all about. neil: another thing governor hochul mentioned as you know, howard, this idea that lee zeldin has one plan, talks time on crime but won t do anything about the guns. she says she s nod doing anything about bail reform either. where do you think this goes? well, i think if lee zeldin gets elected, the nypd is going to become much more assertive. they re going to go back to doing stop and frisk. they re going to do the things that made the city the safest in my tenure. if hochul gets elected, you ll see more pandering to criminals. as i said before, the only people that should be afraid of police are criminals. right now they re not. if they do something now, they get right back out on the street. we have to stop the madness and
and it s a union that has a pretty clever president, pat lynch. when you think about it, this is a bizarre way of hedging his bets. he knows where lee zeldin is coming from on crime. hochul is not big on supporting the police and crime. they can get favor with her by donating to her campaign. you have to realize that a lot of the legislation that takes place in albany that pass the legislations, they get money from the pba. this is a bizarre way not to a very dumb move. neil: i see what you re saying. you re hedging your bets. you think you d write a check to both in that event. if she s the prohibitive favorite, you re just trying to assure keeping her in your good graces, right? absolutely. i think that s what donation was
reporter: in new york, the perceptions that continues to lay out there this is a dangerous city. is it? no, is not. it s not. reporter: mayor eric adams was elected to cleanup new york city s soaring crime. six months later, overall crime is up nearly 40%. reporter: you came in saying you would fight crime and bring crime down. have you been successful? no, we are in complete. we have not been successful until every new yorker feels safe. reporter: a couple dozen shootings over the holiday weekend. it does not feel safe. we also did something else over the holiday weekend. we moved a substantial number of guns off our streets. reporter: he notes homicides and shootings here are down 9%. what we call predatory crimes, rape , robberies, burglaries, grand larceny, but here is the real problem. we arrest john on monday for a green lost city. he is out on
Colorado’s soaring crime rate has roots in Colorado Springs. State Sen. Pete Lee’s website, PeteLeeColorado.com, makes clear his highest priorities. First among his “key issues” one finds “Justice Reform.” His