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An off-duty NYPD police officer trying to buy a car was shot and critically wounded Saturday night in Brooklyn during an attempted robbery, officials said. The gunman is at large.
The shooting occurred at about 7 p.m. local time after the off-duty officer arrived at a prearranged meeting spot to look at a vehicle, NYPD Assistant Chief Michael Baldassano said in a Friday night news conference. The officer had also brought a relative, Baldassano said.
“Almost immediately, the suspect displayed a gun and announced a robbery,” Baldassano told reporters. “There was an exchange of gunfire, where the off-duty officer was struck.”
The suspect fled, and the officer was rushed to a Brooklyn hospital, where he was listed in critical condition, NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell said. The officer’s name was not immediately released.
The officer’s relative was not injured.
The officer, a five-year NYPD veteran, had arranged the meet-up on social media, Baldassano disclosed.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams confirmed the wounded officer was married and had children.
“An officer conducting a simple errand, and a dangerous person pulled out a firearm, as we so often see in this city,” Adams said. “Too many illegal guns are in the hands of bad people and doing bad things.”
No further details were provided, including whether the officer was armed or fired at the suspect. No suspect description was immediately released.
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The man accused of attacking three NYPD officers with a machete on New Year’s Eve is facing federal charges, prosecutors announced. Trevor Bickford, 19, has been charged with attempting to kill officers and employees of the U.S. government, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Southern District of New York.
Bickford, of Maine, was previously indicted on charges including first-degree attempted murder, first-degree attempted murder in the furtherance of an act of terrorism and aggravated assault on a police officer as a crime of terrorism. He is being held in New York state custody before he’ll appear in front of a Manhattan federal court.
The NYPD said that Bickford is accused of targeting three officers with a machete in Times Square amid New Year’s Eve celebrations. Two of the officers were hospitalized due to head injuries, police said.
Federal prosecutors said that Bickford began looking for radical Islamic ideology online in the summer of 2022. They said that Bickford even planned to travel to the Middle East to support the Taliban, and that he told a family member he wanted to be a suicide bomber.
Prosecutors said that Bickford planned to wage jihad and sought to kill U.S. officials.
In late December, investigators said Bickford traveled from Maine to New York ahead of the attack. Right before the attack, officials said that Bickford began to “hype himself up” for the attack by reciting Quran verses in his head.
They said that around 10:10 p.m. on Dec. 31, Bickford approached the officers and said “Allahu Akbar” before stabbing them with a machete-like knife called a kukri. An officer stopped the attack by shooting Bickford in the shoulder, officials said, and he was taken into custody.
A bag recovered by investigators at the scene had a book that promoted jihad and a journal where “this will likely be my last entry” was written. Another bag that investigators found, they said, contained more Islamic extremism.
If convicted on federal charges, he could face up to 80 years in prison.
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It’s not just the Grinch who tried to steal Christmas.
A 30-year-old woman was arrested in the early hours of Monday morning when she was caught attempting to steal Christmas presents from under Robert De Niro‘s tree in his Manhattan townhouse, local police reported.
According to The Associated Press, officers from the New York Police Department (NYPD) discovered the woman in De Niro’s living room “attempting to remove property” around 2:45 a.m.
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The New York Times identified the woman as Shanice Aviles. The outlet reported that Aviles was seen entering De Niro’s Upper East Side rental home through a basement door, which had visible signs of forced entry.
She was arrested at the scene. A publicist for De Niro, 79, confirmed the break-in, but did not comment publicly.
ABC7 claimed Aviles — whom the outlet described as a “prolific” burglar — was followed by police after she was spotted trying to open doors to various buildings in De Niro’s neighbourhood.
Police reportedly followed Aviles into De Niro’s home after they spotted the still-open basement door but did not know the residence belonged to the actor. Police claimed Aviles was discovered taking items from the house and putting them in a bag.
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Aviles is currently in police custody with charges still pending.
Reported details about the alleged burglary are muddled.
ABC7 claimed there was no interaction between Aviles and De Niro, but The Associated Press reported De Niro had awoken to the commotion of Aviles’ arrest and come downstairs.
NBC New York alleged that police discovered Aviles using De Niro’s iPad after the break in, not stealing Christmas presents. The outlet also claimed De Niro is expected to press charges against Aviles.
Regardless, De Niro’s publicist said the actor would not speak publicly about the break-in.
De Niro is one of the most well-beloved actors in Hollywood. He is a two-time Academy Award winner who scored acclaim for his 1974 performance in The Godfather Part II and his role in the 1980 film Raging Bull.
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MANHATTAN, New York (WABC) — More $10 million worth of bogus goods were taken off the streets in New York City, thanks to a big bust by police.
The corner of Canal Street and Broadway in Lower Manhattan is a New York City tourist destination for all the wrong reasons, but it was deserted Monday night.
The fake Rolex watches were all gone, along with the Gucci handbags, and the Louis Vuitton shoes.
NYPD officers carted away three truckloads of luxury knock-offs, while arresting the brazen street vendors who sold them.
“Sidewalks were blocked, there was property everywhere, merchandise everywhere, and this really impacts local businesses in a negative manner,” NYPD Chief Jeffrey Maddrey said.
Fake Rolex watches were selling for $75. Even at that price, authorities say the counterfeit goods they seized had a street value of more than $10 million.
One man said he saw the raid, as officers swept in and made the arrests.
“All you saw was NYPD jumping out unmarked cars, marked cars, paddy wagons,” an unnamed witness said. “They cleared the whole thing from here to here. And these guys used to sit up all night. Rolex watches, everything you can imagine. Yves St. Laurent? All this stuff.”
The original complaint came from a shopkeeper on Broadway who asked not to be identified.
The shopkeeper told Eyewitness News reporter N.J. Burkett off camera that the illegal vendors had taken over the streets, that the sidewalks were, at times, impassable, and that he begged the precinct to do something about it.
In planning the raid, police worked with luxury goods manufacturers who examined the merchandise in advance to certify it was counterfeit.
“He or she will look at the property and say, ‘This is this is not authentic. This is a knockoff bag. This is a fake pair of sneakers.’ And that point, we make the arrest,” Maddrey said.
A total of 17 vendors were arrested.
If convicted, they face felony charges that, on a first offense, carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison. Although, the actual sentence would be determined by a judge.
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Norman, Oklahoma — Stunning bodycam video captured the moment officers with the New York City Police Department on Thursday helped rescue a man who had fallen onto the subway tracks.
The officers — who were on the opposite platform — had to race across a busy city street to reach the man. A Good Samaritan was already trying to help, and together, they lifted him out of harm’s way, seconds before a train rolled into the station.
That is just one of the many life-threatening tasks police officers perform every day. However, law enforcement agencies nationwide are facing staffing shortages, with retirement rates up and new recruits in short supply.
The number of new officer hirings was down 3.9% in 2021 compared to 2019, according to a national survey earlier this year from the Police Executive Research Forum.
The survey found that there were 23.6% more retirements among law enforcement in 2021 compared to 2019. There were also 42.7% more resignations among law enforcement in 2021 compared to 2019 as well. The uptick in retirements and resignations were driven in party by low pay, the survey determined.
At Oklahoma’s Tulsa Police Department, new recruit Cheyenne Walden won’t be part of a full graduating class of recruits.
“You know, it’s something I’ve always wanted to do,” Walden told CBS News. “So it’s not a job, more of a career.”
Tulsa Police Chief Wendell Franklin said he is struggling to fill about 150 positions.
“There is, there was, a lot of scrutiny placed upon law enforcement,” Franklin said. “And I think that soured a lot of interested people that wanted to go into the profession. They have made a detour, and they’ve gone and done something else.”
Smaller law enforcement agencies are sounding the alarm as well. Sgt. Shane Roddy with the University of Oklahoma Police Department (OUPD) told CBS News there are roughly 17 uniformed officers on staff. He said he has not physically trained in an active shooter drill in years.
“The University of Oklahoma is just going to have to start funding OUPD so that we can build our staffing levels to the point that we can actually start training again,” Roddy said.
In a statement to CBS News, the university said it recently raised its police department salaries “on average nearly 8%.” The school noted, however, that the pay raise is coming from open positions which have not been filled. The university, though, also said it has hired three new officers, and that it “will continue to hire more officers in the coming months.”
Furthermore, Saturdays brings college football to Norman — and even with other departments helping with game day security — with more than 100,000 fans on the University of Oklahoma campus, officers worry about the nightmare scenario.
“There’s always going to be the threat of an active shooter or armed subjects coming on campus and causing death or great bodily harm,” Roddy said.
When asked if his department is “adequately staffed,” Roddy responded, “absolutely not.”

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NEW YORK — Imagine going on vacation and coming home to a surprising mess inside your home.
A renter on Manhattan’s West Side claims someone got into his apartment and trashed the place, CBS2’s Jenna DeAngelis reported Thursday.
“It’s really unnerving,” Hell’s Kitchen resident Thomas Mayo-Smith said.
Mayo-Smith claims someone got into his Silver Towers apartment while he was on vacation. He said he left Sept. 1 and returned on Sept. 6.
“I came back, opened up my door, and I found my apartment completely ransacked. There was drug paraphernalia all over the place,” Mayo-Smith said.
He showed DeAngelis photos of the mess.
“This is all the stuff they left on my coffee table. My tax documents, health documents were strewn across my bed,” he said.
Mayo-Smith said a strange pair of sneakers and suitcase were left behind, along with an unusual note, which reads, “25 more moves to go.”
Items he said were missing include his scooter, an old iPhone, and a clay mold of his late-dog’s paw print.
“This person just seems like a NetFlix documentary psycho. It’s not someone who had a grudge on me because they didn’t break my TV. They just stole a pretty inexplicable, hard-to-understand combination of things,” Mayo-Smith said.
He said he called the NYPD. He also brought his concerns to building management.
“They have done nothing,” Mayo-Smith said.
“I feel really bad for Thomas and what he experienced, but it just doesn’t add up, and I’m hoping the detectives will figure out what happened here,” said Dara McQuillan, spokesperson for Silverstein Properties.
McQuillan showed CBS2 how the building’s security system works. Each tenant gets a unique digital key to their apartment.
He said the digital system logs every time a key is used to access a unit and he showed DeAngelis the log for Mayo-Smith’s apartment.
“Our log showed us nobody used a key to enter the apartment in the time he was away,” McQuillan said.
McQuillan showed DeAngelis how tenants could leave their doors unlocked, with the flip of a switch, if they choose.
“The only other way a person could have gotten into this apartment is if the switch had been clicked and the door was left open,” McQuillan said.
Police sources told CBS2 there was no sign of forced entry. Mayo-Smith said he’s confident he locked his door when he left.
“I really have no confidence he’s gonna get caught. At this point, I’m just hoping management updates their security protocol. Anybody with a pizza box and an apartment number in their head can get in this building,” Mayo-Smith said.
DeAngelis reached out to the NYPD, which said there’s a report on file for burglary and the investigation is ongoing. No arrests have been made.
Police sources said detectives will be reviewing building video as part of the investigation. DeAngelis was told there are cameras in the lobby and elevators.
Mayo-Smith said he feels there should be cameras in hallways and has since installed his own at his apartment.