ReportWire

Tag: the new york post

  • Bondi to meet with NYPD, as Trump threatens ‘cashless bail’ cities

    NEW YORK — New York City Police Department officials will meet with U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi on Monday afternoon as Mayor Eric Adams’ administration is making the case to President Donald Trump that the nation’s largest city does not want or need federal troops on its streets.

    The meeting — which Adams is not planning to attend — comes at a particularly tense time, with the White House escalating tensions with Democratic–led jurisdictions. Trump signed an executive order Monday morning threatening to revoke federal funding for states like New York that have laws limiting when judges can seek cash bail for people accused of crimes. The New York Post first reported on the order.

    While the order doesn’t name New York, it’s clear the state and the city are in Trump’s sights. A White House press release Monday touted Trump’s “aggressive crackdown to end the failed experiment known as ‘cashless bail’” and cited four news stories about people released without bail in New York City and later accused of committing other crimes.

    Spokespeople for the NYPD and City Hall confirmed plans for the meeting, which is expected to be held at police headquarters in Lower Manhattan. The DOJ did not respond to a request for comment.

    Bondi also plans to appear in Brooklyn federal court to mark the guilty plea of Mexican drug trafficker Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada. While in the city, her team requested the NYPD meeting. Bondi has not yet met NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch, who has earned acclaim for her leadership of the department across the political spectrum since Adams appointed her in November.

    Trump has sent National Guard troops into Los Angeles and Washington. Adams, who has cultivated a friendly relationship with Trump for a Democrat, has made clear he doesn’t want federal intervention.

    “Our crime rate has dropped. Our subways are the safest they have been, except for the first two years during Covid-19 when no one was on them,” Adams said on “TMZ Live” last week. “We got this. We know how to keep this city safe. I knew it when I was a police officer. What we had to do, we did it then, and we’re doing it again.”

    But Adams was hesitant to criticize the executive order, even if it might cost the city federal funding.

    “I’ve always made it clear that our revolving door system of violent offenders must be addressed,” Adams said at an unrelated campaign rally Monday, when asked to respond to Trump’s order. “We’ll read this executive order, and I’ll be able to tell you more.”

    The Democratic-led state Legislature and then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo passed laws in 2019 intended to keep more people out of jail while they awaited trial. The legislature rolled back the measures in subsequent years in response to political pushback from those who blamed them for a heightened crime rate, including Adams.

    Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the executive order.

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  • “A Slippery Slope”: NYPD Is Relocating Reporters From Police HQ to a Trailer

    “A Slippery Slope”: NYPD Is Relocating Reporters From Police HQ to a Trailer

    The New York Police Department is yet again trying to shuffle the reporters who cover them—this time to a trailer outside their headquarters. For years, reporters have worked inside police headquarters at 1 Police Plaza, in a section of the building referred to as “the Shack.” There, you’ll find a warren of individual offices occupied by several news organizations—the New York Post, Newsday, The New York Times, CBS, Gothamist/WNYC, and The New York Daily News—and, on a crowded day, about a half dozen reporters dispersed among them. Rumors that Deputy Commissioner of Public Information Tarik Sheppard—the NYPD’s chief spokesperson—wanted to relocate reporters, purportedly to make more space for NYPD units, have been circulating for months. But on Monday, the idea seemed to become a reality, when two reporters who happened to be at HQ that day got an informal tour of their new digs. They were told they’d be moving the following Monday.

    Reporters’ objections to the move are not a matter of comfort. The Shack itself is “pretty disgusting,” as one police reporter noted. “It’s not the Ritz.” But having a desk inside police headquarters has offered crucial access to key players that some fear will be cut off in the move outside. “The concern is: Is this a good faith attempt to make more space for whoever they need to make more space for? Or is this a slippery slope, where we’re going to be eventually pushed out altogether from this area?” said a second police reporter. Sheppard, I’m told, has previously mentioned to reporters that he doesn’t get a fair shake from the tabloids. The move to the trailer comes “against a backdrop of complaints about the coverage of crime,” one veteran crime reporter said, which has “raised everybody’s antenna.” A third police reporter added: “Everybody feels it’s somewhat troublesome, like this is a punitive thing for negative coverage—particularly tabloid coverage.”

    The rollout of the move has been a major source of frustration among police reporters, who say that DCPI has not provided an official briefing to the group. Reporters who weren’t in on Monday didn’t realize a tour was even taking place. “There’s been no direct communication with all of us at the same time about what’s happening,” said the first police reporter. The line of reasoning for the move, they added, “has been all over the place.” Whether the move actually happens, or starts to happen, on Monday is somewhat unclear, as a third police reporter told me that DCPI has pulled back on Monday due to logistical matters.

    In a statement, a DCPI spokesperson said the move will begin “early next week” and disputed the idea that reporters are in the dark about the transition. “Sheppard previously met and spoke with representatives from each media outlet that occupies the existing press area inside Police Headquarters and explained that the move is simply to accommodate additional outlets that have asked to cover the NYPD in the same manner,” the spokesperson said, adding that the new location is “much larger, contains private conference rooms and bathrooms,” and is “located literally feet from the building, still very much inside the secure perimeter of One Police Plaza.” (One of the reporters I spoke to admitted the trailer was “way better” than they expected. It resembles a “semi-permanent module attached to HQ. We’d still be able to go in and out, our badges would work from what I’m told,” they said, adding, “but again, we still don’t have anything official from DCPI.”)

    The DCPI spokesperson also disputed the idea that the move is in any way a response to negative coverage. “Change is sometimes difficult for people, we understand. But this is hardly punitive by any stretch of the imagination. This is a planned move—in the works since the start of the current administration—toward greater NYPD transparency, to allow more access to more reporters from more media outlets that desire to cover the police department on an increasing basis.”

    It’s not the first time that the future of the Shack, which has been at 1 Police Plaza since the building was erected in the 1970s, has hung in the balance. Other commissioners have tried to evict reporters, such as in 2009, under Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly. The removal of the press offices seemed so assured that The Times wrote an entire obituary for the hub, only for department officials to backtrack on the eviction. A few months later, reporters were relocated down the hall to what is the current Shack. “Over the years, as papers and the news media sort of contracted, people in the Shack diminished,” said the veteran crime reporter. “Outlets that had four or five reporters were down to two or one; some were no longer there.”

    Lawyers representing the various media organizations with offices in police HQ have been communicating with each other in light of the impending move, according to several reporters. “What can they really do? It’s the NYPD’s property,” the second police reporter noted. The media lawyers’ role in this is more to “show resistance,” said the third police reporter, “so that the next move is not out on the street.”

    “Reporters should be in a newsroom collaborating with their fellow reporters, or they should be in a statehouse, in city hall, in police departments,” said the first police reporter. “Meeting and greeting and talking to people and getting the buzz. Isolating people like this is just another way of siloing the public—and that’s who we are, we’re representatives of the public. I think that they forget that.”

    Charlotte Klein

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