Current:Home > FinanceNew York will send National Guard to subways after a string of violent crimes -Mastery Money Tools
New York will send National Guard to subways after a string of violent crimes
View
Date:2025-04-13 04:32:18
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced plans Wednesday to send the National Guard to the New York City subway system to help police search passengers’ bags for weapons, following a series of high-profile crimes on city trains.
Hochul, a Democrat, said she will deploy 750 members of the National Guard to the subways to assist the New York Police Department with bag searches at entrances to busy train stations.
“For people who are thinking about bringing a gun or knife on the subway, at least this creates a deterrent effect. They might be thinking, ‘You know what, it just may just not be worth it because I listened to the mayor and I listened to the governor and they have a lot more people who are going to be checking my bags,’” Hochul said at a news conference in New York City.
The move came as part of a larger effort from the governor’s office to address crime in the subway, which included a legislative proposal to ban people from trains if they are convicted of assaulting a subway passenger and the installation of cameras in conductor cabins to protect transit workers.
The deployment of the National Guard would bolster an enhanced presence of NYPD officers in the subway system. The governor said she will also send 250 state troopers and police officers for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, a state agency, to help with the bag searches.
Overall, crime has dropped in New York City since a spike during the COVID-19 pandemic, and killings are down on the subway system. But rare fatal shootings and shovings on the subway can put residents on edge. Just last week, a passenger slashed a subway conductor in the neck, delaying trains.
Police in New York have long conducted random bag checks at subway entrances, though passengers are free to refuse and leave the station, raising questions of whether the searches are an effective policing tactic in a subway system that serves over 3 million riders per day.
veryGood! (38628)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Sharon Osbourne calls Ashton Kutcher rudest celebrity she's met: 'Dastardly little thing'
- Two men questioned in Lebanon at Turkey’s request over 2019 escape of former Nissan tycoon Ghosn
- Complex cave rescue looms in Turkey as American Mark Dickey stuck 3,200 feet inside Morca cave
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Climate protesters have blocked a Dutch highway to demand an end to big subsidies for fossil fuels
- Some millennials ditch dating app culture in favor of returning to 'IRL' connections
- Ben Shelton's US Open run shows he is a star on the rise who just might change the game
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- From leaf crisps to pudding, India’s ‘super food’ millet finds its way onto the G20 dinner menu
Ranking
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Biden finds a new friend in Vietnam as American CEOs look for alternatives to Chinese factories
- Team USA loses to Germany 113-111 in FIBA World Cup semifinals
- Evacuation now underway for American trapped 3,400 feet underground in cave
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Artificial intelligence technology behind ChatGPT was built in Iowa -- with a lot of water
- Most of West Maui will welcome back visitors next month under a new wildfire emergency proclamation
- ‘The world knows us.’ South Sudanese cheer their basketball team’s rise and Olympic qualification
Recommendation
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
What's at stake for Texas when it travels to Alabama in Week 2 of college football
Exclusive: 25 years later, Mark McGwire still gets emotional reliving 1998 Home Run Chase
Google policy requires clear disclosure of AI in election ads
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Pakistani police detain relatives of the man wanted in the death probe of his daughter in UK
Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet Attend Star-Studded NYFW Dinner Together
Crashing the party: Daniil Medvedev upsets Carlos Alcaraz to reach US Open final