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Monday, March 6, 2023

Adams: NYC shoppers need to ditch masks to show they aren’t crooks

 Mayor Eric Adams is calling on New York City shoppers to remove their face masks when entering stores as a way to clamp down on shoplifters.

“Do not allow people to enter the store without taking off their face mask and then once they’re inside they can continue to wear if they so desire to do so,” Adams said on 1010-WINS of the facial recognition push to especially help combat repeat offenders.

“When you see these mask-wearing people, oftentimes it’s not about being fearful of the pandemic. It’s fearful of the police catching [them] for their deeds,” he said.

Adams’ call for entryway retail unmasking comes days after data released by the New York City Police Department revealed an unexplained 10% decrease in reports of retail theft this February compared to last year.

Eric Adams
While speaking to 1010-WINS radio Monday, Mayor Eric Adams said businesses need to have customers take off their masks upon entering a shop so their faces can be captured by cameras.
Erik Pendzich/Shutterstock

Officials couldn’t confirm whether NYPD officers made more shoplifting arrests — but the decrease comes amid an unprecedented spike in shoplifting complaints in recent years.

According to Adams, his new no-mask-upon-entry proposal would allow officials to use technology to identify shoplifters after the fact and “those who are committing serious crimes.”

Shoppers who wish to remain masked for health reasons will be able to put their mask back on after lowering it while entering the business, the mayor added.

robbery suspects wearing masks
Shoppers who wish to wear masks for health reasons will be allowed to put their face coverings back on after entering the store.
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masks
Adams said there would be additional police officers stationed in busy shopping areas to ensure businesses would have help with the new mask policy.
AP

When asked what the NYPD was doing to help businesses burdened with ensuring customers take off their masks upon entry, Adams said additional officers have been ordered to patrol retail-heavy areas.

“We are beefing up our coverage in those BID [Business Improvement District] areas, those high shopping areas, and we’re also beefing up our surveillance and practices,” Adams said.

“So we have something called ‘paid detail,’ where you have uniformed officers are allowed during their off-duty hours to do some of the security at many of our stores and locations and that has always been successful,” he said, adding he remembered the practice being used at high-end stores when he was a police officer.

Last week, NYPD Chief of Department Jeff Maddrey shared Adams’ sentiment and urged business owners to force shoppers to remove their masks for identification as a “condition of entry.”

“We need our businesses to be proactive and do their due diligence,” the chief said, adding: “We need to make sure people are identifying themselves.”

Merchants in the Big Apple have become so desperate to stop sticky-fingered thieves amid the recent spike in thefts that many have taken matters into their own hands.

robbery suspect wearing a mask
Officials couldn’t confirm whether the 10% decrease in shoplifting complaints was a result of more arrests.

In the Bronx, a group of vigilant private security guards has been employed to keep the bustling Fordham Road Business Improvement District crime-free by acting as a deterrent against shoplifters.adams

Business owners have become desperate to ward off shoplifters, many taking matters into their own hands by employing private security guards and enlisting K-9s.
John Nacion/Shutterstock

Similarly, the 34th Street Partnership — the trade group serving Macy’s Herald Square, Penn Station and Madison Square Garden — has turned to K-9 units to “sniff out” crime.

Adam’s big proposal for local businesses comes after a hazmat suit-wearing gunman shot and killed a deli worker on the Upper East Side during a grisly robbery Saturday. The gunman is believed to have been responsible for three brutal robberies over the last 10 days.

https://nypost.com/2023/03/06/adams-shoppers-should-remove-face-masks-to-show-they-arent-criminals/

NYC bartenders using private chat groups to warn each other about violent thugs

 Besieged with rampant crime and sluggish response times from police, New York City bartenders and bouncers are using private chat groups to warn each other about violent thugs and other threats to staff and customers alike, Side Dish has learned.

Nearly three dozen workers at East Village haunts Lucy’s, Doc Holliday’s, The Spotted Owl Tavern, Spikes, Beetle House, Phoenix Bar and Niagara have begun sharing information via an Instagram chat group on potential threats from criminals and other lowlifes inside and outside their bars.  

In one recent text exchange shown to Side Dish, a group member posted a terrifying video of a fierce-looking patron pushing his way into a bar, punching and swing a stool at a bouncer even after he appeared to get maced.

“That’s the guy who got me with the stool. Seven stitches, blood and concussion,” wrote the bouncer, who asked that he and his venue not be identified.

“Came in during my day shift yesterday,” chimed in another. “Decided to scream at me walk around the whole bar and stare me down.”

Yet another staffer said he called 911 out of fear of imminent danger being caused by the same thug — with a lack of satisfactory response from the cops.

 Ivan Romero, Lucy’s  bartender
Lucy’s bartender Ivan Romero, who also manages the popular Avenue A joint,  said the main problem is that incidents aren’t prioritized by 911 unless suspects are armed or violent.
J.C. Rice

“The [911 operator] could literally hear him screaming in the background about how he was going to kill me and they were like ‘oh is he still there? Do you need assistance?’ And then [the police] showed [up] 3 f—ing hours late,” the staffer complained.

Gripes from frustrated workers come as the city’s nightlife continues to grapple with a tide of lawlessness since the pandemic.

East Village bar staffers banded together near the end of 2021 to form the Instagram chat group to protect themselves against threats like Earl Gumbs, who was indicted in the fatal beating of bouncer Duane Patterson, 61, outside a Chelsea bar last Christmas Eve.

Screen grab of the group chat
provided

Lucy’s bartender Ivan Romero, who also manages the popular Avenue A joint, said the main problem is that incidents aren’t prioritized by 911 unless suspects are armed or violent.

“I’ll walk over to the precinct and they say, an hour later, that the 911 call is just coming in. And if they do show up, they’ll roll up in a car and not get out. There could have been a stabbing or killing in that time,” Romero added.

Gumbs was a menace well-known by many bartenders in the East Village, according to Romero.

“He’d terrorize young females working the bar. Then he’d run,” said Romero, who added he once had to “talk down” Gumbs after he kicked in a door and threatened to kill another bartender.  

Gumbs, 37, was charged with manslaughter in Patterson’s death but released while awaiting trial. He was recently spotted lurking in the East Village, and the Gumbs sighting lit up texts between members of the chat group.

Earl Gumbs is walked out of the Midtown South precinct in January.
Earl Gumbs is walked out of the Midtown South precinct in January.
William C. Lopez/NYPOST

“Be cautious. Earl is around. I saw him at 4:30 last night,” read one recent text message viewed by Side Dish.

Looking out for violent people is now, sadly, part of the job, several nightlife workers said.

In one group chat, a bartender posted a photo of someone they booted and then posted a warning to others. “[Name] just kicked him out of [bar name] him and his friend are about.

Added another: “Yeesh no please everyone be safe because his boys are the ones that had a gun that one time. Obviously idk if it’s the same boys but yeah.”

In a Feb. 27 incident, a female bartender at Lucy’s named Hannah told Side Dish that she called 911 about a teen threatening her with a gun but had to wait two hours for police to arrive.

The underage boy had come in, was denied service, began hitting on her and refused to leave, said Hannah, who didn’t want to give her last name.

“He became more aggressive. Then he started cursing and getting aggressive with patrons who pushed him out,” Hannah said.

“Then he was outside, locked out, and so he started banging on the door, and he opened up everything in the trash and started throwing things at the windows. He found a wheelchair and started throwing it and threatened to shoot in the window with a gun.

“I was on the phone with 911. I asked for an ETA. ‘Do you hear him? He’s threatening to shoot through the window.’ She [the 911 operator] said that asking for an ETA wouldn’t make anyone come faster….The kid was banging on the door for almost 30 minutes and nobody showed up.”

Romero outside Lucy's on Avenue A.
“And if they do show up, they’ll roll up in a car and not get out,” Romero said of the police.
J.C. Rice

By the time the cops arrived, the teen had fled, Hannah said, adding that she was thankful other bartenders showed up and helped.

A police spokesperson told Side Dish the 911 call did not mention a firearm or wheelchair, and that calls are answered according to priority.

“This dispute was not a priority job. Officers will respond to and handle priority jobs first. At the time of the dispute, there were priority jobs going on which included a dispute with a knife, a violent emotionally disturbed person, a ShotSpotter activation, and an individual prowling a location,” the spokesperson said.

Romero said the community values police and wants to see more of them — not less.

“We deal with everyone, just like Starbucks,” Romero said. “There are psychos who go from bar to bar, and we need cops to come and diffuse situations before they murder people.”

https://nypost.com/2023/03/06/nyc-bartenders-using-chat-groups-to-warn-each-other-about-violent-thugs/