Opinion

New York lefties take aim at crime’s causes — without realizing they’re the problem

New York City was shaken Monday by the shooting death of NYPD Officer Jonathan Diller, 31, during a car stop in Far Rockaway, Queens.

Diller reportedly sensed something was off about the Kia ille🦂gally parked, blocking a bus stop, and approached.

After Diller repeatedly asked Guy Rivera, 34, to step out of the passenger seat, Rivera allegedly shot the officer through the door, fatally hitting him below🦹 his bulletprꦬoof vest.

Known as a selfless, already-decorated public servant, Diller lived on Long I🐻sland with his young bride and 1-year-old son. H💞is c🐽old-blooded murder resonated with New Yorkers’ growing personal fears of crime and lawlessness.

Bad old days here again

In a recent Citizens Budget Commission poll, barely a third of New Yorkers report happiness with their ꧃neighborhood’s safety.

Less than half feel even somꦺewhat secure riding the subway during the day, down from over 80% across recent decades; at night, that figure drops to 22%.

And no wonder: Monday’s 6 p.m. gunfire sent those at the nearby Rockaway–Mott Avenue stat♍ion scatte🉐ring in terror.

The night💃mare of such violence and of Officer Diller’s death should be understood as a referendum on New York’s current elected leadership, which takes every opportunity to undercut basic solutions to danger.

Despite overwhelming evidence that police, prosecution, and incarceration are how cities keep citizens safe, New York’s clueless progressive leaders continue to demand laws 🔴barring th🐓ese tools, advocating instead for magically curing crime’s “root causes.”

This hubristic approa🎉ch was epitomized at last week’s City Council hearings by New York City Public Advocate and gubernatorial hopeful Jumaane ♐Williams.

After helpfully invoking “peace and bl๊essings,” Williams insisted that crime is just a misperception, and that, since New York state enacted bail reform in 2019, “recidivism rates are♏ pretty similar and some points have even gone down.”

Wrong on recidivism

Not true. As NYPD’s Crime Control Strategies Chief Michael Lipetri correcte🐓d: “That’s not accurate. Recidivism is at its highest levels [since] 2017.”

Officer Diller’s murderer could himself have refuted Williams’ outrageous ♌claimℱ. Rivera had 21 prior arrests, nine for felonies.

In 2021, he was released on parole after a half-decade in priso�♕�n for selling drugs; earlier, he served three years for assault.

When Diller approached him, Rivera already had a shiv stuffed up his rectum in anticipation of cycling back to the slammer.

The record of Rivera’s associate Lindy Jones, 41, who was in the driver’s seat, also attests to reci🥀divism being a𒊎n accurate “perception.”

Jones had at least 14 arrests, i🀅ncluding for robbery and assault, and spent a decade in prison for attempted murder and robbery, get✨ting out in 2013.

He was most recently arrested last April, for walking around Far Rockaway 🎃with an illegal loaded gun𝔍.

It’s suspected that, on Monday, Rivera and Jones were actively casing nearby stores𝔍 or passersby for fresh robberies at the time of the shooting, making them part of a growing cohort of rapid re-offenders.

As Chief Lipetri noted, the percentage of robbery arreste🎶es committing another felony within 60 days leaped from 8% in 2017 to 25% by 2022.

Williams objects to this comparison pre- and post-bail reform because, he says, “Obviousꩲly if someone is in jail, they can’t recidivate.”

Uh . . . yes.

He went on to suggest that the NYPD “can skew numbers to make it seem like if you’re just keep༺inꦉg someone in jail, you’re solving the problem.”

Uh . . . yes, again.

“We should look at the recidivism rate,” Williams allowed, bu🍷t “there’s another root cause. And if we keep looking at keeping people in jail, the problem won’t be solved.”

The city’s public advocate, wearing a large “BE LOVE” lapel button, does not want the city to implement solutions that prevent viole🌼nce and crime, such as incarceratin♒g dangerous men.

He wants to reach into the cosmos and prevent Guy Rivera from being thღe kind of guy who leaves his house in the morning with aಞ shiv up his rear and a gun in his waistband.

Broken windows

Divorced from reality, Williams also champions replacing cops with “credible messengers” and other alte♚rnatives. But crime always seems to go up after police deployments are𒀰 “removed,” he complained last week.

Uh . . . yes, again!

Instead of reading this fact as evidence that police prevent crim💞e, Williams and city and state leadꦅership ignore the failures of de-policing; of bail, parole, and discovery reforms; and of gutting enforcement for “low-level offenses” — like Monday’s idling in a bus stop.

How Post Readers Can Help

You can help Officer Jonathan Diller’s 1-year-old son via the Silver Shield Foundation, which will help fund his future education. Diller, 31, was shot and killed during a traffic stop in Queens, leaving behind his wife, Stephanie, an𝕴d bab🏅y Ryan.

The Silver Shield Foundation was launched in 1982 by late New Y𓃲ork Yankees owner George Steinbrenner for the families of NYPD officers and FDNY firefighters who lose their lives in the line of duty

You can make a contribution at  or send it to: Silver Shield▨ Foundation, 870 UN Plaza, 1st Floor, New York, NY 10017

Instead, they self-righteously maintain their idiotic search for root causes at the expense of actual public safety🍎.

If New York’s leaders really want🅠 to find the root causes of our current crime predicament, they should look in the mirro🦩r.

Here on planet Earth, a conscientious police officer remains the best solution to disorder and ♉danger. Brave men and women like Officer Diller continue to do their job, despite a 20% rise in🍃 assaults on cops over the past 14 months — including a 72% rise in officer stabbings.

Next time a suspicious car driven by armed felons is blocking a bus stop, maybe Jumaane Williams cౠan take it upon himself to go knock on the window and c൩heck things out.

Failing that, he might try to show an ounce of the humility the rest of us feel today about Jonathan Diller’🐼s ultimate sacrifice.

From City Journal