a tax to hire thousands of police officers, and he fought to preserve a portion of that anticrime money to keep schools open into the evening, an award-winning initiative that kept tens of thousands of teenagers off the street."[179][180]

Rudy Giuliani edit

 
Rudy Giuliani

In Rudolph Giuliani's first term as mayor, the New York City Police Department, under Giuliani appointee Commissioner Bill Bratton, adopted an aggressive enforcement and deterrence strategy based on James Q. Wilson's Broken Windows research. This involved crackdowns on relatively minor offenses such as graffiti, turnstile jumping, and aggressive "squeegeemen", on the principle that this would send a message that order would be maintained and that the city would be "cleaned up".

At a forum three months into his term as mayor, Giuliani mentioned that freedom does not mean that "people can do anything they want, be anything they can be. Freedom is about the willingness of every single human being to cede to lawful authority a great deal of discretion about what you do and how you do it".[181]

Giuliani also directed the New York City Police Department to aggressively pursue enterprises linked to organized crime, such as the Fulton Fish Market and the Javits Center on the West Side (Gambino crime family). By breaking mob control of solid waste removal, the city was able to save businesses over $600 million.

In 1994, in one of his first initiatives, Bratton instituted CompStat, a comparative statistical approach to mapping crime geographically to identify emerging criminal patterns and chart officer performance by quantifying apprehensions. CompStat gave precinct commanders more power, based on the assumption that local authorities best knew their neighborhoods and thus could best determine what tactics to use to reduce crime. In turn, the gathering of statistics on specific personnel aimed to increase accountability of both commanders and officers. Critics of the system assert that it instead creates an incentive to underreport or otherwise manipulate crime data.[182] The CompStat initiative won the 1996 Innovations in Government Award from Harvard Kennedy School.[183] The Brennan Centre for Justice has stated that "compstat" was the only tactic which lead clearly to subsequent reductions in crime.[176]

In 1996, Time magazine featured Bratton, not Giuliani, on its cover as the face of the successful war on crime in New York City.[184] Giuliani forced Bratton out of his position after two years, in what was generally seen as a battle of two large egos in which Giuliani was unable to accept Bratton's celebrity.[185][186]

 
National, New York City, and other major city crime rates (1990–2002)[187]

Giuliani continued to highlight crime reduction and law enforcement as central missions of his mayoralty throughout both terms. These efforts were largely successful.[188] However, concurrent with his achievements, a number of tragic cases of abuse of authority came to light, and numerous allegations of civil rights abuses were leveled against the NYPD. Giuliani's own deputy mayor, Rudy Washington, alleged that he had been harassed by police on several occasions. More controversial still were several police shootings of unarmed suspects,[189] and the scandals surrounding the sexual torture of Abner Louima and the killing of Amadou Diallo. In a case less nationally publicized than those of Louima and Diallo, unarmed bar patron Patrick Dorismond was killed shortly after declining the overtures of what turned out to be an undercover officer soliciting illegal drugs. Even while hundreds of outraged New Yorkers protested, Giuliani staunchly supported the New York City Police Department, going so far as to take the unprecedented step of releasing Dorismond's "extensive criminal record" to the public,[190] for which he came under wide criticism. While many New Yorkers accused Giuliani of racism during his terms, former mayor Ed Koch defended him as even-handedly harsh: "Blacks and Hispanics ... would say to me, 'He's a racist!' I said, 'Absolutely not, he's nasty to everybody'."[191]

The amount of credit Giuliani deserves for the drop in the crime rate is disputed. He may have been the beneficiary of a trend already in progress. Crime rates in New York City started to drop in 1991 under previous mayor David Dinkins, three years before Giuliani took office.[188] A small but significant nationwide drop in crime also preceded Giuliani's election, and continued throughout the 1990s. Two likely contributing factors to this overall decline in crime were federal funding of an additional 7,000 police officers and an improvement in the national economy. Many experts believe changing demographics were the most significant cause.[192] Some have pointed out that during this time, murders inside the home, which could not be prevented by more police officers, decreased at the same rate as murders outside the home. Also, since the crime index is based on the FBI crime index, which is self-reported by police departments, some have alleged that crimes were shifted into categories that the FBI does not quantify.[193]

According to some analyses, the crime rate in New York City fell even more in the 1990s and 2000s than nationwide and therefore credit should be given to a local dynamic: highly focused policing. In this view, as much as half of the reduction in crime in New York in the 1990s, and almost all in the 2000s, is due to policing.[194] Opinions differ on how much of the credit should be given to Giuliani; to Bratton; and to the current Police Commissioner, Ray Kelly, who had previously served under Dinkins and criticized aggressive policing under Giuliani.[195]

Among those crediting Giuliani for making New York safer were several other cities nationwide whose police departments subsequently instituted programs similar to Bratton's CompStat.[196][197]

In 2005, Giuliani was reportedly nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to reduce crime rates in the city.[198] The prize went instead to Mohamed ElBaradei and the International Atomic Energy Agency for their efforts to reduce nuclear proliferation.[199]

Michael Bloomberg edit

 
Michael Bloomberg

Starting in 2005, under the mayoral tenure of Michael Bloomberg, New York City achieved the lowest crime rate among the ten-largest cities in the United States.[200][201] Since 1991, the city has seen a continuous fifteen-year trend of decreasing crime. Neighborhoods that were once considered dangerous are now much safer. Violent crime in the city has dropped by three quarters in the twelve years ending in 2005 with the murder rate at its lowest then level since 1963 with 539 murders that year, for a murder rate of 6.58 per 100,000 people, compared to 2,245 murders in 1990.[202] The murder rate continued to drop each year since then. In 2012, there were 414 murders, mainly occurring in the outlying, low income areas of NYC. In 2014, there were 328 murders, the lowest number since the introduction of crime statistics in 1963. Among the 182 U.S. cities with populations of more than 100,000, New York City ranked 136th in overall crime.[203]

In 2006, as part of Mayor Michael Bloomberg's gun control efforts, the city approved new legislation regulating handgun possession and sales. The new laws established a gun offender registry, required city gun dealers to inspect their inventories and file reports to the police twice a year, and limited individual handgun purchases to once every 90 days. The regulations also banned the use and sale of kits used to paint guns in bright or fluorescent colors, on the grounds that such kits could be used to disguise real guns as toys.[204] In April, along with Boston mayor Thomas Menino, Bloomberg co-founded Mayors Against Illegal Guns.[205][206] A December 2013 press release by the group said the bipartisan coalition included over 1,000 mayors.[205] As mayor, Bloomberg increased the mandatory minimum sentence for illegal possession of a loaded handgun, saying: "Illegal guns don't belong on our streets and we're sending that message loud and clear. We're determined to see that gun dealers who break the law are held accountable, and that criminals who carry illegal loaded guns serve serious time behind bars."[207] He opposes the death penalty, saying he would "rather lock somebody up and throw away the key and put them in hard labor."[207]

In July 2007, the city planned to install an extensive web of cameras and roadblocks designed to detect, track and deter terrorists called Lower Manhattan Security Initiative.

In 2007, New York City had 494 reported homicides, down from 596 homicides in 2006, and the first year since 1963 (when crime statistics were starting to be published) that this total was fewer than 500.[208] though homicides rose (to 523) in 2008,[209] they fell again in 2009 to 466, an almost fifty-year low.[210][211] Homicides continued to decline, with the city reporting 414 in 2012 and only 333 in 2013.[202]

Bill de Blasio edit

Bill de Blasio was sworn in as mayor on January 1, 2014. On January 1, 2018, he was sworn in for a second term as mayor.

Until 2018, crime under the de Blasio administration continued a generally downward trend. In January 2020 robberies were up 39% from the previous year, shootings were up 29% and car theft was up 72%.[212] Likewise, February and March saw 20% increases in major index crimes. De Blasio said that the consecutive months of 20% increases had been caused by recent bail reforms. Some advocacy groups who support the bail reforms accused the NYPD of misclassifying non-index crimes to put pressure on politicians in Albany. While the cause remains a subject of debate, recent changes to stop and frisk may have also had an impact, a view that was supported by former police commissioner Raymond W. Kelly.[213][214]

In June 2020, gun violence spiked to the highest levels seen in nearly 25 years. De Blasio responded that more officers would be on the streets:[215]

"We're not going back to the bad old days when there was so much violence in the city, nor are we going back to the bad old days where policing was done the wrong way, and, in too many cases, police and community could never connect and find that mutual respect."

Unlike the crime increases from earlier months, June also saw a spike in murders, up 134% over the previous year.[215] August saw shootings more than double compared to the previous year.[216]

Eric Adams edit

The election of Eric Adams as mayor was widely seen as a response by the electorate to concerns about rising crime.

Police commissioners edit

Two of the most influential police commissioners of New York City, Raymond Kelly and William Bratton, helped to greatly reduce the city's crime rate. The New York Times has called both men "the city's most significant police leaders of the past quarter-century."[217]

Ray Kelly edit

 
Ray Kelly

On October 16, 1992, David Dinkins appointed Raymond Kelly the 37th Police Commissioner of the City of New York. The national decline in both violent crime and property crime began in 1993, during the early months of Raymond Kelly's commissionership under Dinkins. At the time a firm believer in community policing, Kelly helped spur the decline in New York City by instituting the Safe Streets, Safe City program, which put thousands more cops on the streets, where they would be visible to and able to get to know and interact with local communities. As the 37th commissioner, he also pursued quality of life issues, such as the "squeegee man" that had become a sign of decay in the city. The murder rate in New York City had declined from its 1990 mid-Dinkins-administration historic high of 2,254 to 1,927, when Kelly left in 1994,[218] and continued to plummet even more steeply under Mayors Giuliani and Bloomberg.

The decline continued when Kelly returned as 41st Commissioner under Mayor Bloomberg in 2002–2013. As commissioner of the NYPD under Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Kelly had often appeared at outreach events such as the Brooklyn's annual West Indian Day Parade, where he was photographed playing the drums and speaking to community leaders. Bloomberg and Kelly, however, continued to place heavy reliance on the CompStat system, initiated by Bill Bratton and since adopted by police departments in other cities worldwide. The system, while recognized as highly effective in reducing crime, also puts pressure on local precincts to reduce the number of reports for the seven major crimes while increasing the number of lesser arrests.[219]

Bloomberg and Kelly continued and indeed stepped up Mayor Giuliani's controversial stop-and-frisk policy, which is considered by some to be a form of racial profiling. In the first half of 2011, the NYC police made 362,150 such arrests, constituting a 13.5 percent increase from the same period in 2010, according to WNYC radio (which also reported that 84 percent of the people stopped were either black or Latino, and that "nine out 10 stops did not result in any arrest or ticket".) According to New York State Senator Eric Adams, "Kelly was one of the great humanitarians in policing under David Dinkins. I don't know what happened to him that all of a sudden his philosophical understanding of the importance of community and police liking each other has changed. Sometimes the expeditious need of bringing down crime numbers bring out the worst in us. So instead of saying let's just go seek out the bad guy, we get to the point of, 'Let's go get them all.' If Kelly can't philosophically change, then we need to have a leadership change at the top."[220]

Under Bloomberg, Commissioner Kelly also revamped New York City's Police Department into a world-class counter-terrorism operation, operating in conjunction with the CIA. Prior to the September 11, 2001 attacks there were fewer than two dozen officers working on terrorism full-time; ten years later there were over 1,000. One of Kelly's innovations was his unprecedented stationing of New York City police detectives in other cities throughout the world following terrorist attacks in those cities, with a view to determining if they are in any way connected to the security of New York. In the cases of both the March 11, 2004, Madrid bombing and the July 7, 2005 London bombings and July 21, 2005 London bombings, NYPD detectives were on the scene within a day to relay pertinent information back to New York. An August 2011 article by the Associated Press reported the NYCPD's extensive use of undercover agents (colloquially referred to as "rakers"[221] and "mosque crawlers"[222]) to keep tabs, even build databases, on stores, restaurants, mosques. and clubs. NYPD spokesman Paul Browne denied that police trawled ethnic neighborhoods, telling the AP that officers only follow leads. He also dismissed the idea of "mosque crawlers", saying, "Someone has a great imagination."[223]

According to Mother Jones columnist Adam Serwer, "The FBI was reportedly so concerned about the legality of the NYPD's program that it refused to accept information that came out of it."[224] Valerie Caproni, the FBI's general counsel, told the AP that the FBI is barred from sending agents into mosques looking for leads outside of a specific investigation and said the practice would raise alarms. "If you're sending an informant into a mosque when there is no evidence of wrongdoing, that's a very high-risk thing to do," she was quoted as saying. "You're running right up against core constitutional rights. You're talking about freedom of religion."[223]

 
Bill Bratton

Under Mayor Bloomberg, Kelly's NYPD also incurred criticism for its handling of the protests surrounding the 2004 Republican National Convention, which resulted in the City of New York having to pay out millions in settlement of lawsuits for false arrest and civil rights violations, as well as for its rough treatment of credentialed reporters covering the 2011 Occupy Wall Street demonstrations.[225]

On March 5, 2007, it was announced that a Rikers Island inmate offered to pay an undercover police officer posing as a hit man to behead Kelly as well as bomb police headquarters in retaliation for the controversial police shooting of Sean Bell.[226]

Bill Bratton edit

Bill Bratton became the chief of the New York City Transit Police in 1990. In 1991 the Transit Police gained national accreditation under Bratton. The department became one of only 175 law-enforcement agencies in the country and only the second in New York State to achieve that distinction. The following year it was also accredited by the State of New York, and by 1994, there were almost 4,500 uniformed and civilian members of the department, making it the sixth largest police force in the United States. Bratton had left the NYC Transit Police returning to Boston in 1992 to head the Boston Police Department, one of his long-time ambitions. In 1994, Bratton was appointed the 38th Commissioner of the NYPD by Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani. He cooperated with Giuliani in putting the broken windows theory into practice. He had success in this position and introduced the CompStat system of tracking crimes, which proved successful in reducing crime in New York City and is still in use today.[227] A new tax surcharge enabled the training and deployment of around 5,000 new better-educated police officers, police decision-making was devolved to precinct level, and a backlog of 50,000 unserved warrants was cleared. Bratton resigned in 1996.[228][229]

 
James P. O'Neill

On December 5, 2013, New York City mayor-elect Bill de Blasio named Bratton as New York City's new Police Commissioner to replace Raymond Kelly after de Blasio's swearing-in on January 1, 2014. The New York Times reported that at Bratton's swearing-in on January 2, 2014, the new Police Commissioner praised his predecessor Raymond Kelly, but also signaled his intention to strike a more conciliatory tone with ordinary New Yorkers who had become disillusioned with policing in the city: "We will all work hard to identify why is it that so many in this city do not feel good about this department that has done so much to make them safe — what has it been about our activities that have made so many alienated?".[230]

James P. O'Neill edit

On August 2, 2016, James P. O'Neill was appointed Police Commissioner of New York City by Mayor Bill de Blasio, effective September 2016. He announced his retirement on November 4, 2019.

Dermot Shea edit

On December 1, 2019 Dermot Shea was appointed Police Commissioner of New York City by Mayor Bill de Blasio, this was effective the following day when he was sworn in.

 
Dermot Shea

Murders by year edit

Specific locations edit

The boroughs of Queens and Staten Island have historically had lower crime rates compared to Brooklyn, The Bronx and Manhattan. Since 1985, the Bronx has consistently had the highest homicide and violent crime rate among the five boroughs.[243]

Index Crime Rates by Borough (per 100,000 population)[244]
The Bronx Brooklyn Manhattan Queens Staten Island
3,540.1 2,438.5 4,403.5 2,236.1 1,479.8
Violent Crime Rates by Borough (per 100,000 population)[244]
The Bronx Brooklyn Manhattan Queens Staten Island
1,290.2 669.0 823.3 526.3 359.8

The Bronx edit

 
Burned-out building, Charlotte Street

With some of the poorest neighborhoods in the country, the Bronx, specifically the South Bronx, became noteworthy as a high-crime area in the later part of the 20th century.[245] Beginning in the 1960s, White flight, landlord abandonment, a decline in city services, reduced investment, economic changes, changing demographics, and the construction of the Cross Bronx Expressway (CBE) all contributed to the borough's decay.[246]

The construction of expressways in the Bronx, especially the CBE within the South Bronx, divided several neighborhoods and displaced thousands of residents and businesses.[246][247] The already poor and working-class neighborhoods were further disadvantaged by the decreasing property value and increasing vacancy rates. Racial tensions during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s further contributed to middle-class flight and the decline of many neighborhoods. By the late 1960s, the vacancy rate of homes in the South Bronx was the highest of any place in the city.

The early 1970s saw South Bronx property values continue to plummet to record lows, as the city experienced a fiscal crisis. Primarily, White flight led to abandonment and deterioration of large numbers of buildings. This, coupled with a stagnant economy and an extremely high unemployment rate, attracted increased social problems including the proliferation of street gangs and a large number of squatters. This had a domino effect, leading landlords of nearby apartment buildings to neglect their properties as well. Police statistics show that as the crime wave moved north across the Bronx, the remaining white tenants in the South Bronx (mostly elderly Jews) were preferentially targeted for violent crime by the influx of young, minority criminals because they were seen as easy prey. This became so common that the slang terms "crib job" (meaning how elderly residents were as helpless as infants) and "push in" (home invasion) were coined specifically in reference to them.[248]

Moreover, South Bronx residents were reportedly burning down vacant properties, either for scrap or to get better housing,[249] while some landlords were doing the same in order to collect the insurance money.[250] Media attention brought the Bronx, especially its southern half, into common interest nationwide. The phrase "The Bronx is burning," attributed to Howard Cosell during a Yankees World Series game in 1977, refers to the arson epidemic caused by the total economic collapse of the South Bronx during the 1970s. During the game, as ABC switched to a generic helicopter shot of the exterior of Yankee Stadium, an uncontrolled fire could clearly be seen burning in the ravaged South Bronx surrounding the park. By the time of Cosell's 1977 commentary, dozens of buildings were being burned in the South Bronx every day, sometimes whole blocks at a time. The local police precincts – already struggling and failing to contain the Bronx's massive wave of drug and gang crime – had long since stopped bothering to investigate the fires, since there were too many to track.

The 1975 New York City fiscal crisis was succeeded by the New York City blackout of 1977, which triggered massive looting that bankrupted stores.[251] By 1979, many Bronx neighborhoods went aflame and were turned into rubble. Apartment buildings were abandoned or sold to lesser landlords amid rapid urban decay.[251][252][253] Its high schools became notorious as the city's worst,[254] and it was struck by the crack epidemic.[253][255] During the 1970s, the NYPD's 41st Precinct Station House at 1086 Simpson Street became known as "Fort Apache, The Bronx". By 1980, the 41st was renamed "The Little House on the Prairie", as two-thirds of the area's 94,000 residents had fled, and the station house was one of the few buildings that had not been abandoned or burnt down.[256] In total, over 40% of the South Bronx was burned or abandoned between 1970 and 1980; 44 census areas lost more than 50% of their area to fires, and seven lost over 97% of their buildings to arson or abandonment.[257] The appearance was frequently compared to that of a bombed-out and evacuated European city following World War II.[258] One of the most drastic cases of this was Charlotte Street in Crotona Park East—the street had become so deteriorated that part of it was de-mapped in 1974. After President Jimmy Carter personally visited Charlotte Street in 1977, he ordered the head of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to take steps to salvage the area.[259]

Despite significant investment compared to the post-war period, many exacerbated social problems remain in many neighborhoods including high rates of violent crime, substance abuse, overcrowding, and substandard housing conditions.[260][261][262][263] The Bronx has the highest rate of poverty in New York City, and the greater South Bronx is the poorest area.[264][265]

Brooklyn edit

Neighborhoods such as Brownsville, Canarsie, and East New York used to be majority Italian and Jewish, but have shifted into mostly Black and Hispanic communities.[266] Between the 1950s and 1970s a demographic shift occurred, the borough lost almost 500,000 people, most of them White, and at the same time the crime rate in Brooklyn increased.[267] Those residents moved to neighboring boroughs of Queens and Staten Island, in addition to suburban counties of Long Island and New Jersey.

Central Brooklyn edit

In 1961, Alfred E. Clark of The New York Times referred to Bedford–Stuyvesant as "Brooklyn's Little Harlem".[268] One of the first urban riots of the era took place there. Social and racial divisions in the city contributed to the tensions. In 1964, a race riot started in Harlem, Manhattan, after an Irish NYPD lieutenant, Thomas Gilligan shot and killed a black teenager named James Powell, who was only 15.[269] The riot spread to Bedford–Stuyvesant, and resulted in the destruction and looting of many neighborhood businesses, many of which were Jewish-owned.[citation needed] Race relations between the NYPD and the city's black community strained as police were seen as an instrument of oppression and racially biased law enforcement.

On top of this, few black officers were present on the force.[270] In predominantly black New York neighborhoods, arrests and prosecutions for drug-related crimes were higher than anywhere else in the city, despite evidence that illegal drugs were being used at the same rate in white communities. This further contributed to the problems between the white dominated police force and the black community.[271] Race riots followed in 1967 and 1968 as part of the political and racial tensions in the United States of the era, aggravated by high unemployment among blacks, de facto segregation in housing, and the failure to enforce civil rights laws. This contributed to the New York City teachers' strike of 1968, when Brownsville's majority white teacher population clashed with the majority black residential population. Conversely, the mostly white population of Canarsie protested efforts at racial school integration in the early 1970s, which largely led to white flight in Canarsie by the 1980s.[272]

Manhattan edit

Starting in the mid-19th century, the United States became a magnet for immigrants seeking to escape poverty in their home countries. After arriving in New York, many new immigrants ended up living in squalor in the slums of the Five Points neighborhood. By the 1820s, the area was home to many gambling dens and brothels, and was known as a dangerous place to go. In 1842, Charles Dickens visited the area and was appalled by the horrendous living conditions he saw there.[273] The area was so notorious that it even caught the attention of Abraham Lincoln, who visited there in 1860 before his Cooper Union speech.[274] The predominantly Irish Five Points Gang was one of the country's first major organized crime entities.[275]

As Italian immigration grew in the early 20th century, many joined ethnic gangs. A prominent example is Al Capone, who got his start in crime with the Five Points Gang.[276] The Mafia (also known as Cosa Nostra) first developed in the mid-19th century in Sicily, and spread to the East Coast of the United States during the late 19th century, following waves of Sicilian and Southern Italian emigration. Lucky Luciano established Cosa Nostra in Manhattan, and formed alliances with other criminal enterprises. This included the Jewish mob, which was led by Meyer Lansky, who was the leading Jewish gangster of that period.[277] From 1920 to 1933, U. S. Prohibition helped create a thriving black market in liquor, which the Mafia was quick to capitalize on.[277]

The borough experienced a sharp increase in crime during the post-war period.[278] The murder rate in Manhattan hit an all-time high of 42 murders per 100,000 residents in 1979.[279] Manhattan retained the highest murder rate in the city until 1985 when it was surpassed by the Bronx. Most serious violent crime has been historically concentrated in Upper Manhattan and the Lower East Side, though robbery in particular was a major quality-of-life concern throughout the borough. Through the 1990s and 2000s, crime in Manhattan plummeted in all categories versus historic highs.

Today crime rates in most of Lower Manhattan, Midtown, the Upper East Side, and the Upper West Side are consistent with other major city centers in the United States. However, crime rates remain high in the Upper Manhattan neighborhoods of East Harlem, Harlem, Washington Heights, Inwood, and NYCHA developments across the borough despite significant reductions. In more recent years there has been an increase in violent crime, particularly in Upper Manhattan and NYCHA developments.[280][281][282]

Harlem edit

Harlem, a large neighborhood within the northern section of the New York City borough of Manhattan, has historically had some of the highest rates of poverty and violent crime citywide.[283] Although the rate of crime has decreased compared to historic highs of the early 1990s, high rates of crime are still prevalent in the neighborhood. Crime in Harlem is primarily related to illicit activities such as theft, robbery, drug trafficking and prostitution. Criminal organizations such as street gangs are responsible for a significant portion of crime, particularly violent crime. The leading cause of death among young black males in Harlem is homicide.[284] According to a survey published in 2013 by Union Settlement Association, residents of East Harlem perceive crime as their biggest single concern.[285] Harlem today maintains one of the highest violent crime rates in New York City. In 2021, the 25th Precinct had the second-highest rates of felony assault and robbery, the sixteenth-highest rate of rape, and the highest rate of murder out of the New York Police Department's 77 precincts.[286]

Chinatown edit

The early days of Chinatown were dominated by Chinese "tongs" (now sometimes referred to as "associations")—a mix of clan associations, landsman's associations, political alliances (Kuomintang vs. Chinese Communist Party), and (more secretly) crime syndicates. The associations started to give protection from harassment due to anti-Chinese sentiment. Each of these associations was aligned with a street gang. The associations were a source of assistance to new immigrants, doing things such as giving out loans and helping to start businesses.

Until the 1980s, the portion of Chinatown east of the Bowery, considered part of the Lower East Side, had a higher proportion of non-Chinese residents than in Chinatown's western section.[287] During the 1970s and 1980s, this area had deteriorating building conditions, including vacant lots and storefronts, with fewer businesses. It suffered from many violent crimes such as gang activities, robberies, burglaries and rape, as well as racial tensions with other ethnic groups.[288] Female Chinese garment workers were especially targets of robbery and rape, with many leaving work together in groups to protect each other as they were heading home.[289]

Similarly, crime in Chinatown increased due to the poor relations between Cantonese and Fuzhouese immigrants when the latter group started moving into the area in the 1980s and 1990s. Due to the Fuzhou immigrants having no legal status and an inability to speak Cantonese, many were denied jobs in Chinatown, and instead became criminals to make a living. There was a large amount of Cantonese resentment against Fuzhou immigrants arriving into Chinatown.[290]

During the mid-to-late 1980s, Chinatown began to experience an influx of Vietnamese refugees from the Vietnam War. Since most of the Vietnamese could not speak Mandarin or Cantonese, which was solely used for most social services, they struggled to survive and lived on the fringes of the community. Eventually, many Vietnamese youth within the city started to form gang factions. Under the leadership of a wealthy Vietnamese immigrant named David Thai, who combined many separate gangs into one known as Born to Kill, Vietnamese youths began a violent crime spree in Chinatown – robbing, extorting, and racketeering – drawing much resentment from the Chinese community.[291][292][293][294]

Washington Heights and Inwood edit

Washington Heights and Inwood, neighborhoods in Upper Manhattan, recorded a total of 103 murders in 1990. The crack epidemic of the late 1980s and early 1990s impacted the community especially hard.[295] The 33rd precinct was established in the area in 1993. The violent crime rate remains higher than the city as a whole today despite a significant decline compared to the crack epidemic. Drug trafficking and human trafficking continue to be a major quality of life issues in the community.

Tactics edit

Broken windows theory edit

The broken windows theory is a criminological theory of the norm-setting and signalling effect of urban disorder and vandalism on additional crime and anti-social behavior. The theory states that maintaining and monitoring urban environments in a well-ordered condition may stop further vandalism and escalation into more serious crime.

CompStat edit

CompStat[296] is the name given to the New York City Police Department's accountability process and has since been replicated in many other departments. CompStat is a management philosophy or organizational management tool for police departments, roughly equivalent to Six Sigma or TQM, and was not a computer system or software package in its original form. Through an evolutionary process, however, some commercial entities have created turnkey packages including computer systems, software, mobile devices, and other implements collectively assembled under the heading of CompStat. Instead, CompStat is a multilayered dynamic approach to crime reduction, quality of life improvement, and personnel and resource management. CompStat employs Geographic Information Systems and was intended to map crime and identify problems. In weekly meetings, ranking NYPD executives meet with local precinct commanders from one of the eight patrol boroughs in New York City to discuss the problems. They devise strategies and tactics to solve problems, reduce crime, and ultimately improve quality of life in their assigned area.

Policing edit

Law enforcement in New York City is carried out by numerous law enforcement agencies. New York City has the highest concentration of law enforcement agencies in the United States. As with the rest of the US, agencies operate at federal, state, and local (county and city) levels. However, New York City's unique nature means many more operate at lower levels. Many private police forces also operate in New York City. The New York City Police Department is the main police agency in the city.

Stop-and-frisk edit

The NYPD has come under scrutiny for its use of stop-and-frisk, implemented under Rudy Giuliani's tenure as mayor.[297][298][299]

It is a practice of the New York City Police Department by which police officers stop and question hundreds of thousands of pedestrians annually, and frisk them for weapons and other contraband. The rules for stop, question and frisk are found in New York State Criminal Procedure Law section 140.50, and are based on the decision of the United States Supreme Court in the case of Terry v. Ohio.[300][301] About 684,000 people were stopped in 2011.[300][302][303] The vast majority of these people were black or Hispanic.[300][302][303] Some judges have found that these stops are not based on reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.[304]

On October 31, 2013, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit blocked the order requiring changes to the New York Police Department's stop-and-frisk program and removed Judge Shira Scheindlin from the case.[305][306] On November 9, 2013, the city asked a federal appeals court to vacate Scheindlin's orders.[307][308] Bill de Blasio, who succeeded Bloomberg as mayor in 2014, has pledged to reform the stop-and-frisk program, and is calling for new leadership at the NYPD, an inspector general, and a strong racial profiling bill.[309]

See also edit

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crime, york, city, crime, rates, york, city, have, been, recorded, since, least, 1800s, they, have, spiked, ever, since, post, period, failed, verification, highest, crime, totals, were, recorded, late, 1980s, early, 1990s, crack, epidemic, surged, then, decli. Crime rates in New York City have been recorded since at least the 1800s They have spiked ever since the post war period 1 failed verification The highest crime totals were recorded in the late 1980s and early 1990s as the crack epidemic surged 2 3 and then declined continuously since the mid 1990s and throughout the 2000s 4 Bushwick in Brooklyn was once one of the most dangerous neighborhoods in New York City New York CityCrime rates 2022 Violent crimesHomicide5 3Rape31 8Robbery211 7Aggravated assault495 4Total violent crime744 2Property crimesBurglary176 7Larceny theft1794 8Motor vehicle theft169 7Total property crime2141 2Notes Number of reported crimes per 100 000 population Source New York State Index CrimeDuring the 1990s the New York City Police Department NYPD adopted CompStat broken windows policing and other strategies in a major effort to reduce crime The drop in crimes thereafter has been variously attributed to a number of factors including these changes to policing the end of the crack epidemic the increased incarceration rate nationwide 2 3 gentrification 5 an aging population and the decline of lead poisoning in children 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 19th century 1 1 1 High profile murders 1 1 1 1 Murder of Helen Jewett 1 1 1 2 Murder of Mary Rogers 1 1 2 Riots 1 1 2 1 1863 draft riots 1 1 2 2 Other riots 1 2 20th century 1 2 1 1900s 1950s 1 2 2 1960s 1 2 3 1970s 1 2 4 1980s 1 2 5 1990s 1 3 21st century 1 3 1 2000s 1 3 2 2010s 1 3 3 2020s 2 Notable recent crime trends 2 1 Late 20th century trends 2 1 1 Gang violence 2 1 2 Subway crime and shoving attacks 2 1 2 1 Shoving attacks 2 2 Child sexual abuse in religious institutions 2 3 Nightlife legislation 3 Administration 3 1 Mayors 3 1 1 David Dinkins 3 1 2 Rudy Giuliani 3 1 3 Michael Bloomberg 3 1 4 Bill de Blasio 3 1 5 Eric Adams 3 2 Police commissioners 3 2 1 Ray Kelly 3 2 2 Bill Bratton 3 2 3 James P O Neill 3 2 4 Dermot Shea 4 Murders by year 5 Specific locations 5 1 The Bronx 5 2 Brooklyn 5 2 1 Central Brooklyn 5 3 Manhattan 5 3 1 Harlem 5 3 2 Chinatown 5 3 3 Washington Heights and Inwood 6 Tactics 6 1 Broken windows theory 6 2 CompStat 6 3 Policing 6 4 Stop and frisk 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editThis section contains embedded lists that may be poorly defined unverified or indiscriminate Please help this article to clean it up so that it meets Wikipedia s quality standards Where appropriate incorporate items into the main body of the article July 2018 19th century edit Organized crime has long been associated with New York City beginning with the Forty Thieves and the Roach Guards gangs in the Five Points area of Manhattan in the 1820s citation needed In 1835 the New York Herald was established by James Gordon Bennett Sr who helped revolutionize journalism by covering stories that appeal to the masses including crime reporting When Helen Jewett was murdered on April 10 1836 Bennett did innovative on the scene investigation and reporting and helped bring the story to national attention 7 Peter Cooper at the request of the Common Council drew up a proposal to create a police force of 1 200 officers The state legislature approved the proposal on May 7 1844 and abolished the nightwatch system 8 Under Mayor William Havemeyer the police force reorganized and officially established itself on May 13 1845 as the New York Police Department NYPD The new system divided the city into three districts and set up courts magistrates clerks and station houses 8 High profile murders edit Murder of Helen Jewett edit Main article Helen Jewett Helen Jewett was an upscale New York City prostitute whose 1836 murder along with the subsequent trial and acquittal of her alleged killer Richard P Robinson generated an unprecedented amount of media coverage 9 Murder of Mary Rogers edit Main article Mary Rogers The murder of Mary Rogers in 1841 was heavily covered by the press which also put the spotlight on the ineptitude and corruption in the city s watchmen system of law enforcement 7 At the time New York City s population of 320 000 was served by an archaic force consisting of one night watch one hundred city marshals thirty one constables and fifty one police officers 8 Riots edit 1863 draft riots edit Main article New York City draft riots The New York City draft riots in July 1863 10 were violent disturbances in New York City that were the culmination of working class discontention with new laws passed by the U S Congress during that year to draft men to fight in the ongoing American Civil War The riots remain the largest civil insurrection in American history with 119 to 120 fatalities aside from the Civil War itself 11 President Abraham Lincoln was forced to divert several regiments of militia and volunteer troops from following up after the Battle of Gettysburg to control the city The rioters were overwhelmingly working class men primarily ethnic Irish resenting particularly that wealthier men who could afford to pay a 300 5 555 in 2014 dollars commutation fee to hire a substitute were spared from the draft 12 13 Initially intended to express anger at the draft the protests turned into a race riot with white rioters mainly but not exclusively Irish immigrants 11 attacking blacks wherever they could be found At least 11 blacks are estimated to have been killed The conditions in the city were such that Major General John E Wool commander of the Department of the East stated on July 16 that Martial law ought to be proclaimed but I have not a sufficient force to enforce it 14 The military did not reach the city until after the first day of rioting when mobs had already ransacked or destroyed numerous public buildings two Protestant churches the homes of various abolitionists or sympathizers many black homes and the Colored Orphan Asylum at 44th Street and Fifth Avenue which was burned to the ground 15 Other riots edit In 1870 the Orange Riots were incited by Irish Protestants celebrating the Battle of the Boyne with parades through predominantly Irish Catholic neighborhoods In the resulting police action 63 citizens mostly Irish were killed 16 The Tompkins Square Riot occurred on January 13 1874 when police violently suppressed a demonstration involving thousands of people in Tompkins Square Park 17 20th century edit High profile crimes include 1900s 1950s edit April 14 1903 The dismembered and mutilated body of Benedetto Madonia who had last been seen the day before eating with several high ranking figures in the Morello crime family the city s first dominant Mafia organization is found in an East Village barrel the most notorious of that era s Barrel Murders After the NYPD arrested several members of the family tied to a local counterfeiting ring Inspector George W McClusky hoping to compel their cooperation through public humiliation had officers walk them through the streets of Little Italy in handcuffs to police headquarters a forerunner of the perp walk that has since become a common practice in the city It backfired as the men were hailed as heroes by the Italian immigrant community they were paraded past Charges against all defendants were later dropped for lack of evidence and the killing remains unsolved 18 June 25 1906 Stanford White is shot and killed by Harry Kendall Thaw at what was then Madison Square Garden The murder would soon be dubbed The Crime of the Century June 19 1909 The strangled body of Elsie Sigel granddaughter of Civil War Union general Franz Sigel 19 is found in a trunk in the Chinatown apartment of Leon Ling a waiter at a Chinese restaurant ten days after she was last seen leaving her parents apartment to visit her grandmother Evidence found in the apartment established that Ling and Sigel had been romantically involved and he was suspected of the killing but never arrested No other suspects have ever been identified August 9 1910 Reformist Mayor William Jay Gaynor is shot in the throat in Hoboken New Jersey by former city employee James Gallagher He eventually dies in September 1913 from a heart attack July 4 1914 Lexington Avenue explosion Four are killed and dozens injured when dynamite believed to have been accumulated by anarchists for an attempt to blow up John D Rockefeller s Tarrytown Kykuit mansion goes off prematurely in a seven story apartment building at 1626 Lexington Avenue 19 June 11 1920 Joseph Bowne Elwell a prominent auction bridge player and writer was shot in the head early in the morning in his locked Manhattan home Despite intense media interest the crime was never solved one confession to police was dismissed because the man who made it was of dubious sanity The case inspired the development of the locked room murder sub genre of detective fiction when Ellery Queen realized that the intense public fascination with the case indicated that there was a market for fictional takes on the story September 16 1920 The Wall Street bombing kills 38 at the precise center geographical as well as metaphorical of financial America and even of the financial world Anarchists were suspected Sacco and Vanzetti had been indicted just days before but no one was ever charged with the crime November 6 1928 Jewish gangster Arnold Rothstein 46 an avid gambler best remembered for his alleged role fixing the 1919 World Series died of gunshot wounds inflicted the day before during a Manhattan business meeting He refused to identify his killer to police A fellow gambler who was believed to have ordered the hit as retaliation for Rothstein s failure to pay a large debt from a recent poker game Rothstein in turn claimed it had been fixed was tried and acquitted No other suspects have ever emerged August 6 1930 The disappearance of Joseph Force Crater an Associate Justice of the New York Supreme Court He was last seen entering a New York City taxicab Crater was declared legally dead in 1939 His mistress Sally Lou Ritz 22 left New York shortly after Crater s disappearance but was found to be with her parents in Ohio citation needed December 24 1933 Leon Tourian 53 primate of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church in America is stabbed to death by several armed men while performing Christmas Eve services All were arrested and convicted the following summer The killing was motivated by political divisions within the church the ensuing schism persists March 19 1935 The arrest of a shoplifter inflames racial tensions in Harlem and escalates to rioting and looting with three killed 125 injured and 100 arrested 20 March 28 1937 Veronica Gedeon 20 a model known for posing in lurid illustrations for pulp magazines is brutally murdered along with her mother Mary Gedeon and a boarder Frank Byrnes in her mother s Long Island City home Sculptor Robert George Irwin who left a telltale soap sculpture at the scene was eventually arrested after a nationwide manhunt fed by widespread media coverage of the case said to be the most intense since the Stanford White murder which capitalized by Gedeon s risque professional work After doubts about his sanity surfaced during trial he was sentenced to life in prison July 4 1940 Two police detectives are killed and other officers injured when a bomb detonated as they were carrying it out of the World s Fair from the British Pavilion No arrests were made and the case remains open 21 investigators today believe it may have been planted by British intelligence as a false flag operation to implicate the German American Bund and draw the U S into World War II which was not going well for Britain at the time 22 November 16 1940 Mad Bomber George Metesky plants the first bomb of his 16 year campaign of public bombings January 11 1943 Carlo Tresca an Italian American labor leader who led the opposition to Fascism Stalinism and Mafia control of unions was shot dead at a Manhattan intersection during the night Given the enemies he had made and their propensity for violence the list of potential suspects was long however the investigation was incomplete and no one was ever officially named Historians believe the most likely suspect was mobster Carmine Galante later acting boss of the Bonanno family seen fleeing the scene who had likely acted on the orders of a Bonanno underboss and Fascist sympathizer Tresca had threatened to expose 23 August 1 1943 A race riot erupts in Harlem after a black soldier is shot by the police and rumored to be dead The incident touches off a simmering brew of racial tension unemployment and high prices to a day of rioting and looting Several looters are shot dead about 500 people are injured and another 500 arrested March 8 1952 A month after helping police find bank robber Willie Sutton 24 year old clothing salesman Arnold Schuster is fatally shot outside his Brooklyn home An extensive investigation failed to identify any suspects though police came to believe that either the Gambino crime family or Sutton s associates had ordered Schuster killed Schuster s family filed a lawsuit against the city which led to a landmark ruling by the New York Court of Appeals that the government has a duty to protect anyone who cooperates with the police when asked to do so October 25 1957 Mafia boss Albert Anastasia was shot dead while getting a shave at a Manhattan barbershop As with many organized crime killings it remains officially unsolved 1960s edit January 27 1962 The French Connection drug bust nets 112 pounds 51 kg of heroin hidden inside a car shipped from France with an estimated street value of 112 million the biggest drug haul in U S history at that point The work of detectives Eddie Egan and Sonny Grosso leading up to it was later the subject of The French Connection by Robin Moore which formed the basis for the influential Oscar winning 1971 film of the same name May 18 1962 Two NYPD detectives were killed in a gun battle with robbers at the Boro Park Tobacco store in Brooklyn the first time two NYPD detectives died in the same incident since the 1920s The resulting manhunt brings in the perpetrators including Jerry Rosenberg who after being spared the death penalty would become one of America s best known jailhouse lawyers 24 The case also led to controversy over the perp walk in which freshly arrested suspects are paraded in front of the media Rosenberg filed a federal lawsuit over prejudicial remarks made by a detective during his and another detective Albert Seedman was briefly demoted in response to outrage over a picture of him holding up the head of the other suspect Tony Dellernia for photographers who missed the perp walk August 28 1963 The Career Girls Murders Emily Hoffert and Janet Wylie two young professionals are murdered in their Upper East Side apartment by an intruder Richard Robles a young white man was ultimately apprehended in 1965 after investigators erroneously arrested and forced a false confession from a black man George Whitmore who was innocent of the crime Whitmore was compelled to wrongfully spend many years incarcerated but he was eventually released after his innocence was established while Robles remains in prison as of 2013 25 March 13 1964 Kitty Genovese is stabbed 12 times in Kew Gardens Queens by Winston Moseley The crime is witnessed by numerous people none of whom aid Genovese or call for help The crime is noted by psychology textbooks in later years for its demonstration of the bystander effect though an article published in The New York Times in February 2004 indicated that many popular conceptions of the crime were wrong 26 Moseley died in prison in 2016 July 18 1964 Riots break out in Harlem in protest over the killing of a 15 year old by a white NYPD officer One person is killed and 100 are injured in the violence February 21 1965 Black nationalist leader Malcolm X is assassinated at the Audubon Ballroom by three members of the Nation of Islam July 14 1965 Two children five year old Eddie and four year old Alice Missy went missing Later that day Missy was found strangled and five days after that Eddie was also found dead The mother Alice Crimmins was charged for the murders April 7 1967 Members of the Lucchese crime family including Henry Hill and Tommy DeSimone walked into the Air France cargo terminal at JFK airport around midnight and walked out with 420 000 in cash that had been exchanged overseas The theft which remained undiscovered for two days was at the time the highest valued cargo theft at the airport 27 it has since been exceeded by the 1978 Lufthansa heist perpetrated by some of the same criminals including Hill Both are dramatized in the 1990 Martin Scorsese film GoodFellas based on Hill s memoirs October 8 1967 James Groovy Hutchinson 21 an East Village hippie stoner and Linda Fitzpatrick 18 a newly converted flower child from a wealthy Greenwich Connecticut family are found bludgeoned to death at 169 Avenue B an incident dubbed The Groovy Murders by the press Two drifters later plead guilty to the murders 28 July 3 1968 A Bulgarian immigrant and Neo Nazi 42 year old Angel Angelof opens fire from a lavatory roof in Central Park killing a 24 year old woman and an 80 year old man before being gunned down by police 29 June 13 1969 Clarence 13X founder of the Nation of Islam splinter group Five Percent Nation was shot and killed in the early morning hours in the lobby of his girlfriend s Harlem apartment building The crime remains unsolved June 28 1969 A questionable police raid on the Stonewall Inn a Greenwich Village gay bar is resisted by the patrons and leads to the Stonewall riots The event helps inspire the founding of the modern homosexual rights movement 1970s edit March 6 1970 Greenwich Village townhouse explosion Three members of the domestic terrorist group the Weathermen are killed when a nail bomb they were building accidentally explodes in the basement of a townhouse on 18 West 11th Street 30 May 21 1971 Two NYPD officers Waverly Jones and Joseph Piagentini are gunned down in ambush by members of the Black Liberation Army in Harlem The gunmen Herman Bell now Jalil Muntaqim and Anthony Bottom were arrested and imprisoned Bell was released on parole in 2018 31 As of 2019 update Muntaqim remained imprisoned 32 In 2007 the two men were also charged in connection with the 1971 killing of a San Francisco police officer 33 April 7 1972 Mobster Joe Gallo is gunned down at Umberto s Clam House in Little Italy The incident serves as the inspiration for the Bob Dylan s epic Joey recorded in 1975 April 14 1972 The 1972 Harlem mosque incident Two NYPD officers responded to an apparent call for assistance from a detective at a Harlem address that turned out to be a mosque used by the Nation of Islam What happened when they got there is still unclear but both officers were seriously beaten and one Philip Cardillo was shot He died of the wounds six days later Louis 17X Dupree director of the mosque s school was eventually tried for Cardillo s murder After the first jury deadlocked he was acquitted at a second trial August 22 1972 John Wojtowicz and Salvatore Natuarale hold up a Brooklyn bank for 14 hours in a bid to get cash to pay for Wojtowicz s gay lover s sex change operation The scheme fails when the cops arrive leading to a tense 14 hour standoff Natuarale is killed by the police at JFK Airport The incident served as the basis for the 1975 film Dog Day Afternoon December 1972 The police department discloses that around 200 pounds 91 kg of heroin much of it seized in the French Connection busts a decade earlier has been stolen from evidence lockers over a period of several months and replaced with cornstarch by someone who signed in under false names and nonexistent badge numbers Several detectives were suspected of complicity in the thefts in 2009 Brooklyn mobster Anthony Casso serving 455 years in federal prison intimated that he knew who had stolen the drugs 34 January 3 1973 The body of 29 year old teacher Roseann Quinn is discovered with multiple stab wounds in her Upper West Side apartment after she failed to show up for the first day of classes in the new year John Wayne Wilson a man she had picked up at nearby bar on New Year s Eve was later arrested and charged with the murder but killed himself in jail before he could be tried The incident inspired the 1975 novel Looking for Mr Goodbar the source for the 1977 film of the same name starring Diane Keaton April 28 1973 Clifford Glover a 10 year old black resident of Jamaica Queens was shot and killed by police officer Thomas Shea while running from an unmarked car which he thought was a robbery attempt Shea was charged with murder the first time an NYPD officer had been so charged for a killing in the line of duty in 50 years He claimed that he saw a gun a claim contradicted by ballistic evidence that showed Glover had been shot from behind Race riots broke out following his acquittal the following year 35 It inspired the opening verse of The Rolling Stones s song Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo Heartbreaker January 24 1975 Fraunces Tavern a historical site in lower Manhattan is bombed by the FALN killing four people and wounding more than 50 December 29 1975 A bomb explodes in the baggage claim area of the TWA terminal at LaGuardia Airport killing 11 and injuring 74 The perpetrators were never identified 36 July 29 1976 David Berkowitz aka the Son of Sam kills one person and seriously wounds another in the first of a series of attacks that terrorized the city for the next year November 25 1976 NYPD officer Robert Torsney fatally shoots unarmed 15 year old Randolph Evans in Cypress Hills Brooklyn Torsney is found not guilty by reason of insanity the following year and is released from Queens Creedmoor Psychiatric Center in 1979 only to be denied a disability pension July 13 1977 Dominick Ciscone a 17 year old aspiring mobster is shot and killed while hanging out with friends on Smith Street in the Carroll Gardens neighborhood of Brooklyn the only homicide to occur during that year s blackout Police investigate several local parties Ciscone was known to have had disputes with but do not identify any suspects Despite several promising anonymous tips to police around the killing s 20th anniversary in 1997 it remained unsolved as of 2019 update 37 September 14 1977 Variety reporter Addison Verrill 36 was found beaten and stabbed in his Greenwich Village apartment after having spent the night in gay bars After the killer called Village Voice reporter Arthur Bell an acquaintance of Verrill s and confessed he was identified as Paul Bateson a former radiological technician at New York University Medical Center who had appeared in that role in The Exorcist Bateson was convicted of the murder and served 25 years in prison police suspected him in a series of serial killings of still unidentified gay men whose dismembered bodies were found in bags in the Hudson inspiring a plot element in the 1980 film Cruising but no charges were ever filed 38 October 12 1978 Sid Vicious former bassist of seminal English punk band the Sex Pistols allegedly stabs his girlfriend Nancy Spungen to death in their room in the Hotel Chelsea He died of a drug overdose before he could be tried December 11 1978 Lufthansa heist At the German airline s JFK Airport cargo terminal an armed gang makes off with 5 million in cash and 875 000 in jewelry in the early hours of the morning The well planned robbery was at the time the largest cash theft ever in the United States and remains the largest theft ever at the airport It was masterminded by members of the Lucchese crime family including Henry Hill and Tommy DeSimone who had pulled off the Air France robbery at the airport nine years earlier Tensions among the gang over how to divide the money and some members failure to keep a low profile in the wake of the crime led to the deaths or disappearances of 10 of those involved over the next few months Many of the killings are believed to have been committed or ordered by Lucchese soldier Jimmy Burke though no one was ever arrested and charged not least because many died first The crime and its aftermath have been dramatized in the films The 10 Million Dollar Robbery The Big Heist and GoodFellas Martin Scorsese s 1990 adaptation of Hill s memoirs In 2014 Vincent Asaro a 78 year old Bonanno family capo was indicted on charges of receiving money from the robbery and conspiring in it He was acquitted the following year the only person ever tried in connection with the crime May 25 1979 Six year old Etan Patz vanishes after leaving his SoHo apartment to walk to his school bus alone Despite a massive search by the NYPD the boy is never found and was declared legally dead in 2001 39 1980s edit January 4 1980 Three Manhattan men suspected of 60 break ins were arrested by the police March 14 1980 Ex Congressman Allard Lowenstein is assassinated in his law offices at Rockefeller Center by Dennis Sweeney a deranged ex associate 40 December 8 1980 Ex Beatle John Lennon is murdered in front of his home in The Dakota June 22 1982 Willie Turks a black 34 year old MTA worker is set upon and killed by a white mob in the Gravesend section of Brooklyn Eighteen year old Gino Bova was convicted of second degree manslaughter in 1983 November 5 1982 Author and artist Theresa Hak Kyung Cha was raped and killed by security guard and serial rapist Joey Sanza in The Puck Building September 15 1983 Michael Stewart is allegedly beaten into a coma by New York Transit Police officers Stewart died 13 days later from his injuries at Bellevue Hospital On November 24 1985 after a six month trial six officers were acquitted on charges stemming from Stewart s death 41 October 29 1984 Police shoot and kill 66 year old Eleanor Bumpurs as they try to evict her from her Bronx apartment Bumpurs who was mentally ill was wielding a knife and had slashed one of the officers The shooting provoked heated debate about police racism and brutality In 1987 officer Stephen Sullivan was acquitted on charges of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide stemming from the shooting 42 December 2 1984 Caroline Rose Isenberg a 23 year old aspiring actress was stabbed to death in the early morning hours after returning to her Upper West Side apartment from a Broadway show Emmanuel Torres the building custodian s son was arrested at the end of the month and charged with the crime He was convicted the following year and sentenced to life in prison The case received considerable national media attention December 22 1984 Bernhard Goetz shoots and seriously wounds four unarmed black men on a 2 train on the subway who he claimed were trying to rob him generating weeks of headlines and many discussions about crime and vigilantism in the media April 17 1985 Mark Davidson a high school student is arrested and tortured in Queens 106th Precinct on drug dealing charges June 12 1985 Edmund Perry a returning graduate of Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter New Hampshire is shot to death in Harlem by undercover officer Lee Van Houten who claimed that Perry and his brother Jonah attacked and attempted to rob him A grand jury declined to indict Van Houten the following month December 16 1985 Gambino crime family boss Paul Castellano is shot dead in a gangland execution on East 46th Street in Manhattan February 25 1986 2 dead and 4 hurt including 3 police officers in a shootout in the Bronx July 7 1986 A deranged man Juan Gonzalez wielding a machete kills 2 and wounds 9 on the Staten Island Ferry In 2000 Gonzalez was granted unsupervised leave from his residence at the Bronx Psychiatric Hospital 43 August 26 1986 18 year old student Jennifer Levin is murdered by Robert Chambers in Central Park after the two had left a bar to have sex in the park The case was sensationalized in the press and raised issues over victims rights as Chambers attorney attempted to smear Levin s reputation to win his client s freedom October 4 1986 CBS News anchorman Dan Rather is assaulted while walking along Park Avenue by two men one of whom Rather reported kept asking him Kenneth what is the frequency as he did 44 The mysterious question became a pop culture catch phrase and inspired an R E M song that Rather joined with the band in performing on Late Night with David Letterman William Tager who apparently believed that Rather was secretly broadcasting messages to him was identified as one of the assailants in 1997 though not charged because the statute of limitations had expired following his own conviction for killing an NBC stagehand 45 November 19 1986 20 year old Larry Davis opens fire on NYPD officers attempting to arrest him in his sister s apartment in the Bronx Six officers are wounded and Davis eludes capture for the next 17 days during which time he became something of a folk hero in the neighborhood Davis was stabbed to death in jail in 2008 November 24 1986 Two Port Authority police officers and a holdup were seriously shot and wounded in a shootout at a Queens diner December 20 1986 A white mob in Howard Beach Queens attacks three black men whose car had broken down in the largely white neighborhood One of the men Michael Griffith is chased onto Shore Parkway where he is hit and killed by a passing car The killing prompted several tempestuous marches through the neighborhood led by Al Sharpton July 9 1987 12 year old Jennifer Schweiger a girl with Down syndrome is abducted and murdered in Staten Island by a sex offender and suspected mass murderer Andre Rand November 2 1987 Joel Steinberg and his lover Hedda Nussbaum are arrested for the beating and neglect of their six year old adopted daughter Lisa Steinberg who died two days later from her injuries The case provoked outrage that did not subside when Steinberg was released from prison in 2004 after serving 15 years February 26 1988 A gunman shot rookie NYPD officer Edward Byrne while he was alone in a patrol car monitoring a Jamaica street where a homeowner had reported violence and threats against his house The blatant deliberate nature of the killing resulted in widespread outrage with President Ronald Reagan personally calling the Byrne family to offer condolences Four men apparently acting on the orders of a jailed drug dealer were arrested within a week all involved are serving lengthy prison sentences December 21 1988 Transgender performer Venus Xtravaganza featured in the documentary film Paris is Burning was found strangled under a Manhattan hotel bed The autopsy established that she had been killed four days earlier No suspects have ever been named April 19 1989 Central Park jogger Trisha Meili is violently raped and beaten while jogging in Central Park The crime is attributed to a group of young men who were practicing an activity the police called wilding with five of these teens convicted and jailed In 2002 after the five had completed their sentences Matias Reyes a convicted rapist and murderer serving a life sentence for other crimes confessed to the crime after which DNA evidence proved the five teens innocent nbsp The Reverend Al Sharpton leading the first protest march over the death of Yusuf Hawkins in Bensonhurst 1989 August 23 1989 Yusuf Hawkins a 16 year old black student is set upon and murdered by a white mob in the Bensonhurst neighborhood of Brooklyn 46 1990s edit nbsp John Gotti shortly after his arrest March 7 1990 Twelve year old Haitian immigrant David Opont is mugged and set on fire by a 14 year old assailant who remained anonymous because he was tried as a minor The attack created an outpouring of support throughout the city for Opont who eventually recovered from his burns 47 March 8 1990 The first of the copycat Zodiac Killer Heriberto Seda s eight shooting victims is wounded in an attack in Brooklyn Between 1990 and 1993 Seda wounds five and kills three in his serial attacks He is captured in 1996 and convicted in 1998 March 25 1990 Arson at the illegally operated Happyland Social Club at 1959 Southern Boulevard in the East Tremont section of the Bronx kills 87 people unable to escape the packed dance club the city s deadliest act of arson ever 48 Cuban refugee Julio Gonzalez who was angry about having been ejected from the club is arrested tried and convicted of murder and arson making the crime also the deadliest to result from a single person s actions in the city s history Gonzalez sentenced to 25 years to life died in prison in 2016 September 2 1990 Utah tourist Brian Watkins is stabbed to death in the Seventh Avenue 53rd Street station by a gang of youths Watkins was visiting New York with his family to attend the US Open Tennis tournament in Queens when he was killed defending his family from a gang of muggers The killing marked a low point in the record murder year of 1990 and led to an increased police presence in New York 49 November 5 1990 Rabbi Meir Kahane founder of the Jewish Defense League is assassinated at the Marriott East Side Hotel at 48th Street and Lexington Avenue by El Sayyid Nosair December 11 1990 Senior mafia member John Gotti is arrested and jailed Other associates are also arrested January 24 1991 Arohn Kee rapes and murders 13 year old Paola Illera in East Harlem while she is on her way home from school Her body is later found near the FDR Drive Over the next eight years Kee murders two more women before being arrested in February 1999 He is sentenced to three life terms in prison in January 2001 July 23 1991 The body of a four year old girl is found in a cooler on the Henry Hudson Parkway in Inwood Manhattan The identity of the child dubbed Baby Hope is unknown until October 2013 when 52 year old Conrado Juarez is arrested after confessing to killing the girl his cousin Anjelica Castillo and dumping her body 50 August 19 1991 A Jewish automobile driver accidentally kills a seven year old black boy thereby touching off the Crown Heights riots during which an Australian Jew Yankel Rosenbaum was fatally stabbed by Lemrick Nelson August 28 1991 A 4 train crashes just north of 14th Street Union Square killing five people Motorman Robert Ray who was intoxicated fell asleep at the controls and was convicted of manslaughter in 1992 51 February 26 1992 Two teens were shot to death by 15 year old Khalil Sumpter inside Thomas Jefferson High School an hour before a scheduled visit by then mayor David Dinkins Sumpter was paroled in 1998 at the age of 22 52 March 11 1992 Manuel de Dios Unanue a Cuban born journalist who edited several Spanish language newspapers was shot to death at a Queens bar Several men were later convicted in the murder apparently carried out at the order of the Colombian Cali cartel on whose activities de Dios had reported extensively the first time the cartel had murdered one of its opponents on American soil December 17 1992 Patrick Daly principal of P S 15 in Red Hook Brooklyn is killed in the crossfire of a drug related shooting while looking for a pupil who had left his school The school was later renamed the Patrick Daly school after the principal 53 February 26 1993 A bomb planted by terrorists explodes in the World Trade Center s underground garage killing six people and injuring over a thousand as well as causing much damage to the basement See World Trade Center bombing December 7 1993 Colin Ferguson shoots 25 passengers killing six on a Long Island Rail Road commuter train out of Penn Station March 1 1994 During the 1994 New York school bus shooting Rashid Baz a Lebanese born Arab immigrant opens fire on a van carrying members of the Lubavitch Hasidic sect of Jews driving on the Brooklyn Bridge A 16 year old student Ari Halberstam later dies of his wounds Baz was apparently acting out of revenge for the Cave of the Patriarchs massacre in Hebron West Bank 54 August 31 1994 William Tager shoots and kills Campbell Theron Montgomery a technician employed by NBC outside of the stage of the Today show Tager is also identified as one of possibly two men who assaulted CBS News anchor Dan Rather on Park Avenue in 1986 December 15 1994 Disgruntled computer analyst Edward J Leary firebombs a 3 train with homemade explosives at 145th Street injuring two teenagers Six days later he firebombs a crowded 4 train at Fulton Street injuring over 40 Leary is sentenced to 94 years in prison for both attacks 55 December 22 1994 Anthony Baez a 29 year old Bronx man dies after being placed in an illegal choke hold by NYPD officer Francis X Livoti Livoti is sentenced to 7 1 2 years in 1998 for violating Baez s civil rights 56 October 20 1995 Wall Street investment banker Gerard Finneran 58 of Greenwich Connecticut is arrested after his United Airlines flight from Buenos Aires lands at Kennedy Airport During the flight he had in addition to drunkenly assaulting and threatening cabin crew when they refused to serve him additional drinks climbed atop a serving cart and defecated on it in full view of passengers and crew 57 November 30 1995 Rapper Randy Walker 27 better known as Stretch was shot and killed by the occupants of a vehicle passing his minivan in Queens Village New York shortly after midnight No suspects have ever been identified but it is often believed to be somehow related to his onetime colleague Tupac Shakur s later death since it took place exactly one year after an apparent robbery attempt in Manhattan in which Shakur had been seriously injured December 8 1995 A long racial dispute in Harlem over the eviction of a black record store owner by a Jewish proprietor ends in murder and arson Fifty one year old Roland Smith Jr angry over the proposed eviction set fire to Freddie s Fashion Mart on 125th Street and opened fire on the store s employees killing seven and wounding four Smith also perished in the blaze 58 March 4 1996 Second Avenue Deli owner Abe Lebewohl is shot and killed during a robbery The murder of this popular deli owner and East Village fixture remained unsolved as of 2013 59 June 4 1996 John Royster a 22 year old drifter brutally beats a 32 year old female piano teacher in Central Park the first in a series of attacks over a period of eight days Royster would go on to brutally beat another woman in Manhattan rape a woman in Yonkers and beat a woman Evelyn Alvarez to death on Park Avenue on the Upper East Side of Manhattan In 1998 Royster was sentenced to life in prison without parole 60 March 17 1996 During an argument over drug debts Michael Alig and Robert Riggs kill fellow Club Kid Andre Melendez often known as Angel for the winged outfits he wore during the Club Kids heyday After keeping his body on ice in a bathtub for several days Alig ultimately dismembered it and threw the parts in the Hudson River where they washed up on Staten Island the next month The pair were not arrested until October and would eventually serve over a decade in prison after pleading guilty to manslaughter 61 July 4 1996 A confrontation between a police officer and subway patron at the 167th Street station on the D train in the Bronx results in the shooting death of Nathaniel Levi Gaines the patron Officer Paolo Colecchia was convicted of homicide the third time that has happened to a police officer in city history February 5 1997 Ali Forney age 22 a homeless gay black and transgender person who advocated for homeless LGBT youth was found shot dead on a Harlem street The Ali Forney Center was established in his memory No suspects have ever been named in the case February 23 1997 Abu Ali Kamal a 69 year old Palestinian immigrant opens fire on the observation deck of the Empire State Building killing one and wounding six before taking his own life 62 In 2007 Kamal s daughter told the New York Daily News that the shooting was politically motivated 63 May 30 1997 Jonathan Levin a Bronx teacher and son of former Time Warner CEO Gerald Levin is robbed and murdered by his former student Corey Arthur 64 August 9 1997 Abner Louima is beaten and sodomized with a plunger at the 70th precinct house in Brooklyn by several NYPD officers led by Justin Volpe November 7 1997 A Manhattan couple Camden Sylvia 36 and Michael Sullivan 54 disappear from their loft at 76 Pearl Street in Manhattan after arguing with their landlord over a lack of heat in their apartment The landlord Robert Rodriguez pleaded guilty to tax evasion larceny and credit card fraud following the missing persons investigation The couple is presumed dead their bodies have never been found despite extensive searches 65 January 3 1999 Kendra Webdale age 32 is killed after being pushed in front of an oncoming subway train at the 23rd Street station by Andrew Goldstein a 29 year old with schizophrenia The case ultimately led to the passage of Kendra s Law February 4 1999 Unarmed African immigrant Amadou Bailo Diallo is shot and killed by four plainclothes police officers sparking massive protests against police brutality and racial profiling February 15 1999 Rapper Lamont Coleman better known as Big L is killed in a Harlem drive by shooting A friend Gerard Woodley was arrested and charged with the murder three months later but then released no other suspects have ever been identified Police believe the murder was either revenge for something Coleman s brother had done or that he was mistaken for his brother 66 March 8 1999 Amy Watkins a 26 year old social worker from Kansas who worked with battered women in the Bronx is stabbed to death in a botched robbery near her home in Prospect Heights Brooklyn Her two assailants are sentenced to 25 years to life in prison 67 21st century edit 2000s edit nbsp An NYPD vehicle stationed in Times Square in 2005 March 16 2000 Patrick Dorismond is shot and killed by an NYPD officer in a case of mistaken identity during a drug bust May 24 2000 Five employees of a Flushing Queens Wendy s restaurant are killed and two are seriously wounded during a robbery that netted the killers 2 400 May 10 2001 Actress Jennifer Stahl is killed with two other people in an armed robbery in her apartment above the Carnegie Deli in Manhattan The victims were bound and shot point blank in the head 68 September 11 2001 Two jetliners destroy the two 110 story World Trade Center Twin Towers and several surrounding buildings in part of a coordinated terrorist attack killing 2 606 people who were in the towers and on the ground It is the deadliest mass casualty incident in the city s history That night Polish immigrant Henryk Siwiak was shot dead in Bedford Stuyvesant where he had mistakenly gone to start a new job due to scarce police resources at that time the crime remains unsolved It is the city s only official homicide for that day since the terrorist attack victims are not included in crime statistics 69 October 30 2002 Two gunmen went into a Jamaica Queens recording studio and shot Jason Mizell 37 better known as Jam Master Jay a founding member of pioneering hip hop group Run DMC in the head at point blank range he died shortly thereafter 70 While some suspects have been identified in the years since no one has ever been prosecuted April 24 2003 Romona Moore a 21 year old Hunter College student disappeared after leaving home for a friend s house The NYPD closed the case after two days Her body was found on May 15 severely tortured she had been kept alive for a considerable length of time after the case was closed The two perpetrators were convicted in a second trial after a mistrial was declared following a courtroom attack by one of them Moore s family sued the NYPD over what they felt was inadequate attention to the case compared to later cases involving young white women 71 July 23 2003 Othniel Askew shoots to death political rival City Council member James E Davis in the City Hall chambers of the New York City Council October 15 2003 One of the Staten Island ferries crashes into the pier at St George killing 11 Pilot Richard Smith who had nodded off due to the side effects of some over the counter painkillers he had taken fled the scene for his home where he was arrested after having survived two suicide attempts He was later arrested and pleaded guilty to manslaughter the next year for which he was sentenced to 18 months in prison the city s ferry director also served a year and a day after pleading guilty to the same charge January 27 2005 Nicole duFresne an aspiring actress is shot dead in the Lower East Side section of Manhattan after being accosted by a gang of youths 72 February 14 2005 Rashawn Brazell 19 of Bushwick is last seen leaving a subway station with two unidentified individuals Several days later plastic bags with parts of his dismembered body were found around the neighborhood In 2017 police arrested a suspect already in custody for another heretofore unsolved Brooklyn homicide and charged him with killing Brazell who had lived across the street from at the time 73 October 31 2005 Fashion journalist Peter Braunstein sexually assaults a co worker while posing as a fireman earning him the nickname of the Fire Fiend from the city s tabloids He was arrested after leading officials on a multi state manhunt Braunstein was later sentenced to life and will be eligible for parole in 2023 January 11 2006 Seven year old Nixzmary Brown dies after being beaten by her stepfather Cesar Rodriguez in their Brooklyn apartment Rodriguez was convicted of first degree manslaughter in March 2008 74 February 25 2006 Criminology graduate student Imette St Guillen is brutally tortured raped and killed in New York City after being abducted outside the Falls bar in the SoHo section of Manhattan Bouncer Darryl Littlejohn is convicted of the crime and sentenced to life imprisonment 75 April 1 2006 New York University student Broderick Hehman is killed after being hit by a car in Harlem Hehman was chased into the street by a group of black teens who allegedly shouted get the white boy The death of Hehman echoed the death of Michael Griffith 20 years earlier in Queens 76 May 29 2006 Jeff Gross founder of the Staten Island commune Ganas is shot and wounded by former commune member Rebekah Johnson Johnson was captured in Philadelphia on June 18 2007 after being featured on America s Most Wanted 77 July 25 2006 Jennifer Moore an 18 year old student from New Jersey is abducted and killed after a night of drinking at a Chelsea bar Her body is found outside a Weehawken motel Thirty five year old Draymond Coleman was convicted of the crime and sentenced to 50 years in 2010 78 October 8 2006 Michael Sandy a 29 year old man is hit by a car on the Belt Parkway after being beaten by a group of white attackers Sandy died of his injuries on October 13 2006 The attack which is being investigated as a hate crime hearkened back to the killing of Michael Griffith in 1986 79 nbsp Memorial to Sean Bell November 1 2006 Actress Adrienne Shelly is killed in her apartment November 25 2006 Four NYPD officers fire a combined 50 shots at a group of unarmed men in Jamaica Queens wounding two and killing 23 year old Sean Bell The case sparks controversy over police brutality and racial profiling July 9 2007 Rookie police officer Russel Timoshenko is shot five times while pulling over a stolen BMW in Crown Heights he died five days later A massive manhunt led to the arrest of three men a week later in Pennsylvania who were eventually convicted of the crime All three were carrying guns obtained illegally which led Mayor Michael Bloomberg and other city officials to stiffen city ordinances on illegal firearm possession and seek tighter gun control laws at the state and national level February 12 2008 Psychologist Kathryn Faughey is murdered in her Manhattan office by a mentally ill man whose intended victim was a psychiatrist in the same practice 80 March 20 2009 WABC AM radio personality George Weber was found stabbed to death in his Brooklyn apartment during an apparent robbery A teenage boy who had answered an Internet ad Weber placed was later convicted of the crime 2010s edit May 1 2010 A bombing in Times Square was thwarted when some shopkeepers and others notified a mounted officer about a 4 wheel drive vehicle parked illegally The officer also noticed smoke and explosives and called for backup 81 July 22 2010 Five members of the Jones family were killed in an apparent case of murder suicide arson in the Port Richmond section of Staten Island 82 February 11 2011 Maksim Gelman 23 years old went on a 28 hour rampage killing four people and wounding five others throughout Brooklyn and Manhattan He was sentenced to life imprisonment 83 July 13 2011 The body of eight year old Leiby Kletzky was found dismembered in two locations in Brooklyn after he was murdered by Levi Aron 84 July 31 2012 Ramona Moore 35 disappears after reportedly arguing with Nasean Bonie her building superintendent over the rent on her apartment near Crotona Park in the Bronx Over the next two years police eventually developed enough evidence to charge him with her murder despite the absence of her body It was found in Orange County in 2015 the week before his trial which would have been the first murder prosecution without a body in the borough s history was to start 85 In 2016 a jury acquitted Bonie already serving time for assaulting his wife of the murder charge but convicted him of manslaughter he was sentenced to 25 years in prison August 24 2012 Jeffrey Johnson 58 shot and killed a former co worker before being shot and killed by police officers outside the Empire State Building A total of 11 people including the gunman were shot 86 October 25 2012 Lucia and Leo Krim were stabbed to death by their babysitter Yoselyn Ortega in their Upper West Side apartment 87 December 3 2012 Death of Ki Suck Han Han 58 of Korean descent was pushed onto the tracks by Naeem Davis an African immigrant from Sierra Leone at the Times Square station before eventually being crushed by an oncoming train The two men had bumped into each other at the turnstiles Han was drunk and began aggressively engaging Davis Davis eventually pushed Han away which caused him to fall onto the tracks Han had some time to climb back onto the platform but was too drunk to do so 88 His case drew controversy especially due to a photograph that was published of Han on the tracks in the New York Post 89 Prosecutors brought a murder charge against Davis to which he pleaded not guilty 90 In 2017 Davis was acquitted by a jury and released 88 December 27 2012 Murder of Sunando Sen Sen 46 of Indian descent was pushed onto an incoming train at 40th Street Lowery Street station in a hate crime attack by 33 year old Erika Menendez 91 In 2015 Menendez was sentenced to 24 years in prison 92 January 2 2014 Satmar Hasidic businessman Menachem Stark 39 was kidnapped outside his office in Williamsburg Brooklyn during a snowstorm the intended victim of a robbery His burned body was found in a trash bin the next day in Great Neck New York 93 Of the four cousins indicted in the crime Kendel Felix was convicted of 2nd degree manslaughter in September 2016 Irvine Henry pled guilty in February 2017 to conspiracy hindering prosecution and tampering with physical evidence Kendall Felix was sentenced in March 2019 to seven years in prison and Erskine Felix charged with kidnapping and 2nd degree murder was sentenced to 15 years to life in prison 94 July 17 2014 Eric Garner a 43 year old black man on Staten Island died after a chokehold was applied to him during a confrontation with police over selling untaxed cigarettes The incident captured on cellphone video showed that the asthmatic Garner had repeatedly called out I can t breathe The case attracted national attention as it occurred three weeks before the equally racially tinged shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson Missouri A grand jury declined to indict Daniel Pantaleo the officer involved 95 November 17 2014 Murder of Wai Kuen Kwok Kwok 61 of Asian descent was pushed onto an incoming D train at 167th Street station 96 The prepreator 36 year old African American Kevin Darden was sentenced to 18 years in prison in a plea deal after initially facing 25 years to life in prison Darden was a habitual offender that had previously been arrested 50 times 97 The sentence was criticised by both Kwok s family and James Muriel the subway motorman who was at the controls of the train that struck Kwok who stated that the incident destroyed his state of mind 97 Kwok s death in 2014 meant that the last three victims killed in NYC by being pushed into subway tracks since 2012 were all Asian American men 98 November 20 2014 A 28 year old Brooklyn man Akai Gurley was shot dead by rookie NYPD officer Peter Liang during a vertical patrol on the staircases of Louis H Pink housing projects in East New York Liang was convicted of manslaughter in February 2016 he is currently appealing the verdict 99 December 20 2014 2014 Killings of NYPD Officers A gunman killed two NYPD officers and then himself in Bedford Stuyvesant Brooklyn May 2 2015 Police officer Brian Moore was shot in Queens by Demetrius Blackwell after Moore and his partner asked Blackwell to stop while walking down the street Moore died in the hospital two days later Blackwell was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life in prison May 17 2015 Rapper Chinx and another were wounded in a drive by shooting along Queens Boulevard he died at the hospital later The killing remains unsolved needs update August 2 2016 Murder of Karina Vetrano Karina Vetrano went for a late afternoon run in Spring Creek Park Her body was found around 11 pm with evidence of assault and was ruled a homicide Chanel Lewis was arrested and tried for her murder and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole 100 September 2016 31 people are injured in a pressure cooker bombing in Chelsea Manhattan A bombing occurred earlier that day in Seaside Park New Jersey and no one was injured as a result A suspect in both bombings was arrested the following day after a shootout in Linden New Jersey that left him and three police officers injured 101 May 18 2017 2017 Times Square car attack Navy veteran Richard Rojas drove his car on a pedestrian zone Alyssa Elsme a 18 year old domestic tourist from Portage Michigan was killed and 20 people were injured June 30 2017 Bronx Lebanon Hospital attack A former employee Henry Bello shot and killed a doctor and wounded six other people at the hospital before committing suicide October 31 2017 2017 New York City truck attack A terrorist attack killed eight and wounded eleven in Downtown Manhattan June 20 2018 Murder of Lesandro Guzman Feliz 15 year old Lesandro Junior Guzman Feliz was killed by members of the Dominican gang Trinitario in the Belmont neighborhood of the Bronx The death occurred in a case of mistaken identity in which Guzman Feliz was mistaken for a member of a rival gang Public outrage arose when graphic video of the killing began to circulate on the Internet Video footage shows Guzman Feliz being dragged out of a bodega by a group of men who repeatedly slash the victim with a machete and stab him with knives Five individuals all members of the Trinitario gang were convicted of his murder in 2019 October 5 2019 Four homeless men were beaten to death with a heavy blunt object and a fifth was injured They were found between 2 a m and 5 a m on the streets of Chinatown Manhattan A 24 year old homeless man was arrested 102 December 11 2019 Murder of Tessa Majors 18 year old Tessa Majors a freshman at Barnard College was stabbed and killed during a robbery in Morningside Park 2020s edit February 12 13 2021 Four strangers were stabbed within a 14 hour window along the A train Two of the victims eventually died from their injuries Police apprehended a suspect in Upper Manhattan on February 13 103 April 23 2021 Killing of Yao Pan Ma Ma 61 of Asian descent was randomly attacked by Jarrod Powell as he was collecting cans along Third Avenue and 125th Street in East Harlem Ma suffered serious injuries that eventually caused his death from a cerebral hemorrhage in a long term care center run by The New Jewish Home on December 31 2021 104 105 106 December 3 2021 Stabbing of Davide Giri a young Italian academic from Columbia University by a member of the Everybody Killer gang 107 108 109 January 15 2022 Death of Michelle Go Go 40 of Asian descent was killed after she was pushed into the path of an oncoming subway train by assailant Martial Simon a black man at Times Square 42nd Street station causing her death Along with the killing of Yao Pan Ma this incident was against the backdrop amid rising anti Chinese hate crimes in the city as well as the country in general since 2020 110 111 112 113 February 13 2022 Killing of Christina Yuna Lee Lee 35 of Asian descent was stabbed to death inside her apartment at Chrystie Street by assailant Assamad Nash a black man who had followed her home from the street and into the building The 25 year old Nash had a record of misdemeanor arrests 114 115 February 28 2022 Death of GuiYing Ma Ma 62 was sweeping a sidewalk in Queens the previous year on November 26 when she was attacked with a rock by assailant Elisaul Perez Ma of Chinese descent suffered serious injuries as a result with permanent brain and skull damage 116 She went into a coma for ten weeks 117 and although she initially woke up from it in early February she ultimately died from her injuries due to complications of a traumatic head injury on February 28 118 119 Ma is the fourth American of Asian descent to be killed in the city within the last two months that has been directly attributed to violence against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders AAPIs 117 March 1 2022 Steven Zajonc 28 physically assaulted seven Asian women in Manhattan in a matter of two hours in the evening before he was arrested the next day and charges with hate crimes 120 March 3 2022 Harvey Marcelin known lately as Marcelin Harvey and identifying as a transgender woman was arrested for the murder and dismemberment of 68 year old Susan Leyden after having been previously released on other convictions of murder and sexual assault March 12 2022 2022 Northeastern U S serial shooter A man shot two homeless men in Manhattan killing one The same man is suspected in several shootings in Washington D C that also targeted homeless men 121 March 13 2022 Two women working at the Museum of Modern Art were stabbed in a rage and severely injured by 60 year old Gary Cabana who was arrested two days later after fleeing and is now being tried for attempted murder 122 April 12 2022 2022 New York City Subway attack The accused Frank Robert James a black nationalist opened fire and shot 10 people on a northbound N train on the New York City Subway in Sunset Park Brooklyn and had also threw a smoke grenade While no one was killed a few were left with serious injuries April 16 2022 Murder of Orsolya Gaal Gaal 51 a married mother of two was found stabbed 58 times in a duffle bag in Forest Park A 44 year old handyman an illegal alien from Mexico was arrested on April 21 as a person of interest and the two reportedly argued before Gaal was killed by the handyman in her basement 123 April 30 2022 Murder of Zhiwen Yan Yan 45 of Chinese descent was a food delivery worker on a shift when he was shot and killed on his scooter near 108th Street and 67th Drive in Forest Hills 124 125 126 On June 2 2022 51 year old Glenn Hirsch was charged with his murder He pleaded not guilty 127 In August 2022 Hirsch was found dead at his home from a self inflicted gunshot wound 128 May 11 2022 Death of Zinat Hossain Hossain 24 was killed when she was pushed under the train at Utica Avenue station by robbers who were trying to steal her bag Hossain was a Bangladeshi student that attended Hunter College 129 May 22 2022 Death of Daniel Enriquez Enriquez 48 was riding on a Manhattan bound Q train when he was shot and killed in what police called a random attack 130 May 25 2022 Killing of Victor Vega Vega 61 was approached by two African American men while he was walking home at Lexington Avenue near Nostrand Avenue in Bedford Stuyvesant The incident which was caught on surveillance camera appeared to show the two men intimidating Vega before he turned towards them One of the men then punched Vega in the face causing him to fall and land on his back with his head under a parked car The man then pick pocketed an unconscious Vega and handed something to his accomplice Vega was admitted to the Kings County Hospital Center where he subsequently died five days later 131 132 His death has been ruled a homicide 131 Notable recent crime trends editLate 20th century trends edit Freakonomics authors Steven Levitt and Steven Dubner attribute the drop in crime to the legalization of abortion in the 1970s as they suggest that many would be neglected children and criminals were never born 133 On the other hand Malcolm Gladwell provides a different explanation in his book The Tipping Point he argues that crime was an epidemic and a small reduction by the police was enough to tip the balance 134 Another theory is that widespread exposure to lead pollution from automobile exhaust which can lower intelligence and increase aggression levels incited the initial crime wave in the mid 20th century most acutely affecting heavily trafficked cities like New York A strong correlation was found demonstrating that violent crime rates in New York and other big cities began to fall after lead was removed from American gasoline in the 1970s 135 Gang violence edit Main article Gangs in the United States In the 20th century notorious New York based mobsters Arnold Rothstein Meyer Lansky and Lucky Luciano made headlines The century s later decades are more famous for Mafia prosecutions and prosecutors like Rudolph Giuliani than for the influence of the Five Families Violent gangs such as the Black Spades and the Westies influenced crime in the 1970s The Bloods Crips and MS 13 gangs of Los Angeles arrived in the city in the 1980s but gained notoriety when they appeared on Rikers Island in 1993 to fight off the already established Latin Kings gang Chinese gangs were also prominent in Chinatown Manhattan notably Ghost Shadows and Flying Dragons From the 1990s until their 2013 arrest by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in a sting operation an Orthodox Jewish gang led by Mendel Epstein and Martin Wolmark kidnapped and tortured a number of Jewish men from Borough Park and Midwood Brooklyn in troubled marriages to force them into granting religious divorces to their wives some of whom Epstein charged up to 100 000 to commit the crimes 136 Subway crime and shoving attacks edit nbsp A New York City 1 service subway car in 1973Crime on the New York City Subway reached a peak in the late 1970s and early 1980s with the city s subway having a crime rate higher than that of any other mass transit system in the world 137 During the 2000s the subway had a lower crime rate as crime started dropping in the 1990s 138 139 Various approaches have been used to fight crime A 2012 initiative by the MTA to prevent crime is to ban people who commit one in the subway system from entering it for a certain length of time 140 In the 1960s mayor Robert Wagner ordered an increase in the Transit Police force from 1 219 to 3 100 officers During the hours at which crimes most frequently occurred between 8 00 p m and 4 00 a m the officers went on patrol in all stations and trains In response crime rates decreased as extensively reported by the press 141 However as a consequence of the city s 1976 fiscal crisis service had become poor and crime had gone up with crime being announced on the subway almost every day Additionally there were 11 crimes against the infrastructure in open cut areas of the subway in 1977 where TA staff were injured some seriously There were other rampant crimes as well For example in the first two weeks of December 1977 Operation Subway Sweep resulted in the arrest of over 200 robbery suspects Passengers were afraid of crime fed up with long waits for trains that were shortened to save money and upset over the general malfunctioning of the system The subway also had many dark subway cars 137 Further compounding the issue on July 13 1977 a blackout cut off electricity to most of the city and to Westchester 137 Due to a sudden increase in violent crimes on the subway in the last week of 1978 police statistics about crime in the subway were being questioned In 1979 six murders on the subway occurred in the first two months of the year compared to nine during the entire previous year The IRT Lexington Avenue Line was known to be frequented by muggers so in February 1979 a group headed by Curtis Sliwa began unarmed patrols of the 4 train during the night time in an effort to discourage crime They were known as the Guardian Angels and would eventually expand their operations into other parts of the five boroughs By February 1980 the Guardian Angels ranks numbered 220 142 In March 1979 Mayor Ed Koch asked the city s top law enforcement officials to devise a plan to counteract rising subway violence and to stop insisting that the subways were safer than the streets Two weeks after Koch s request top TA cops were publicly requesting Transit Police Chief Sanford Garelik s resignation because they claimed that he had lost control of the fight against subway crime Finally on September 11 1979 Garelik was fired and replaced with Deputy Chief of Personnel James B Meehan reporting directly to City Police Commissioner Robert J McGuire Garelik continued in his role of chief of security for the MTA 137 By September 1979 around 250 felonies per week or about 13 000 that year were being recorded on the subway making the crime rate the most of any other mass transit network anywhere in the world Some police officers supposedly could not act upon the quality of life crimes and were only to look for violent crimes Among other problems the following were included Transit police radios and the New York City Police radios transmitted at different frequencies and if additional help above ground was needed it could not be summoned because no one above ground would hear the request Subway patrols were also rigidly scheduled and it wasn t long before felons and even the general riders knew exactly when police would be on their train or at particular stations The public perception at the time was that the war on subway crime was failing In October of 1979 additional decoy and undercover units were deployed in the subway 137 Meehan had claimed to be able to along with 2 300 police officers provide sufficient protection to straphangers but Sliwa had brought a group together to act upon crime so that between March 1979 and March 1980 felonies per day dropped from 261 to 154 However overall crime grew by 70 between 1979 and 1980 143 On the IRT Pelham Line in 1980 a sharp rise in window smashing on subway cars caused 2 million in damages it spread to other lines during the course of the year When the broken windows were discovered in trains that were still in service they needed to be taken out of service causing additional delays in August 1980 alone 775 vandalism related delays were reported 144 Vandalism of subway cars including windows continued through the mid 1980s between January 27 and February 2 1985 1 129 pieces of glass were replaced on subway cars on the 1 6 CC E and K trains 145 Often bus transfers sold on the street for 50 cents were also sold illegally mainly at subway to bus transfer hubs 146 Mayor Koch even proposed to put a subway court in the Times Square subway station to speed up arraignments as there were so many subway related crimes by then Meanwhile high ranking senior City Hall and transit officials considered raising the fare from 60 to 65 cents to fund additional transit police officers who began to ride the subway during late nights between 8 p m and 4 a m owing to a sharp increase in crime in 1982 Operation High Visibility commenced in June 1985 had this program extended to 6 a m and a police officer was to be present on every train in the system during that time 147 On January 20 1982 MTA Chairman Richard Ravitch told the business group Association for a Better New York that he would not let his teenage sons ride the subway at night and that even he as the subway chairman was nervous riding the trains 148 The MTA began to discuss how the ridership issue could be fixed but by October 1982 mostly due to fears about transit crime poor subway performance and some economic factors ridership on the subway was at extremely low levels matching 1917 ridership 149 Within less than ten years the MTA had lost around 300 million passengers mainly because of fears of crime In July 1985 the Citizens Crime Commission of New York City published a study showing this trend fearing the frequent robberies and generally bad circumstances 150 As a result the Fixing Broken Windows policy which proposed to stop large profile crimes by prosecuting quality of life crimes was implemented 151 152 Along this line of thinking the MTA began a five year program to eradicate graffiti from subway trains in 1984 153 To attract passengers the TA tried to introduce the Train to the Plane a service staffed by a transit police officer 24 7 This was discontinued in 1990 due to low ridership and malfunctioning equipment In 1989 the Metropolitan Transportation Authority asked the transit police then located within the NYCTA to focus on minor offenses such as fare evasion In the early nineties the NYCTA adopted similar policing methods for Penn Station and Grand Central Terminal When in 1993 Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Police Commissioner Howard Safir were elected to official positions the Broken Windows strategy was more widely deployed in New York under the rubrics of zero tolerance and quality of life Crime rates in the subway and city dropped 154 prompting New York magazine to declare The End of Crime as We Know It on the cover of its edition of August 14 1995 Giuliani s campaign credited the success to the zero tolerance policy 155 The extent to which his policies deserve the credit is disputed 156 Incoming New York City Police Department Commissioner William J Bratton and author of Fixing Broken Windows George L Kelling however stated the police played an important even central role in the declining crime rates 157 The trend continued and Giuliani s successor Michael Bloomberg stated in a November 2004 press release that Today the subway system is safer than it has been at any time since we started tabulating subway crime statistics nearly 40 years ago 158 Shoving attacks edit Shoving attacks has become a noticeable problem ever since the 2000s leading to multiple murders as the subway lacks platform screen doors In 2022 the New York City subway chief told commuters to stay off the platform edge as much as possible 159 The MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber stated that are also looking into making changes to subway platforms and that these shoving incidents are unacceptable and have to stop 159 In 2022 the MTA announced that it will be trialing platform doors at three subway stations 160 Child sexual abuse in religious institutions edit Main article Child sexual abuse in New York City religious institutions Two cases in 2011 those of Bob Oliva and Ernie Lorch have both centered in highly ranked youth basketball programs sponsored by churches of different denominations In early 2011 Oliva a long time basketball coach at Christ the King Regional High School was accused of two cases of child sexual abuse 161 In Manhattan Father Bruce Ritter founder of Covenant House was forced to resign in 1990 after accusations that he had engaged in financial improprieties and had engaged in sexual relations with several youth in the care of the charity 162 In December 2012 the president of the Orthodox Jewish Yeshiva University apologized over allegations that two rabbis at the college s high school campus abused boys there in the late 1970s and early 1980s 163 164 Nightlife legislation edit Main article Nightlife legislation in New York City In New York City legislation was enacted in 2006 affecting many areas of nightlife This legislation was in response to a number of murders which occurred in the New York City area some involving nightclubs and bouncers The city council introduced four pieces of legislation to help combat these problems including Imette s Law which required stronger background checks for bouncers Among the legislative actions taken were the requirement of ID scanners security cameras and independent monitors to oversee problem establishments It also enacted the following plan Create a city Office of Nightlife Affairs Find ways to get more cops to patrol outside clubs and bars Combat underage drinking and the use of fake IDs Foster better relationship among club owners the NYPD and the New York State Liquor Authority Raise age limit for admittance into a club or bar from 16 to 18 or 21 Develop a public awareness campaign urging patrons to be safe at night Examine zoning laws to help neighborhoods that are flooded with clubs and bars A new guideline booklet NYPD and Nightlife Association Announce Best Practices 165 was unveiled on October 18 2007 This voluntary rule book included a 58 point security plan drafted in part by the New York Nightlife Association was further recommended by Police Commissioner Ray Kelly and Speaker Christine Quinn Security measures included cameras outside of nightclub bathrooms a trained security guard for every 75 patrons and weapons searches for everyone including celebrities entering the clubs The new regulation resulted in stricter penalties for serving underage persons 166 167 168 The Club Enforcement Initiative was created by the NYPD in response to what it referred to as a series of high profile and violent crimes against people who visited city nightclubs this year mentioning the July 27 rape and murder of Jennifer Moore One article discussed the dangers of police work and undercover investigations 169 In August 2006 the New York City Council started initiatives to correct the problems highlighted by the deaths of Moore and St Guillen 170 171 There was also discussions about electronic I D scanners Quinn reportedly threatened to revoke the licenses of bars and clubs without scanners 172 In September 2011 the NYPD Nightlife Association updated their Safety Manual Handbook There is now a section on counterterrorism this addition came after the planned terrorist attacks on certain bars and clubs worldwide 173 Administration editMayors edit Crime in New York City was high in the 1980s during the Mayor Edward I Koch years as the crack epidemic hit New York City and peaked in 1990 4 174 the first year of Mayor David Dinkins s administration 1990 1993 but then began to decline the number of murders fell from the 1990 peak to a level close to Koch s worst year of 1989 by Dinkins s final year of 1993 The decline accelerated dramatically during the first term of Mayor Rudolph Giuliani 1994 1997 the number of murders falling by sixty percent and continued to decline though at much slower rates during both his second term 1998 2001 and Mayor Michael Bloomberg s three terms 2002 2013 citation needed Scholars differ on the causes of the precipitous decline in crime in New York City which also coincided with a nationwide drop in crime which some have termed the Great American Crime Decline 175 In a 2007 paper economist Jessica Reyes attributes a 56 percent drop in nationwide violent crime in the 1990s to the removal of lead a neurotoxin that causes cognitive and behavioral problems from gasoline 175 The Brennan Center for Justice has estimated that between 0 and 5 of the drop in crime in the 1990s may be attributed to higher employment 5 to 10 of the drop may be attributed to income growth and 0 to 10 of the drop from increased hiring of police officers 175 The Brennan Centre has also stated that the introduction of compstat procedures being a combination of targeted enforcement at crime hot spots and the imposition of greater managerial accountability on police command staff is the only tactic which has led clearly to subsequent reductions in crime As law professor Lawrence Rosenthal reported this was introduced during Giuliani s first term as mayor together with stop and frisk 176 Economists Steven Levitt and John J Donohue III argue that the drop in crime in New York City as in the United States generally to the legalization of abortion following Roe v Wade see legalized abortion and crime effect 175 David Dinkins edit nbsp David DinkinsThe rates of most crimes including all categories of violent crime made consecutive declines from their peak in his first year 1990 during the last 36 months of his four year term The 30 year upward spiral was ended and a trend of falling rates was initiated that continued beyond his term and accelerated under his successor 177 Despite the actual abating of crime Dinkins was hurt by the perception that crime was out of control during his administration 178 179 Dinkins also initiated a hiring program that expanded the police department nearly 25 The New York Times reported He obtained the State Legislature s permission to dedicate a tax to hire thousands of police officers and he fought to preserve a portion of that anticrime money to keep schools open into the evening an award winning initiative that kept tens of thousands of teenagers off the street 179 180 Rudy Giuliani edit nbsp Rudy GiulianiIn Rudolph Giuliani s first term as mayor the New York City Police Department under Giuliani appointee Commissioner Bill Bratton adopted an aggressive enforcement and deterrence strategy based on James Q Wilson s Broken Windows research This involved crackdowns on relatively minor offenses such as graffiti turnstile jumping and aggressive squeegeemen on the principle that this would send a message that order would be maintained and that the city would be cleaned up At a forum three months into his term as mayor Giuliani mentioned that freedom does not mean that people can do anything they want be anything they can be Freedom is about the willingness of every single human being to cede to lawful authority a great deal of discretion about what you do and how you do it 181 Giuliani also directed the New York City Police Department to aggressively pursue enterprises linked to organized crime such as the Fulton Fish Market and the Javits Center on the West Side Gambino crime family By breaking mob control of solid waste removal the city was able to save businesses over 600 million In 1994 in one of his first initiatives Bratton instituted CompStat a comparative statistical approach to mapping crime geographically to identify emerging criminal patterns and chart officer performance by quantifying apprehensions CompStat gave precinct commanders more power based on the assumption that local authorities best knew their neighborhoods and thus could best determine what tactics to use to reduce crime In turn the gathering of statistics on specific personnel aimed to increase accountability of both commanders and officers Critics of the system assert that it instead creates an incentive to underreport or otherwise manipulate crime data 182 The CompStat initiative won the 1996 Innovations in Government Award from Harvard Kennedy School 183 The Brennan Centre for Justice has stated that compstat was the only tactic which lead clearly to subsequent reductions in crime 176 In 1996 Time magazine featured Bratton not Giuliani on its cover as the face of the successful war on crime in New York City 184 Giuliani forced Bratton out of his position after two years in what was generally seen as a battle of two large egos in which Giuliani was unable to accept Bratton s celebrity 185 186 nbsp National New York City and other major city crime rates 1990 2002 187 Giuliani continued to highlight crime reduction and law enforcement as central missions of his mayoralty throughout both terms These efforts were largely successful 188 However concurrent with his achievements a number of tragic cases of abuse of authority came to light and numerous allegations of civil rights abuses were leveled against the NYPD Giuliani s own deputy mayor Rudy Washington alleged that he had been harassed by police on several occasions More controversial still were several police shootings of unarmed suspects 189 and the scandals surrounding the sexual torture of Abner Louima and the killing of Amadou Diallo In a case less nationally publicized than those of Louima and Diallo unarmed bar patron Patrick Dorismond was killed shortly after declining the overtures of what turned out to be an undercover officer soliciting illegal drugs Even while hundreds of outraged New Yorkers protested Giuliani staunchly supported the New York City Police Department going so far as to take the unprecedented step of releasing Dorismond s extensive criminal record to the public 190 for which he came under wide criticism While many New Yorkers accused Giuliani of racism during his terms former mayor Ed Koch defended him as even handedly harsh Blacks and Hispanics would say to me He s a racist I said Absolutely not he s nasty to everybody 191 The amount of credit Giuliani deserves for the drop in the crime rate is disputed He may have been the beneficiary of a trend already in progress Crime rates in New York City started to drop in 1991 under previous mayor David Dinkins three years before Giuliani took office 188 A small but significant nationwide drop in crime also preceded Giuliani s election and continued throughout the 1990s Two likely contributing factors to this overall decline in crime were federal funding of an additional 7 000 police officers and an improvement in the national economy Many experts believe changing demographics were the most significant cause 192 Some have pointed out that during this time murders inside the home which could not be prevented by more police officers decreased at the same rate as murders outside the home Also since the crime index is based on the FBI crime index which is self reported by police departments some have alleged that crimes were shifted into categories that the FBI does not quantify 193 According to some analyses the crime rate in New York City fell even more in the 1990s and 2000s than nationwide and therefore credit should be given to a local dynamic highly focused policing In this view as much as half of the reduction in crime in New York in the 1990s and almost all in the 2000s is due to policing 194 Opinions differ on how much of the credit should be given to Giuliani to Bratton and to the current Police Commissioner Ray Kelly who had previously served under Dinkins and criticized aggressive policing under Giuliani 195 Among those crediting Giuliani for making New York safer were several other cities nationwide whose police departments subsequently instituted programs similar to Bratton s CompStat 196 197 In 2005 Giuliani was reportedly nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to reduce crime rates in the city 198 The prize went instead to Mohamed ElBaradei and the International Atomic Energy Agency for their efforts to reduce nuclear proliferation 199 Michael Bloomberg edit nbsp Michael BloombergStarting in 2005 under the mayoral tenure of Michael Bloomberg New York City achieved the lowest crime rate among the ten largest cities in the United States 200 201 Since 1991 the city has seen a continuous fifteen year trend of decreasing crime Neighborhoods that were once considered dangerous are now much safer Violent crime in the city has dropped by three quarters in the twelve years ending in 2005 with the murder rate at its lowest then level since 1963 with 539 murders that year for a murder rate of 6 58 per 100 000 people compared to 2 245 murders in 1990 202 The murder rate continued to drop each year since then In 2012 there were 414 murders mainly occurring in the outlying low income areas of NYC In 2014 there were 328 murders the lowest number since the introduction of crime statistics in 1963 Among the 182 U S cities with populations of more than 100 000 New York City ranked 136th in overall crime 203 In 2006 as part of Mayor Michael Bloomberg s gun control efforts the city approved new legislation regulating handgun possession and sales The new laws established a gun offender registry required city gun dealers to inspect their inventories and file reports to the police twice a year and limited individual handgun purchases to once every 90 days The regulations also banned the use and sale of kits used to paint guns in bright or fluorescent colors on the grounds that such kits could be used to disguise real guns as toys 204 In April along with Boston mayor Thomas Menino Bloomberg co founded Mayors Against Illegal Guns 205 206 A December 2013 press release by the group said the bipartisan coalition included over 1 000 mayors 205 As mayor Bloomberg increased the mandatory minimum sentence for illegal possession of a loaded handgun saying Illegal guns don t belong on our streets and we re sending that message loud and clear We re determined to see that gun dealers who break the law are held accountable and that criminals who carry illegal loaded guns serve serious time behind bars 207 He opposes the death penalty saying he would rather lock somebody up and throw away the key and put them in hard labor 207 In July 2007 the city planned to install an extensive web of cameras and roadblocks designed to detect track and deter terrorists called Lower Manhattan Security Initiative In 2007 New York City had 494 reported homicides down from 596 homicides in 2006 and the first year since 1963 when crime statistics were starting to be published that this total was fewer than 500 208 though homicides rose to 523 in 2008 209 they fell again in 2009 to 466 an almost fifty year low 210 211 Homicides continued to decline with the city reporting 414 in 2012 and only 333 in 2013 202 Bill de Blasio edit Bill de Blasio was sworn in as mayor on January 1 2014 On January 1 2018 he was sworn in for a second term as mayor Until 2018 crime under the de Blasio administration continued a generally downward trend In January 2020 robberies were up 39 from the previous year shootings were up 29 and car theft was up 72 212 Likewise February and March saw 20 increases in major index crimes De Blasio said that the consecutive months of 20 increases had been caused by recent bail reforms Some advocacy groups who support the bail reforms accused the NYPD of misclassifying non index crimes to put pressure on politicians in Albany While the cause remains a subject of debate recent changes to stop and frisk may have also had an impact a view that was supported by former police commissioner Raymond W Kelly 213 214 In June 2020 gun violence spiked to the highest levels seen in nearly 25 years De Blasio responded that more officers would be on the streets 215 We re not going back to the bad old days when there was so much violence in the city nor are we going back to the bad old days where policing was done the wrong way and in too many cases police and community could never connect and find that mutual respect Unlike the crime increases from earlier months June also saw a spike in murders up 134 over the previous year 215 August saw shootings more than double compared to the previous year 216 Eric Adams edit The election of Eric Adams as mayor was widely seen as a response by the electorate to concerns about rising crime Police commissioners edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information February 2023 Two of the most influential police commissioners of New York City Raymond Kelly and William Bratton helped to greatly reduce the city s crime rate The New York Times has called both men the city s most significant police leaders of the past quarter century 217 Ray Kelly edit nbsp Ray KellyOn October 16 1992 David Dinkins appointed Raymond Kelly the 37th Police Commissioner of the City of New York The national decline in both violent crime and property crime began in 1993 during the early months of Raymond Kelly s commissionership under Dinkins At the time a firm believer in community policing Kelly helped spur the decline in New York City by instituting the Safe Streets Safe City program which put thousands more cops on the streets where they would be visible to and able to get to know and interact with local communities As the 37th commissioner he also pursued quality of life issues such as the squeegee man that had become a sign of decay in the city The murder rate in New York City had declined from its 1990 mid Dinkins administration historic high of 2 254 to 1 927 when Kelly left in 1994 218 and continued to plummet even more steeply under Mayors Giuliani and Bloomberg The decline continued when Kelly returned as 41st Commissioner under Mayor Bloomberg in 2002 2013 As commissioner of the NYPD under Mayor Michael Bloomberg Kelly had often appeared at outreach events such as the Brooklyn s annual West Indian Day Parade where he was photographed playing the drums and speaking to community leaders Bloomberg and Kelly however continued to place heavy reliance on the CompStat system initiated by Bill Bratton and since adopted by police departments in other cities worldwide The system while recognized as highly effective in reducing crime also puts pressure on local precincts to reduce the number of reports for the seven major crimes while increasing the number of lesser arrests 219 Bloomberg and Kelly continued and indeed stepped up Mayor Giuliani s controversial stop and frisk policy which is considered by some to be a form of racial profiling In the first half of 2011 the NYC police made 362 150 such arrests constituting a 13 5 percent increase from the same period in 2010 according to WNYC radio which also reported that 84 percent of the people stopped were either black or Latino and that nine out 10 stops did not result in any arrest or ticket According to New York State Senator Eric Adams Kelly was one of the great humanitarians in policing under David Dinkins I don t know what happened to him that all of a sudden his philosophical understanding of the importance of community and police liking each other has changed Sometimes the expeditious need of bringing down crime numbers bring out the worst in us So instead of saying let s just go seek out the bad guy we get to the point of Let s go get them all If Kelly can t philosophically change then we need to have a leadership change at the top 220 Under Bloomberg Commissioner Kelly also revamped New York City s Police Department into a world class counter terrorism operation operating in conjunction with the CIA Prior to the September 11 2001 attacks there were fewer than two dozen officers working on terrorism full time ten years later there were over 1 000 One of Kelly s innovations was his unprecedented stationing of New York City police detectives in other cities throughout the world following terrorist attacks in those cities with a view to determining if they are in any way connected to the security of New York In the cases of both the March 11 2004 Madrid bombing and the July 7 2005 London bombings and July 21 2005 London bombings NYPD detectives were on the scene within a day to relay pertinent information back to New York An August 2011 article by the Associated Press reported the NYCPD s extensive use of undercover agents colloquially referred to as rakers 221 and mosque crawlers 222 to keep tabs even build databases on stores restaurants mosques and clubs NYPD spokesman Paul Browne denied that police trawled ethnic neighborhoods telling the AP that officers only follow leads He also dismissed the idea of mosque crawlers saying Someone has a great imagination 223 According to Mother Jones columnist Adam Serwer The FBI was reportedly so concerned about the legality of the NYPD s program that it refused to accept information that came out of it 224 Valerie Caproni the FBI s general counsel told the AP that the FBI is barred from sending agents into mosques looking for leads outside of a specific investigation and said the practice would raise alarms If you re sending an informant into a mosque when there is no evidence of wrongdoing that s a very high risk thing to do she was quoted as saying You re running right up against core constitutional rights You re talking about freedom of religion 223 nbsp Bill BrattonUnder Mayor Bloomberg Kelly s NYPD also incurred criticism for its handling of the protests surrounding the 2004 Republican National Convention which resulted in the City of New York having to pay out millions in settlement of lawsuits for false arrest and civil rights violations as well as for its rough treatment of credentialed reporters covering the 2011 Occupy Wall Street demonstrations 225 On March 5 2007 it was announced that a Rikers Island inmate offered to pay an undercover police officer posing as a hit man to behead Kelly as well as bomb police headquarters in retaliation for the controversial police shooting of Sean Bell 226 Bill Bratton edit Bill Bratton became the chief of the New York City Transit Police in 1990 In 1991 the Transit Police gained national accreditation under Bratton The department became one of only 175 law enforcement agencies in the country and only the second in New York State to achieve that distinction The following year it was also accredited by the State of New York and by 1994 there were almost 4 500 uniformed and civilian members of the department making it the sixth largest police force in the United States Bratton had left the NYC Transit Police returning to Boston in 1992 to head the Boston Police Department one of his long time ambitions In 1994 Bratton was appointed the 38th Commissioner of the NYPD by Mayor Rudolph W Giuliani He cooperated with Giuliani in putting the broken windows theory into practice He had success in this position and introduced the CompStat system of tracking crimes which proved successful in reducing crime in New York City and is still in use today 227 A new tax surcharge enabled the training and deployment of around 5 000 new better educated police officers police decision making was devolved to precinct level and a backlog of 50 000 unserved warrants was cleared Bratton resigned in 1996 228 229 nbsp James P O NeillOn December 5 2013 New York City mayor elect Bill de Blasio named Bratton as New York City s new Police Commissioner to replace Raymond Kelly after de Blasio s swearing in on January 1 2014 The New York Times reported that at Bratton s swearing in on January 2 2014 the new Police Commissioner praised his predecessor Raymond Kelly but also signaled his intention to strike a more conciliatory tone with ordinary New Yorkers who had become disillusioned with policing in the city We will all work hard to identify why is it that so many in this city do not feel good about this department that has done so much to make them safe what has it been about our activities that have made so many alienated 230 James P O Neill edit On August 2 2016 James P O Neill was appointed Police Commissioner of New York City by Mayor Bill de Blasio effective September 2016 He announced his retirement on November 4 2019 Dermot Shea edit On December 1 2019 Dermot Shea was appointed Police Commissioner of New York City by Mayor Bill de Blasio this was effective the following day when he was sworn in nbsp Dermot SheaMurders by year editYear Murders1928 404 note 1 1929 4251930 4941931 5881932 5791933 5411934 45819351936 5101937 19381939 291 231 1940 275 231 1941 268 231 1942 265 231 1943 201 231 1944 288 231 1945 292 231 1946 346 231 1947 333 231 1948 315 231 1949 301 231 1950 294 231 1951 243 231 1952 309 231 1953 350 231 1954 342 231 1955 306 231 1956 315 231 1957 314 231 1958 354 231 Year Murders1959 390 231 1960 4821961 4831962 6311963 548 232 1964 636 232 1965 634 232 1966 654 232 1967 746 232 1968 986 232 1969 1043 232 1970 1117 232 1971 1466 232 1972 1691 232 1973 1680 232 1974 1554 232 1975 1645 232 1976 1622 232 1977 1557 232 1978 1504 232 1979 1733 232 1980 1814 232 1981 1826 232 1982 1668 232 1983 1622 232 1984 1450 232 1985 1384 232 1986 1582 232 1987 1672 232 1988 1896 232 Year Murders1989 1905 232 1990 2245 232 note 2 1991 2154 232 1992 1995 232 1993 1946 232 1994 1561 232 1995 1177 232 1996 983 232 1997 770 232 1998 633 232 1999 671 232 2000 673 232 2001 649 232 note 3 2002 587 232 2003 597 232 2004 570 232 2005 539 232 2006 596 232 2007 496 232 2008 5232009 471 233 2010 536 234 2011 515 235 2012 4192013 3352014 3332015 352 236 2016 335 237 2017 292 238 2018 295 238 Year Murders2019 319 239 2020 468 240 2021 488 241 2022 438 242 nbsp Number of murders in New York City per year from 1928 to 2021 based on the chart 1928 First year tabulated 1990 Highest total to date 2001 Not including the September 11 attacks Specific locations editThe boroughs of Queens and Staten Island have historically had lower crime rates compared to Brooklyn The Bronx and Manhattan Since 1985 the Bronx has consistently had the highest homicide and violent crime rate among the five boroughs 243 Index Crime Rates by Borough per 100 000 population 244 The Bronx Brooklyn Manhattan Queens Staten Island3 540 1 2 438 5 4 403 5 2 236 1 1 479 8Violent Crime Rates by Borough per 100 000 population 244 The Bronx Brooklyn Manhattan Queens Staten Island1 290 2 669 0 823 3 526 3 359 8The Bronx edit nbsp Burned out building Charlotte StreetWith some of the poorest neighborhoods in the country the Bronx specifically the South Bronx became noteworthy as a high crime area in the later part of the 20th century 245 Beginning in the 1960s White flight landlord abandonment a decline in city services reduced investment economic changes changing demographics and the construction of the Cross Bronx Expressway CBE all contributed to the borough s decay 246 The construction of expressways in the Bronx especially the CBE within the South Bronx divided several neighborhoods and displaced thousands of residents and businesses 246 247 The already poor and working class neighborhoods were further disadvantaged by the decreasing property value and increasing vacancy rates Racial tensions during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s further contributed to middle class flight and the decline of many neighborhoods By the late 1960s the vacancy rate of homes in the South Bronx was the highest of any place in the city The early 1970s saw South Bronx property values continue to plummet to record lows as the city experienced a fiscal crisis Primarily White flight led to abandonment and deterioration of large numbers of buildings This coupled with a stagnant economy and an extremely high unemployment rate attracted increased social problems including the proliferation of street gangs and a large number of squatters This had a domino effect leading landlords of nearby apartment buildings to neglect their properties as well Police statistics show that as the crime wave moved north across the Bronx the remaining white tenants in the South Bronx mostly elderly Jews were preferentially targeted for violent crime by the influx of young minority criminals because they were seen as easy prey This became so common that the slang terms crib job meaning how elderly residents were as helpless as infants and push in home invasion were coined specifically in reference to them 248 Moreover South Bronx residents were reportedly burning down vacant properties either for scrap or to get better housing 249 while some landlords were doing the same in order to collect the insurance money 250 Media attention brought the Bronx especially its southern half into common interest nationwide The phrase The Bronx is burning attributed to Howard Cosell during a Yankees World Series game in 1977 refers to the arson epidemic caused by the total economic collapse of the South Bronx during the 1970s During the game as ABC switched to a generic helicopter shot of the exterior of Yankee Stadium an uncontrolled fire could clearly be seen burning in the ravaged South Bronx surrounding the park By the time of Cosell s 1977 commentary dozens of buildings were being burned in the South Bronx every day sometimes whole blocks at a time The local police precincts already struggling and failing to contain the Bronx s massive wave of drug and gang crime had long since stopped bothering to investigate the fires since there were too many to track The 1975 New York City fiscal crisis was succeeded by the New York City blackout of 1977 which triggered massive looting that bankrupted stores 251 By 1979 many Bronx neighborhoods went aflame and were turned into rubble Apartment buildings were abandoned or sold to lesser landlords amid rapid urban decay 251 252 253 Its high schools became notorious as the city s worst 254 and it was struck by the crack epidemic 253 255 During the 1970s the NYPD s 41st Precinct Station House at 1086 Simpson Street became known as Fort Apache The Bronx By 1980 the 41st was renamed The Little House on the Prairie as two thirds of the area s 94 000 residents had fled and the station house was one of the few buildings that had not been abandoned or burnt down 256 In total over 40 of the South Bronx was burned or abandoned between 1970 and 1980 44 census areas lost more than 50 of their area to fires and seven lost over 97 of their buildings to arson or abandonment 257 The appearance was frequently compared to that of a bombed out and evacuated European city following World War II 258 One of the most drastic cases of this was Charlotte Street in Crotona Park East the street had become so deteriorated that part of it was de mapped in 1974 After President Jimmy Carter personally visited Charlotte Street in 1977 he ordered the head of the U S Department of Housing and Urban Development to take steps to salvage the area 259 Despite significant investment compared to the post war period many exacerbated social problems remain in many neighborhoods including high rates of violent crime substance abuse overcrowding and substandard housing conditions 260 261 262 263 The Bronx has the highest rate of poverty in New York City and the greater South Bronx is the poorest area 264 265 Brooklyn edit Neighborhoods such as Brownsville Canarsie and East New York used to be majority Italian and Jewish but have shifted into mostly Black and Hispanic communities 266 Between the 1950s and 1970s a demographic shift occurred the borough lost almost 500 000 people most of them White and at the same time the crime rate in Brooklyn increased 267 Those residents moved to neighboring boroughs of Queens and Staten Island in addition to suburban counties of Long Island and New Jersey Central Brooklyn edit In 1961 Alfred E Clark of The New York Times referred to Bedford Stuyvesant as Brooklyn s Little Harlem 268 One of the first urban riots of the era took place there Social and racial divisions in the city contributed to the tensions In 1964 a race riot started in Harlem Manhattan after an Irish NYPD lieutenant Thomas Gilligan shot and killed a black teenager named James Powell who was only 15 269 The riot spread to Bedford Stuyvesant and resulted in the destruction and looting of many neighborhood businesses many of which were Jewish owned citation needed Race relations between the NYPD and the city s black community strained as police were seen as an instrument of oppression and racially biased law enforcement On top of this few black officers were present on the force 270 In predominantly black New York neighborhoods arrests and prosecutions for drug related crimes were higher than anywhere else in the city despite evidence that illegal drugs were being used at the same rate in white communities This further contributed to the problems between the white dominated police force and the black community 271 Race riots followed in 1967 and 1968 as part of the political and racial tensions in the United States of the era aggravated by high unemployment among blacks de facto segregation in housing and the failure to enforce civil rights laws This contributed to the New York City teachers strike of 1968 when Brownsville s majority white teacher population clashed with the majority black residential population Conversely the mostly white population of Canarsie protested efforts at racial school integration in the early 1970s which largely led to white flight in Canarsie by the 1980s 272 Manhattan edit Starting in the mid 19th century the United States became a magnet for immigrants seeking to escape poverty in their home countries After arriving in New York many new immigrants ended up living in squalor in the slums of the Five Points neighborhood By the 1820s the area was home to many gambling dens and brothels and was known as a dangerous place to go In 1842 Charles Dickens visited the area and was appalled by the horrendous living conditions he saw there 273 The area was so notorious that it even caught the attention of Abraham Lincoln who visited there in 1860 before his Cooper Union speech 274 The predominantly Irish Five Points Gang was one of the country s first major organized crime entities 275 As Italian immigration grew in the early 20th century many joined ethnic gangs A prominent example is Al Capone who got his start in crime with the Five Points Gang 276 The Mafia also known as Cosa Nostra first developed in the mid 19th century in Sicily and spread to the East Coast of the United States during the late 19th century following waves of Sicilian and Southern Italian emigration Lucky Luciano established Cosa Nostra in Manhattan and formed alliances with other criminal enterprises This included the Jewish mob which was led by Meyer Lansky who was the leading Jewish gangster of that period 277 From 1920 to 1933 U S Prohibition helped create a thriving black market in liquor which the Mafia was quick to capitalize on 277 The borough experienced a sharp increase in crime during the post war period 278 The murder rate in Manhattan hit an all time high of 42 murders per 100 000 residents in 1979 279 Manhattan retained the highest murder rate in the city until 1985 when it was surpassed by the Bronx Most serious violent crime has been historically concentrated in Upper Manhattan and the Lower East Side though robbery in particular was a major quality of life concern throughout the borough Through the 1990s and 2000s crime in Manhattan plummeted in all categories versus historic highs Today crime rates in most of Lower Manhattan Midtown the Upper East Side and the Upper West Side are consistent with other major city centers in the United States However crime rates remain high in the Upper Manhattan neighborhoods of East Harlem Harlem Washington Heights Inwood and NYCHA developments across the borough despite significant reductions In more recent years there has been an increase in violent crime particularly in Upper Manhattan and NYCHA developments 280 281 282 Harlem edit Main article Crime in Harlem Harlem a large neighborhood within the northern section of the New York City borough of Manhattan has historically had some of the highest rates of poverty and violent crime citywide 283 Although the rate of crime has decreased compared to historic highs of the early 1990s high rates of crime are still prevalent in the neighborhood Crime in Harlem is primarily related to illicit activities such as theft robbery drug trafficking and prostitution Criminal organizations such as street gangs are responsible for a significant portion of crime particularly violent crime The leading cause of death among young black males in Harlem is homicide 284 According to a survey published in 2013 by Union Settlement Association residents of East Harlem perceive crime as their biggest single concern 285 Harlem today maintains one of the highest violent crime rates in New York City In 2021 the 25th Precinct had the second highest rates of felony assault and robbery the sixteenth highest rate of rape and the highest rate of murder out of the New York Police Department s 77 precincts 286 Chinatown edit The early days of Chinatown were dominated by Chinese tongs now sometimes referred to as associations a mix of clan associations landsman s associations political alliances Kuomintang vs Chinese Communist Party and more secretly crime syndicates The associations started to give protection from harassment due to anti Chinese sentiment Each of these associations was aligned with a street gang The associations were a source of assistance to new immigrants doing things such as giving out loans and helping to start businesses Until the 1980s the portion of Chinatown east of the Bowery considered part of the Lower East Side had a higher proportion of non Chinese residents than in Chinatown s western section 287 During the 1970s and 1980s this area had deteriorating building conditions including vacant lots and storefronts with fewer businesses It suffered from many violent crimes such as gang activities robberies burglaries and rape as well as racial tensions with other ethnic groups 288 Female Chinese garment workers were especially targets of robbery and rape with many leaving work together in groups to protect each other as they were heading home 289 Similarly crime in Chinatown increased due to the poor relations between Cantonese and Fuzhouese immigrants when the latter group started moving into the area in the 1980s and 1990s Due to the Fuzhou immigrants having no legal status and an inability to speak Cantonese many were denied jobs in Chinatown and instead became criminals to make a living There was a large amount of Cantonese resentment against Fuzhou immigrants arriving into Chinatown 290 During the mid to late 1980s Chinatown began to experience an influx of Vietnamese refugees from the Vietnam War Since most of the Vietnamese could not speak Mandarin or Cantonese which was solely used for most social services they struggled to survive and lived on the fringes of the community Eventually many Vietnamese youth within the city started to form gang factions Under the leadership of a wealthy Vietnamese immigrant named David Thai who combined many separate gangs into one known as Born to Kill Vietnamese youths began a violent crime spree in Chinatown robbing extorting and racketeering drawing much resentment from the Chinese community 291 292 293 294 Washington Heights and Inwood edit Washington Heights and Inwood neighborhoods in Upper Manhattan recorded a total of 103 murders in 1990 The crack epidemic of the late 1980s and early 1990s impacted the community especially hard 295 The 33rd precinct was established in the area in 1993 The violent crime rate remains higher than the city as a whole today despite a significant decline compared to the crack epidemic Drug trafficking and human trafficking continue to be a major quality of life issues in the community Tactics editBroken windows theory edit Main article Broken windows theory The broken windows theory is a criminological theory of the norm setting and signalling effect of urban disorder and vandalism on additional crime and anti social behavior The theory states that maintaining and monitoring urban environments in a well ordered condition may stop further vandalism and escalation into more serious crime CompStat edit Main article CompStat CompStat 296 is the name given to the New York City Police Department s accountability process and has since been replicated in many other departments CompStat is a management philosophy or organizational management tool for police departments roughly equivalent to Six Sigma or TQM and was not a computer system or software package in its original form Through an evolutionary process however some commercial entities have created turnkey packages including computer systems software mobile devices and other implements collectively assembled under the heading of CompStat Instead CompStat is a multilayered dynamic approach to crime reduction quality of life improvement and personnel and resource management CompStat employs Geographic Information Systems and was intended to map crime and identify problems In weekly meetings ranking NYPD executives meet with local precinct commanders from one of the eight patrol boroughs in New York City to discuss the problems They devise strategies and tactics to solve problems reduce crime and ultimately improve quality of life in their assigned area Policing edit Main article Law enforcement in New York City Law enforcement in New York City is carried out by numerous law enforcement agencies New York City has the highest concentration of law enforcement agencies in the United States As with the rest of the US agencies operate at federal state and local county and city levels However New York City s unique nature means many more operate at lower levels Many private police forces also operate in New York City The New York City Police Department is the main police agency in the city Stop and frisk edit Main article New York City stop and frisk program The NYPD has come under scrutiny for its use of stop and frisk implemented under Rudy Giuliani s tenure as mayor 297 298 299 It is a practice of the New York City Police Department by which police officers stop and question hundreds of thousands of pedestrians annually and frisk them for weapons and other contraband The rules for stop question and frisk are found in New York State Criminal Procedure Law section 140 50 and are based on the decision of the United States Supreme Court in the case of Terry v Ohio 300 301 About 684 000 people were stopped in 2011 300 302 303 The vast majority of these people were black or Hispanic 300 302 303 Some judges have found that these stops are not based on reasonable suspicion of criminal activity 304 On October 31 2013 the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit blocked the order requiring changes to the New York Police Department s stop and frisk program and removed Judge Shira Scheindlin from the case 305 306 On November 9 2013 the city asked a federal appeals court to vacate Scheindlin s orders 307 308 Bill de Blasio who succeeded Bloomberg as mayor in 2014 has pledged to reform the stop and frisk program and is calling for new leadership at the NYPD an inspector general and a strong racial profiling bill 309 See also edit nbsp New York City portal nbsp Law portalCrime in New York state Timeline of New York City List of United States cities by crime rateReferences edit 217 years of homicide in New York January 26 2022 a b Johnson Bruce D Golub 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