A five-year-old girl was grazed by a bullet in East New York on Monday, the latest in a string of shocking crimes amid a surge in New York City.
Additionally, police are on the lookout for a suspect who chased a 16-year-old into a building after a shooting before fleeing the scene.
The two incidents come on the trail of a tourist from Kansas City being grazed by a bullet near Times Square and a retired crime reporter being beaten and bloodied by a random attacker in Harlem.
Just days ago, the NYPD released its latest crime data for March. It showed overall crime went up 2.4 percent compared with the same time last year. But shootings skyrocketed year-over-year, increasing 77 percent, and gun arrests jumped 67 percent from last March.
The rise in violent crime in the city was driven by a 36 percent increase in murders and a 35 percent increase in auto thefts.
Crime appears to be increasing in New York City as more and more people exit various stages of lockdown from the coronavirus pandemic.
The incident with the five-year-old girl occurred around 6pm on Monday night, when a gunman stepped out of a vehicle in East New York and fired six shots towards a man.
The gunman missed the target, but at least one bullet grazed the little girl, who is doing okay after being treated at Brookdale University Hospital.
‘I’m disgusted by the whole neighborhood,’ the girl’s father told the New York Daily News. ‘It put like a slice on her head.’
‘The streets have gotten worse. … that it happened in broad daylight is insane,’ the girl’s mom added.
She also criticized the mayor’s recent assertion that New Yorkers weren’t living in fear during the crime surge.
‘He’s not really saying anything,’ the mother said. ‘What is his real plan. Is there an actual plan? Is there any plan at all. I don’t really feel safe with shots going off in broad daylight.’
Meanwhile, the NYPD is asking for the public’s help in identifying a man responsible for a shooting in the Bronx on Sunday.
It took place around 9:05pm when a 16-year-old victim was grazed in the head with a bullet by an assailant who fired multiple times while the victim was walking with friends.
The suspect then chased the victim into a building, where the victim was able to escape before the suspect fled the scene.
The victim was transported to NYC Health & Hospitals/Lincoln, where they were treated and released.
Mayor Bill de Blasio believes New York City citizens aren’t leaving in fear amid the surge
The data shows crime in the city increasing from recent years
On Wednesday, Kansas City tourist Chris Ruby, 44, was shot as he walked down West 38th Street in Manhattan.
The Missouri native was rushed to nearby Bellevue Hospital where he was treated for the gunshot wound, which fractured both his collarbone and his shoulder blade.
‘I felt this huge pain in my shoulder,’ Ruby told ABC 7 after he was discharged from the hospital on Wednesday evening.
‘I [then] took off my jacket, and there was blood everywhere. It was really bad.’
Police say they believe Ruby was not the intended target of the shooting, and that he was simply caught in the crossfire.
Purported gang member Brannovan Martinez, 21, was arrested over the incident late Wednesday and has been charged with assault, criminal use of a firearm and reckless endangerment. He has multiple prior arrests for drugs and assaults.
And on Easter Sunday, retired channel 9 crime reporter Judith Thomas was walking to meet her sister when a stranger struck her with ‘a hellacious punch’ on the corner of West 119th Street and Lenox Avenue in Harlem.
Thomas was left with swollen cheeks and lips, as well as a pronounced bruise on her face.
Even as crime surged, Mayor Bill de Blasio expressed optimism that other New Yorkers are not currently living in fear during a Wednesday press conference.
‘I think people see these actions and they know that continued help is coming,’ he argued. ‘But New Yorkers don’t live in fear. They keep moving forward. I really believe that. I’ve felt that my whole life here.’
The statistics don’t back up de Blasio’s assertions, though.
The mayor did acknowledge that since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, the city has experienced a ‘serious uptick’ in gun violence.
Still, he praised the New York City Police Department for its ‘great work’ getting guns off the streets and making arrests.
Aside from assaults, when it comes to the most recent crime statistics, there were 99 shooting incidents in March 2021, compared to 56 a year ago, representing an increase of nearly 77 percent.
There were also 492 gun arrests citywide last month, which is an increase of nearly 67 percent compared to March 2020.
Despite the statistics, De Blasio said Wednesday that he’s convinced that deepening the bond between the NYPD and communities would have a ‘huge impact’ on reducing crime rates in the city.
Chris Ruby was hit by a bullet in his shoulder near Times Square on Wednesday
Judith Thomas (left), 75, was beaten by a random attacker (right) on Easter Sunday
It’s worth noting that more people were in lockdown during the spring of 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Budget cuts to the police force could be related to the recent surge in crime the city has seen.
In June, de Blasio announced a $1 billion cut to the NYPD’s budget.
Meanwhile, candidates to be the next mayor of New York City have varying thoughts on how to handle the crime wave.
Maya Wiley’s platform includes an $18 million cut to the NYPD, as well as a reduction in cadet class size by 2,250.
According to the New York Post, Dianne Morales is open to cutting the NYPD budget by up to $3 billion.
Scott Stringer, meantime, wants to disband the Strategic Response Group’s Disorder Control Unit, which has served as the riot police during racial unrest.
Crime in the city was declining in recent years, with March 2019 being the best March in the city during the CompStat era.
There was a 6.2 percent decrease in index crime from the same month of the previous year.
Murders dropped by 27.3 percent, rapes fell by 3.8 percent, robberies decreased by 6.7 percent, and burglaries were down 17.5 percent.