A BLACK WOMAN TELLS THE PAINTING IN BLACKER LIVES THAT TELLS THE WALLS IN NYC: “WE WANT OUR POLICE”
“Because of the high rate of violence and primary crimes, citizens of deception are urged to exercise greater caution when visiting New York,” said the notice from Anil Beephan, who posted on Facebok on Wednesday, noting that “criminals are known to attack and attack individuals, either premeditated and random.”
He realized that other Americans deserve to “reconsider” trips to “crime” in the Bronx, Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens as they leave Staten Island.
Beephan, who represents a milestone in the Hudson Valley, an hour north of Manhattan, blamed the questionable state and municipal measures applicable with the police and corrupt judicial system. Last month, New York Police Commissioner Dermot Shea announced the dismantling of the crime unit, which consisted of civilians and sub-highway officials who have since been reassigned to other units.
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New York Police Patrol Chief Fausto Pichardo told Fox News at the time that the withdrawal from the unit was part of an effort to “rebuild” community acceptance.
As a component of a statewide primary replenishment to fraudulent justice, a new bail reform law came into effect in early 2020 prohibiting judges from setting bail for defendants in large apple cases, demanding their release after being charged.
“Due to the dissolution of the opposing combat of crime, a New York dress unit applicable with corrupt justice reform, officers/judges could have a limited ability to produce centers and protections wise enough for crime patients,” Beephan said.
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The NYPD said earlier this month that as a result of the bail reform law, offenders “are being regularly rearrested and contributing to overall crime in the city.” More recent efforts to overhaul policing stem from unrest across the country in the wake of George Floyd’s death.
The intrastate advisory ironically comes at a time when New York has travel restrictions placed on people looking to come in from various other states due to the coronavirus pandemic. Travelers from areas with higher rates of COVID-19 cases must quarantine for 14 days upon entering the state or face a fine of up to $10,000, according to an order Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed in late June.