NYPD deploys neighborhood safety teams to combat rising gun violence in New York City

Citywide shooting incidents in New York City jumped 14.3% so far this year compared to same period in 2021

The NYPD’s new Neighborhood Safety Teams hit the streets Monday to combat rising gun violence in New York City.

The initiative will start with 25 commands patrolling the most dangerous neighborhoods in the city’s five boroughs, NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell told reporters Friday.

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Sewell said the plan is to roll out more teams in the future, emphasizing that the officers’ presence in the neighborhoods will focus on gun violence and criminal activity.

"They are not in plain clothes; the uniform on the back plainly states NYPD Police," Sewell said. "They are there for the safety of the community and to get the violent offenders off the streets."

The NYPD's Neighborhood Safety Teams will begin patrolling the most crime-ridden areas of New York City to reduce gun violence. (iStock)

The unit is part of Mayor Eric Adams’ plan to make New York City safer amid a rise in violent crime.

As of March 6, police data shows there were 215 citywide shooting victims year-to-date – an 18.8% increase compared to 181 shooting victims reported during same period last year.

Citywide shooting incidents also increased 14.3% year-to-date compared to 2021, with 192 reported so far this year compared to 168 during the same period last year, according to NYPD statistics.

Before the neighborhood safety teams were deployed Monday, Sewell said the assigned officers all underwent extensive training. 

She said that community input was part of the training, with community members expressing to the NYPD what changes they would like to see and what their concerns were in the past.

"We actually had to take a look at the mistakes of the past and what we needed to change," Sewell said. "The officers are being trained in the constitution, in community interaction, car stops, use of force."

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Kenneth Corey, NYPD Chief of Department, said the officers assigned to the neighborhood safety teams all received seven days of training in multiple areas.

"They are extensively trained in minimal force techniques. They receive advanced tactics, car stop, de-escalation is central to all of it," Corey told reporters. "Communication skills is a big part of it, courtroom testimony training, and as the commissioner indicated, constitutional policing."

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