NYPD Chief Chell: If Mamdani Wins, Defunds NYPD, Expect Spike in City Crime
NYPD Chief of Department John Chell warned during an interview on Newsmax that New York City is already struggling with crime tied to repeat offenders, and he cautioned that the situation would worsen if Democrat mayoral hopeful Zohran Mamdani is elected and cuts funding for law enforcement. “Our staffing is already down tremendously, and we got to fund our police officers,” Chell said Monday on Wake Up America. “We have to pay them, we have to make sure the quality of life in their precincts are proper. We cannot go backwards. We really can’t. We’ve worked so hard post 2020 to get to a little light, if you will, to turn this thing around, to go backwards is not an option.”
Chell stressed that funding is essential not just for maintaining staff levels but also for recruiting. “If you don’t fund us, then people aren’t going to join the police department,” he said. “If you don’t give them a good contract, people are not going to join, and we’re going to have issues. But, at the end of the day, the cops in New York City, like everywhere else, took an oath. We will do our job to the best of our ability. We just need the tools to do it to keep the city safe.”
He pointed to a particularly brutal case in Queens last week, where an elderly couple was allegedly tortured, murdered, and their home set on fire by a repeat offender. According to Chell, the suspect had recently finished a 16-year prison sentence for robbery and sexual assault and was still on parole when the killings occurred. “The problem we spoke about for years now is repeat offenders and consequences for those people,” Chell explained. “In terms of this brutal murder in Queens last Monday, this person just got jailed for doing 16 years for robbery and sexual assault and was also on parole last Monday. So we know where they are, we know how to apprehend them — we just need to keep them in jail.”
Chell underscored that the issue revolves around a relatively small group of criminals who are responsible for a disproportionate amount of violence. “And we’re talking about a small minority. We’re not talking about everybody here. We all know the repeat offenders that affect crime in New York City and nationwide,” he said.
When asked about the morale of officers who see suspects released shortly after being arrested, Chell acknowledged the frustration. “When we talk about repeat offenders, the crimes they commit, we often talk numbers, but these are people, these are victims,” he said. “These are our families. So when the cops do a good job in making a good arrest for a really bad person, they don’t want to see him on the street the next day. They figure, ‘What’s the point here?’ But we’re professionals, and we’ll keep doing it until someone fixes the issue.”
{Matzav.com}