The NYPD has seized more than 1,000 illegal guns from the cityās streets so far this year ā a milestone that Mayor Eric Adams applauded Monday as he pointed the finger at repeat offenders for bringing weapons into the Big Apple.
Adams and NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch announced the public safety feat at the NYPDās 75th Precinct in East New York ā where dozens of seized guns were lined up on two tables in front of them.Ā
āThese gunsā¦ carve highways of death through our communities,ā Adams said. āThey devastate lives. Even when the bullet hits the intended target or unintended target, the pathway of destruction does not stop. It rips apart the anatomy of our community and it devastates the loved ones and family members.ā
āWhen we take a gun off the street, we are able to alleviate, if not eradicate, that pain,ā he added. āAnd thatās what the men and women are doing in this city that wear that blue uniform.ā
Hizzoner linked the illegal guns to repeat offenders ā less that two weeks after Tisch raged against an āunsustainableā revolving door of recidivism driving the cityās crime.Ā
āI would challenge anyone, each one of these guns, I guarantee you, the person we got it from, in some way or another, had already had an interaction with the criminal justice system,ā Adams said. āAnd this is why weāre focusing on recidivism over and over again.ā
Tisch also pointed out that of the more than 1,000 firearms seized, 40 were ghost guns ā āthe untraceable firearms assembled with the intent to evade law enforcement.ā
She also noted that ārapid fire modification devicesā were attached to some of the handguns, turning them into āhigh-capacity weapons capable of firing at an alarming rate.ā
In total, 20,700 guns have been removed from the cityās streets since the start of the Adams administration ā an increase of 3,000 compared to the three years before his term began, from 2019 to 2021, the mayorās office said.Ā Ā
The announcement also came a week after the NYPD revealed that the city shattered a 30-year record for the fewest number of shootings in the first two months of the year.
The Big Apple saw 93 incidents of gun violence between January and February, the fewest for those months since 1993, officials said.
āSo those who have not read the memo, stop saying our city is in chaos and crisis,ā the mayor said. āIt is not. The numbers donāt lie, your noise lies. Letās stay focused on what weāre doing and applaud these men and women who are doing the job every day. Theyāre doing the dangerous work of interacting with armed recidivists, repeated offenders over and over again.ā