Blueprint for public safety
Brad will make NYC safer – reducing crime and achieving more effective policing.
He will confront the staffing crisis at the NYPD, guide the NYPD to focus on solving gun crimes, and keep Jessica Tisch as NYPD commissioner. He’ll restore trust and accountability by combatting hate crimes and violence and investing in community partnerships and safe neighborhoods. Back to Issues
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At the height of the discriminatory use of stop-and-frisk, Brad spearheaded legislation at the City Council along with Public Advocate Jumaane Williams to strengthen the City’s prohibition on racial profiling and create the office of the NYPD Inspector General. What followed were dramatic declines in discriminatory stop-and-frisk, accompanied by dramatic declines in crime. Additionally while in the Council, Brad sponsored a resolution in favor of pending legislation within the New York State Legislature to enact extensive gun control laws including waiting periods, background checks, and safety certificates.
As Comptroller, Brad’s hard-hitting audits and reports have exposed the failures of Mayor Adams’ approach to public safety, like sweeps of homeless encampments that place just 0.1% of people into permanent housing. Brad’s audit of ShotSpotter, a gunfire location and detection technology contracted by the NYPD, revealed that alerts only identified confirmed shootings 13% of the time.
As a trustee of the Police Pension Fund, Brad worked alongside union representatives to protect retirement security and ensure disability decisions were handled with integrity and consistency. Brad partnered with police unions to secure disability benefits for officers who contracted long Covid. He also fought to ensure that the family of Officer Adeed Fayaz, who was killed in the line of duty, received the death benefits they deserved.
Brad led the pension systems to call on American Express, MasterCard and Visa to support a proposal to establish a merchant category code (MCC) for gun and ammunition stores. The MCC code would allow financial institutions to both locate and report large purchases of firearms and ammunition – purchases that have the potential to be used for criminal purchases.