NYC feels unsafe ‘for the first time in my life,’ ex-Gov. Paterson says

Former Gov. David Paterson said Sunday that he has never felt less safe in the Big Apple — and warned local Democrats they could be in for an electoral “monsoon” if they don’t get crime under control.

“I never felt as unsafe as I do now just walking around,” the ex-governor and lifelong New Yorker told host John Catsimatidis on WABC Radio’s “Cats Roundtable.”

“For the first time in my life, even in the late ’80s and ’90s when the crime rate was killing 2,000 people a year, I never felt as unsafe as I do now just walking around,” he said.

Paterson noted several recent high-profile subway assaults, including three knife attacks that occurred in a single day Thursday.

“You’re hearing about an assault on the subway almost every other day,” he said.

Felony crime in the city was up over 15% citywide last month compared to September 2021, recent NYPD statistics showed.

David Paterson
David Paterson said Sunday that he has never felt less safe in the Big Apple.
Jared Siskin/PMC

The number of subway assaults also has increased year-over-year, while remaining below the levels seen before the COVID-19 pandemic, according to NYPD.

Paterson, a Democrat who served as the state’s first black governor from 2008 to 2010, chastised his party for failing to address “a rather small number of who seem
to repeat these offenses and get arrested 20, 30, 50 times.

“People start to think that power lasts forever, and people can start to think that they are immune from any kind of repercussions,” Paterson said of fellow Democrats.

FILE - In this June 4, 2020 file photo, New York City police officers gather near the site of shooting in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Heralded as the safest big city in America in recent years, New York City is closing out its bloodiest year in nearly a decade, grappling with a surge in homicides and a pandemic authorities say has helped fuel violence.
Felony crime in the city was up over 15% citywide last month compared to September 2021.
AP Photo/Frank Franklin II, File
Police at the scene where a teenager was fatally stabbed inside the one train subway station on Broadway and W137th Street in New York, NY on July 9, 2022.
The number of subway assaults has increased year-over-year.
Christopher Sadowski

He pointed to Democratic losses in Nassau County’s executive and district attorney races, when he said the party got caught in the “monsoon” of voter concerns about crime.

“That could happen again unless some of these people who have not been speaking out start doing it,” he said, adding, “I don’t want to be the one in November to say, ‘I told you so.’ “

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