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The Right Scoop
6 Mar 2024


NextImg:New York Gov deploying HUGE number of National Guard to subway system in NYC

Crime is so out of control in the New York City subway system that Governor Kathy Hochul is deploying a huge number of the state’s National Guard to help ensure deadly weapons aren’t being brought on to the subway.

The city is re-instituting bag checks before people can board the subway to ensure people feel safe when riding. State police and MTA officers will also be involved.

Here’s more from NBC News:

A series of recent, high-profile crimes in the New York City subway system prompted Gov. Kathy Hochul on Wednesday to send National Guard members into the sprawling underground network.

Hochul is ordering a force of nearly 1,000 people, comprised of 750 National Guard members, state police and MTA officers, to conduct bag checks at some of the busiest stations.

The effort, Hochul said, is aimed to “rid our subways of people who commit crimes and (to) protect all New Yorkers whether you’re a commuter or a transit worker.”

“No one heading to their job or to visit family or go to a doctor appointment should worry that the person sitting next to them possesses a deadly weapon,” she told reporters.

Thomas Taffe, the MTA Police Department’s chief of operations, said “reducing the fear of crime” is as important as “reducing crime itself.”

“Our focus is to respond to issues that most affected riders, the feeling of disorder, that fear of crime,” he said.

Several recent, well-publicized attacks have led to increasing anxiety on New York City subways.

“Let me be very, very clear,” Hochul said. “These brazen, heinous attacks on our subway system will not be tolerated.”

This past Sunday, a 64-year-old man was checking his phone when he was kicked into the tracks at Penn Station before good Samaritans helped get him out of harm’s way.

A 27-year-old man on Friday was slashed aboard a northbound A train in Manhattan after the perpetrator allegedly made homophobic comments at him.

And on Thursday, Feb. 29, a subway conductor was slashed in the neck in Brooklyn, when he stuck his head out of a southbound C train at Rockaway Avenue station in Brooklyn.

The governor called for a major expansion in subway surveillance cameras.

“If a camera had been positioned on Alton Scott’s conductor cabin last Thursday, we probably would have already apprehended the person who slashed his neck,” she said. “Or maybe they wouldn’t have done it at all.”