New York Republicans hammered Democrats on crime during the 2022 midterms, a message that helped the GOP capture suburban congressional seats.
But heightened law enforcement presence can be a double-edged sword, said Alex Piquero, a criminology professor at the University of Miami and the former director of the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics.
“For some people, they’d like to see the added security,” he said. “And for other people, they’ll say we’re overreacting.”
The political tough talk can also gloss over the reality that transit crime accounts for just a tiny percentage of all crime, said Vincent Del Castillo, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and a former chief of New York City’s transit police.
“You can have 10 to 12 murders in the system when there are literally hundreds across the city,” he said. “But because it’s so rare, it gets a lot of attention.”
The four shootings linked to Philadelphia’s bus system began Sunday, when a man was killed by another passenger shortly after they got off a bus.
Two more bus-related shootings in the next two days left two more dead and four injured. Then on Wednesday eight teenagers waiting to take a city bus home after school were shot, leaving a bus riddled with bullet holes.
Charles Lawson, chief of the city’s transit police, vowed that officers will take an aggressive approach, using “every criminal code on the book” to crack down on crime.
“We’re going to target individuals concealing their identity,” he said. “We’re going to target fare evasion. We’re going to target open drug use.”
The Guard troops in New York won’t be that active. Instead they have been tasked with helping police conduct random searches of bags, a practice in place for nearly two decades. Passengers have the right to refuse such searches, though if they do they are asked to leave the subway system.
Guard troops can’t make arrests, but if they witness a crime, they can detain someone until police arrive, just as any civilian can do.
The troops were deployed Thursday, but transit riders might not have noticed as they weren’t widely visible at stations or in trains. Some were seen patrolling major hubs, including Grand Central Terminal and Penn Station, where they have been a regular presence since the terror attacks of Sept. 11 , 2001.
Riders have long been split over bag checks, which are infrequent but can hold people up as they race for a train. Searches have also long been a subject of concerns iver racial profiling, though the NYPD says it takes steps to avoid that.
“Sometimes when I’m in a hurry and I have a bag, I don’t like to be stopped,” said Jerome Brooks Jr., a 44-year-old actor and musician. “So then I try to see, do they stop me if they’re going to stop somebody else that doesn’t look like me?”
Cheryl Ann Harper, 46, said she welcomed the precaution.
“We need it,” she said, noting that similar checks are common at theaters. “I do it all the time. Not a big deal. If you don’t have anything to hide, why you can’t open up your bag?”
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Associated Press reporters Anthony Izaguirre and Michael Hill in Albany, Ted Shaffrey and Michael Sisak in New York City, Claudia Lauer in Philadelphia and Mark Scolforo in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, contributed.