The Daily - A Surge in Shootings
Episode Date: August 24, 2020Gun violence is on the rise in New York City. By the end of July, there had been more shootings in 2020 than in all of 2019. Shootings have risen in other metropolises, too, including Atlanta, Chicago..., Denver and Houston.Several theories have been advanced about why. Experts on crime say the coronavirus outbreak has deepened the endemic problems that often underlie gun violence, including poverty, unemployment, housing instability and hunger.Police leaders also cite budget cuts and a political climate that has made officers reluctant to carry out arrests because of what they see as unfair scrutiny of their conduct.Today, we look at how the various diagnoses could influence activists’ calls for the police to be defunded.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily Background reading: “Right now, communities are being held hostage by the cops and the robbers at the same time,” a City Council member from Queens said. The summertime surge in shootings is unlike anything New York has seen in two decades. The summer usually brings with it an increase in violent crime. Across the U.S., as many states emerge from lockdown, the increase has been steeper than usual.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
Today, in major cities across the U.S., gun violence is surging, just as activists are
calling to defund the police. My colleague, Ashley Southall, on how that is playing out in New York City.
It's Monday, August 24th.
Ashley, what has been the story of crime in New York City up until this moment?
So around the 70s and 80s, we saw crime start to really rise in New York.
And we went through the drug war, the crack epidemic. And in the 90s, we saw crime sort of
peak all across the United States, but especially in New York. And there were thousands of murders
each year and even more shootings. But as the 90s wore on and into the 2000s...
The crime rate in this country is continuing to fall. The FBI reported today that violent crime
fell 5.5% last year. That's three years in a row now.
We saw a crime decline and there was a strong decline for years to the point where we were
having just hundreds of murders a year. The NYPD says there have been 289 murders this year.
That's down from a peak of more than 2,200 in 1990.
Crime in New York City dropping yet again,
this time to levels not seen since Harry Truman was president.
Police admit it's probably the worst-kept secret in the city,
that New York is now the safest big city in America.
And the question was, when was New York going to reach bottom?
Breaking news on this Sunday night.
Crime is up across the city.
That's according to the latest numbers released by the NYPD this afternoon.
The NYPD now having to adapt to a noticeable rise in crime since the beginning of the year.
At the beginning of the year, we started to see crime rise over several categories.
Then in June, we see it really take off.
It has been a violent weekend in New York City.
The NYPD investigating a spree of shootings on this first official weekend of summer.
More than a dozen people were shot between Friday night and Saturday morning.
And in July, the trend seems to just
accelerate. Nine victims fatally shot tonight across four boroughs. Deadly shootings started
just before one this morning in Brooklyn and continued throughout the day in Manhattan,
the Bronx and Staten Island. So that by the end of the month, we'd had more shootings this year than all of last year.
And we still have five months to go.
I guess we should acknowledge, Ashley, that there is a siren behind you, which has nothing
to do with this conversation.
It's just what it means to live in New York.
Yeah, I'm five blocks from a hospital.
So, you know, it's part of the soundtrack of my everyday life.
So at this point, there are meaningfully more shootings and meaningfully more murders. So,
Ashley, how should we think about the causes of this? What exactly is going on here? I think for
a lot of people, the instinct might be to think that this is somehow related to this moment in American policing, this forceful rejection of how policing has occurred, the protest against it, and the response of police to those protests.
I mean, sure, it's easy to think that because it's right in front of us. It almost seems obvious.
But it's really much more complex, And there are really three big theories about
what's happening. The one that has the most consensus around it is that the pandemic is
exacerbating longstanding problems of gun violence and particularly unemployment. There are a lot of
people with no jobs and nothing to do. People are sinking deeper into poverty, which creates a greater
desperation. And there's also a lot of illegal guns in New York City. And that's a really combustible
situation. What do you mean? How does that work? What we've long known in New York City is that a
small number of people are responsible for the vast majority of the violence. And those are people who are largely in gangs and crews, particularly in public housing.
And those groups compete in normal times. Some gangs sell drugs and they have turf that they
cover. But when you have a pandemic hit that causes lots of unemployment, there's less people
buying drugs. And so there's less people buying drugs. And so there's less
of a market. And when you have less of a market, that increases the competition. So then you have
these violent gangs fighting more fiercely for less of a pie. Okay. So under this theory that
the pandemic is exacerbating existing problems in the city. That explains the pandemic's effect on the people doing the shooting.
What about the effect the pandemic had on the police?
Immediately what we saw was officers being removed from duty because of the virus.
We had thousands of officers calling out sick every day.
And at the height of the pandemic, almost 20% of the forest was out sick because of the virus.
Wow.
And that had two effects.
On the street, officers, their presence is a deterrent to violence.
You're probably not going to shoot somebody with an officer standing right there watching you.
Right.
But if there's no officer, there's no real deterrent.
And then after a shooting occurs, there's an investigation. Then the police department
detectives work in these squad rooms where they're very close together. They're practically
breathing on top of each other. So if one of them gets sick, then there's a chance that everybody's
sick. So they all go out sick and investigations come to a halt. Well, that's a problem because
one shooting often leads to another shooting, whether that person continues shooting rivals or whether someone is now looking for him.
And it's almost always a him.
So when you have cases that can't be investigated, that means that the ones that can be solved aren't being solved and that that pattern of violence continues uninterrupted.
All right. That's the first theory, that the pandemic is both fueling more shootings and
sidelining the officers who could potentially prevent those shootings. Ashley, what is the
second theory of why crime is going up in New York?
Well, you touched on this earlier. We had massive protests break out in May after the
death of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis, just as police were coming back
from the virus. That required resources. We saw in those early days, the police deployed about
4,000 officers to the protests, but there was rampant looting in some parts of Manhattan and Brooklyn,
and they had to double the force to about 8,000 police officers. So that meant that officers have
to come from somewhere, and they typically come from the streets, and some of them come from
detective squads. So that means that fewer police resources are involved in investigating shootings,
and there are less officers in the neighborhoods where shootings are more likely to occur.
And how do the protests themselves play into this theory?
Amid these protests, you start to see a political response to the demands to reform the police.
Within the last hour, I just chaired a meeting of senior executives of the police department.
And one of those changes was to disband the anti-crime units.
It is regarding the deployment of precinct level and PSA level anti-crime units.
These are the plainclothes units that operate our traditional anti-crime.
And explain what an anti-crime unit is.
Anti-crime officers are the main group responsible
for getting guns off the street in New York City. And they confiscated thousands of guns each year.
The men and women of the police department were doing what I and others before me asked.
They have done an exceptional job. But they were controversial and they became known as the jump out boys because
what they would do sometimes is stop in their cars, get out and throw somebody up against the
wall, search them and leave without any explanation or finding any weapons. And it had led to a lot of
tension between police and communities of color. And it is lost on no one, certainly not the people that live in the neighborhoods that we serve,
that endure being stopped or their children being stopped.
But what was also problematic about anti-crime
is that they were involved in a lot of police-involved shootings.
And why exactly is that?
Because anti-crime officers are trained to look
for guns. They're looking for violent people. And so in expecting violence, they are prepared to use
it. And the calculation was that New York City could not afford to have a police-involved shooting
at that time. So the commissioner had been thinking about this, about disbanding anti-crime for a long time.
Effective immediately, we will be transitioning those units, roughly 600 people citywide,
into a variety of assignments, including detective bureau, neighborhood policing, and other assignments.
And finally, he made the decision in June to pull the plug.
It's a big move when you look at culturally how we police
this city. And what we always struggle with, I believe, as police executives is not keeping crime
down. It's keeping crime down and keeping the community working with us. And I think those
two things at times have been at odds. We can do it better. We can do it smarter. And we will.
Is there a feeling, Ashley, that disbanding this unit
at a time when gun violence is going up has contributed to the increase in shootings and
murders? There's certainly a sense that removing anti-crime officers from the street and publicly
announcing that has let people who carry guns and who are also involved in violence know that
there's no one there to stop them. And one of the things that we've seen as shootings and murders
have risen is that gun arrests have declined. And since the anti-crime unit was disbanded,
shootings have only continued to go up.
And under this second theory that's centered around the role of these protests in the rise of crime, what role does the actual frustration at the heart of these protests play here?
The mistrust on the side of the protesters toward the police? Well, there's always been a level of mistrust of police in communities that experience
higher levels of crime because they have experienced aggressive policing in the past.
But what happens when you have a death like George Floyd that's captured on video where he's saying the last words of Eric Garner,
who died here six years ago, is that those old wounds are scratched again and they reopen.
And that mistrust for a while is laid bare again. You know, that can manifest as people
not calling the police or not seeking them out to help with the problem. And one of the
things that the police have said is that they had people who were cooperating with shooting and
murder investigations before the protests who have now backed out because they don't want to have
anything to do with the police. And that makes it harder to solve crimes that might lead to future
ones like shootings.
And what about the police side of this equation, this message of the protests?
How are officers in New York City, from your reporting, internalizing this message and reacting to it, and perhaps changing their behavior and their approach in response in
ways that might be fueling all of this?
So when you talk to the cops, or even if you listen to the things that top brass say,
what cops take from the protests and the political response is that their work isn't valuable
and nobody supports them, that the city doesn't have their backs.
And so what we're seeing is that in moments where police might have been proactive in
making an arrest or in intervening in a situation that could spiral into violence, they're actually
standing down. One of the examples that people often give to me is that there are these barbecues
and street parties that go late into the night.
Usually the police would break them up.
But instead, they're going on well past midnight to 2, 4, sometimes even 6 a.m. And the police aren't doing anything about it.
And what we've seen in some instances is that those parties often lead to a shooting and one or more people get hurt or killed.
often lead to a shooting and one or more people get hurt or killed.
And the cops you're talking to are telling you,
yeah, we're hesitant to engage with these kinds of situations right now.
Yeah. I mean, think about it from the perspective of the cop on the street who he's thinking,
you know, well, the public doesn't want me here. And, you know, if I step into a situation where I think someone might have a gun or this thing could get out of control, then I could be arrested. And then that's the end of my
career. And I can't support my family. That's that's a very scary thing for cops.
But I'm curious, Ashley, if in your reporting, you get the sense that on some level, this may be police saying to the protesters,
okay, so you're so disgusted by us,
and you are making all these demands for budget cuts to fund the police.
Do you want to know what the world would look like
if you get your vision implemented?
Well, here, we'll give you a taste of it.
We will not go in and break up the barbecue.
We will not make the arrest. In other words, is there some form of kind of protest going on by
the police of the work that they typically do in order to say to the public, this is what it would
be like if you get what protesters out on the streets are demanding? It certainly seems that
in some way the cops are responding in a way that almost seems flippant. You want to abolish the
police. You want to defund the police. Well, this is what it looks like when you don't have the
police. And there's a prevailing sense that cops are stepping back to prove that they are, in fact, necessary.
Ashley, it doesn't seem like there's a ton of debate around these two theories that you have laid out here, the role of the pandemic and the role of the protests against police.
Do I have that right?
Yeah, there's a lot of agreement on the role of the pandemic
and also the effect of the protests.
But the third theory is where there's a lot of debate and it's heated.
We'll be right back.
Okay, so Ashley, tell me about this third theory about why crime in New York City is rising.
And why is that theory such a source of disagreement?
So the third theory is one advanced almost exclusively by the New York Police Department itself.
And that theory is that a couple of measures taken by both the city and the state over the last few years, first with criminal justice reform and then through some of the steps they've taken to slow the spread of the coronavirus, that those measures are contributing to putting people back out onto the street who have not just engaged in criminal activity, but who are also violent.
I wonder if you can break those two things down, maybe start with the criminal justice reforms.
What's the theory there?
So last year, the New York State legislature passed a bail law.
The old system was too reliant on cash, right? That allowed more people to get out of jail while their cases were winding through the courts. The old system was if you were rich
and you could pay bail, you get out. If you're poor and you couldn't pay bail, you went to jail.
And in most cases, people who are assigned bail do make bail, but it takes some time.
And being in jail for a day, two days, a week, a month can have serious consequences for people's lives.
They lose their job, they lose their housing, and they might even lose custody of their kids. And that's all before the case is resolved.
So the bail law was intended to fix this problem that was largely affecting poor people in communities of color.
It was never supposed to be about money.
The whole justice system is not supposed to be about who's rich, who's poor.
But what the theory is now, at least from the police department, is that that law put more people onto the streets who are not only criminal,
but are also violent. The police commissioner, Dermot Shea, he's gone after this bail law
ever since he became commissioner and predicted that it would cause a rise in crime.
When you have individuals that are standing before a judge and immediately being released,
and essentially everyone in the room
knows that this person is a danger to the community, I think we need to look at the
system and make sure that judges can make common sense decisions.
So because that law was passed last year and is being implemented now, the theory here
is that a criminal justice reform with a good intention, right, of like not making people buy their freedom before their charges even get processed by the court may result in more people who might be violent, who might do something like get involved in a shooting, being out of prison and on the street.
That's exactly right. And the second part of this theory is
that the measures undertaken to slow the spread of the coronavirus in the city's jails and in
the state prison system have also put more violent people onto the streets. Well, everyone,
I want to talk about what we all will be doing and will need to do to make these adjustments and to deal with our
new reality. We're seeing milestones in the growth of this disease that are just absolutely staggering,
things we could not have imagined. So as the coronavirus was spreading, the city started
thinking about who it could release from its jails. In the course of this evening,
I will be given results of an effort
by Department of Corrections and NYPD
and our Mayor's Office for Criminal Justice
to review a list of approximately 200 inmates
for potential release.
Those individuals will be released tomorrow.
We hope to make decisions on them very quickly.
But this process...
And so the argument is that some of these people
who have been coming back onto the streets
are involved in the shootings
and some of the murders that we are seeing
on the streets today.
Is there evidence to support that?
Because my sense is that the bail reform
deliberately avoided letting violent people or allegedly violent people out.
And the COVID-19 mitigation plans also attempted to avoid letting out violent people.
So is there any evidence that people charged with violent crimes were let out through either of those measures?
Not really. The problem with this theory is that the NYPD's own data don't really support what
they say. At first, the NYPD, they went out and they said, OK, this uptick in crime is happening
because of bail reform. And sometimes the data contradict them. This is something that's been
noted by critics, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
who is, of course, a congresswoman representing part of the Bronx and Queens.
They just released data a couple of weeks ago that showed that out of almost all the people who
have committed crimes, et cetera, almost none have been re-released due to the bail reform.
So why is this uptick in crime happening? Well, do we think
this has to do with the fact that there's record unemployment in the United States right now?
The fact that people are at a level of economic desperation that we have not seen since the Great
Recession? The police department's data doesn't establish a connection between the people who are out there shooting other people and the
people who are getting out on bail. There are some examples of people who have been released,
who have been rearrested on a gun charge, but the police haven't provided any evidence linking them
to shootings in any kind of substantial way. It's mostly been like an anecdote here or there,
but no consistent pattern.
And Ashley, what about the release of people
from places like Rikers Island,
that famous New York City prison,
because of COVID-19?
Has there been any evidence that that has led
to the surge in shootings and murders?
So this theory plays out similar to the one about bail.
And once again, we have a situation where the NYPD's own data
does not show a strong connection between those people
and the violence the police are trying to pin on them.
So Ashley, you have laid out these three theories,
and the first two seem like there's a sort of interplay between them,
that people are increasingly desperate and out of work because of the pandemic.
And with cops out sick, the shootings were escalating even further. And then the protests
started and people were reluctant to engage with the police at the same time that the police were
reluctant to engage with the community. And I'm mindful that one of the things that seems to
support these first two theories is that all these forces were also at play in the other cities
around America where we have seen rising unrest in recent months. Other cities with historic issues
between police and communities of color. So Chicago, Atlanta, Seattle, whereas bail reform and prisoner release, those are factors
that are specific to New York. But even so, I have to think that regardless of the explanation for
the rise in crime, that it gives critics of the defund movement an argument for opposing that
move, right? They can make the case that a moment where shootings
and murders are up is a pretty bad time to cut funding for traditional policing. So do you feel
like the fact that these numbers are going up is going to make the case for defunding the police
in New York City harder? Is that what you're seeing? On the one hand, yes, because no politician
wants to be the person who takes money away from the police department while more people are getting shot and more people are dying and dying from violence that is preventable.
The police presence is supposed to deter violence and you're taking money away from them.
They don't show up.
And so the violence continues.
And so you're going to take the blame
for that. It makes the moment inopportune. But at the same time, people point to the police failure
to get a handle on shootings and murders that have been rising now for three months straight.
And people see that as evidence of the failure of police to do their most basic job, which is to keep people safe.
So they say, let's cut their funding and try something else.
So this moment could actually strengthen the case for defunding the police.
Yeah, that's it, because it's not keeping people safe in communities of color at this moment in New York City.
keeping people safe in communities of color at this moment in New York City.
But Ashley, if you believe that the forces behind the rising crime rate are connected to the pandemic,
and that situation will resolve itself in the next couple of months or year,
and police could start doing their jobs again as they did before,
wouldn't that be enough to keep shootings historically low like they were over the past few years? Or has something now changed that will make it difficult to go back
to before? I wish I could go back in the past and kind of do some tweaks to tell you what it might
look like if things had played out differently, if there had been no pandemic and no protests. But I can't.
What I can tell you is that even before these events,
the police recognized that there was a really big impediment to fighting crime.
And that was a broken trust between the police and particularly communities of color
that was decades in the making.
Commissioner Shea, in disbanding anti-crime, acknowledged that although they were effective
in getting guns off the streets, their tactics were sometimes harmful. And that was counterproductive
to building the kind of public confidence the police need to have people not only reporting crimes,
because remember, not all crimes are reported to the police and many people don't report crime at all.
It also keeps people from helping the police to solve crimes.
Repairing that trust was paramount before the pandemic, before any protests, and it's only gotten worse.
And so it's not going to be an easy fix.
So what you're saying is that the crime rate, the number of shootings and the number of murders reported has not necessarily been a great reflection of whether policing in New York
is actually working. In fact, it might have been a pretty misleading number to begin with because of these deeper root issues that have been there during that period of quote unquote low crime.
So going back to before is a kind of flawed way of thinking about this.
That's right.
In this moment, we see these wild cards, the pandemic and the protests, exacerbating the factors that already fuel gun violence.
But even before those came into play and up till now,
we're talking about a very small group of people who carry guns.
And the research shows that they do so because they feel caught between two worlds that make them feel unsafe.
One is the violence in their communities, whether it be conflicts between
gangs with rivalries or crews in neighboring housing projects that have beefs.
They also feel unsafe around the police. They feel at any moment they could be targeted,
that they could be a George Floyd or an Eric Garner. So there's no one in their lives who they feel can protect them.
And so they pick up a gun to do it for themselves.
So pandemic or no pandemic, protest or no protest,
ultimately it's the problems in their lives that need to be addressed.
And what the experts will tell you is that policing, even with reforms,
is just one part of a very large puzzle.
Ashley, thank you very much.
We really appreciate it.
Thanks for having me.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
As we head into the election season, I want to assure this committee and the American public that the Postal Service is fully capable and committed to delivering the nation's election mail securely and on time. a major surge in voting by mail this fall, despite the cost-cutting plans that he has put in place,
which have slowed delivery across the country.
We deliver 433 million pieces of mail a day.
So 150 million ballots, 160 million ballots over a course of a week is a very small amount.
Adequate capacity.
Nevertheless, over the weekend,
the House of Representatives passed emergency legislation
that would block DeJoy's changes
and inject $25 billion into the Postal Service
before the election.
This is not a partisan issue.
It makes absolutely no sense to implement these dramatic changes in the middle of a pandemic less than three months before the November elections.
The American people do not want anyone messing with the post office. And the Republican National Convention will begin tonight
with a heavy emphasis on the president, his family, and his White House staff.
The Times reports that in an unusual decision,
Trump is scheduled to speak on all four nights
and that no previous Republican presidents or presidential nominees
will appear at the convention.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.