Now NYC Mayor Eric Adams says his 'blue surge' of NYPD officers on subways IS working as he dishes out awards to two officers who saved straphanger from tracks - despite serious crimes surging 34%

  • 'The blue surge in our subway system is working,' New York Mayor Adams said
  • In October, the city announced increased subway patrols with the NYPD adding 1,200 overtime shifts per day 
  • But figures released by the MTA paint a different picture of subway safety
  • Major felonies, assault, robbery and homicide, on city public transportation have increased by nearly 40% this year compared to the same time period last year 
  • Transit crime and subway incidents have skyrocketed this year, and despite the MTA being focused placing more officers at subway stations in recent months 
  • So far this year, there have been nine murders in the subway, compared to six in 2021, according to newly released data 
  • At least twelve people have been shoved in front of a subway train so far this year, and at least two fatally 

New York City Mayor Eric Adams insists his 'blue surge' of putting more NYPD officers on patrol in the city's subway system is working, despite crime figures showing crimes including murder, rape, and robbery have surged 40 percent this year, compared to 2021.

Between January and October at least 2,096 felony crimes were reported - up from  1,570 recorded from the same time period last year - a rise of almost 34 percent.

October saw a total of 210 felonies - up marginally from 198 in September, according to the NYPD. 

The statistics for October include all manner of crimes including three murders, two burglaries, 51 robberies, 46 felony assaults, and 108 grand larcenies.

So far this year, there have been nine murders in the subway, compared to six in 2021, according to newly released data. 

At least twelve people have been shoved in front of a subway train so far this year, at least two fatally. 

Major felonies in the subway system as a whole are down 13 percent over the last 28 days, and down 5.4 percent as compared to 2017, the data shows. 

Part of the rise in crime can be linked to the fact more people are now using the subway system once again with workers returning to their offices.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams is seen with Officers Taufique Bokth, left, and Brunel Victor who saved the life of a man who collapsed on subway tracks on 116th Street Station in Harlem

New York City Mayor Eric Adams is seen with Officers Taufique Bokth, left, and Brunel Victor who saved the life of a man who collapsed on subway tracks on 116th Street Station in Harlem

Between January and November at least 2,096 felony crimes were reported - up from 1,570 recorded from the same time period last year - a rise of almost 34 percent

Between January and November at least 2,096 felony crimes were reported - up from 1,570 recorded from the same time period last year - a rise of almost 34 percent

Violent crime in the Big Apple has soared by nearly 30 percent from last year

But when compared to pre-pandemic levels, crime rates are now shockingly high with subway killings at their highest level in 25 years.

It is precisely because of such violence on the transit system that saw Mayor Adams move to deploy more police officers underground, with New York State even footing the bill for overtime paid.

Yet despite Adam's declaration of progress and figures 'traveling southbound', shocking crimes are still being perpetrated throughout including several stabbings last week that left three injured last Tuesday.

Video that was released on Monday shows a suspect stabbing and robbing another passenger. 

Video that was released on Monday shows a suspect stabbing and robbing another passenger

Video that was released on Monday shows a suspect stabbing and robbing another passenger

Surveillance video released by the NYPD shows the suspect, wearing a black baseball cap with white lettering and a black jacket, pulling on the victim's backpack before snatching it

Surveillance video released by the NYPD shows the suspect, wearing a black baseball cap with white lettering and a black jacket, pulling on the victim's backpack before snatching it

According to police, the 34-year-old victim was riding the F train approaching 34th Street–Herald Square station in Manhattan at about 10pm on November 22 when the suspect asked for a cigarette. 

When the victim proceeded to give him a cigarette, the suspect tried to steal his money. A struggle then spilled out onto the station platform. 

Surveillance video released by the NYPD shows the suspect, wearing a black baseball cap with white lettering and a black jacket, pulling on the victim's backpack.

The struggle moves out of the camera's frame at which point the suspect then stabbed the victim in the torso before grabbing their backpack and the cash.

In a separate incident, on Saturday, a 38-year-old woman was shoved onto the tracks in Brooklyn. She was rescued by a fellow straphanger. 

Adams recently announced a subway safety plan for the city, which is currently struggling with bouts of violence facing commuters

During his campaign, Adams had promised cut the NYPD's overtime budget in half yet this summer the department spent an almost record-breaking $762 million on overtime in the last fiscal year, six months which Adams was in office for

Nevertheless, the MTA insist that the influx of police officers has led to a drop in incidents. 

'The NYPD is now putting more officers on subway cars and on platforms, and so far this month it has resulted in a drop in crime,' said MTA spokesman, Aaron Donovan.

On Monday, NYPD officers were being praised after they saved a homeless man who fell onto the subway tracks in Harlem.

Adams wasted no time in taking credit noting how the officers, Taufique Bokth and Brunel Victor were both on overtime shifts when they spotted the man falling into harms way. Adams has described it as his 'omnipresence policing' strategy.

NYPD officers were being praised after they saved a person who fell onto the subway tracks

NYPD officers were being praised after they saved a person who fell onto the subway tracks

Adam's has hailed the rescuing of a person who fell onto the subway tracks as part of the 'blue wave'

Adam's has hailed the rescuing of a person who fell onto the subway tracks as part of the 'blue wave'

The officers plucked him out of the way of an oncoming train in a daring rescue captured by an officer's body camera.

The incident happened around 4pm on Thursday at the 116th Street station in East Harlem. The man, whom police said fell by accident, was taken to a hospital with injuries to his hand and back.

Officers Brunel Victor and Taufique Bokth were on patrol at the station when they saw a commotion and heard a scream from the opposite side of the station, police said.

They ran up and down stairs, through an emergency exit, and onto the tracks, pulling the man to safety with the assistance of a bystander who was already trying to help, police said.

This is the heart-stopping moment NYPD cops race to save a man who fell on to the subway tracks just moments before a train arrived. The dramatic footage showed the officers run from one side of the station to the other to help the passenger on Thursday afternoon. They quickly leapt on to the rails before helping hoist him on to the platform just seconds before the car pulled into 116th Street and Lexington Avenue in East Harlem

This is the heart-stopping moment NYPD cops race to save a man who fell on to the subway tracks just moments before a train arrived. The dramatic footage showed the officers run from one side of the station to the other to help the passenger on Thursday afternoon. They quickly leapt on to the rails before helping hoist him on to the platform just seconds before the car pulled into 116th Street and Lexington Avenue in East Harlem

The cops were alerted by straphangers that the 40-year-old had fallen onto the northbound 6 train line. That station does not have a mezzanine that connects the northbound and southbound lines, meaning the officers had to race up the stairs to exit the southbound line to get to the fallen man. Bodycam footage shows two cops - only identified as Officers Victor and Bokth - as they run to the northbound entrance

The cops were alerted by straphangers that the 40-year-old had fallen onto the northbound 6 train line. That station does not have a mezzanine that connects the northbound and southbound lines, meaning the officers had to race up the stairs to exit the southbound line to get to the fallen man. Bodycam footage shows two cops - only identified as Officers Victor and Bokth - as they run to the northbound entrance

When they finally arrived, they discovered another person had headed down to the track to try and help the fallen man. A third officer, identified as Officer Gregorek, was trying to give medical assistance while waiting for further help

When they finally arrived, they discovered another person had headed down to the track to try and help the fallen man. A third officer, identified as Officer Gregorek, was trying to give medical assistance while waiting for further help

They then were able to grab the unidentified man by his arms and legs and bring him onto the platform with what the NYPD said was 'seconds to spare' before the 6 train arrived.

They then were able to grab the unidentified man by his arms and legs and bring him onto the platform with what the NYPD said was 'seconds to spare' before the 6 train arrived. 

The cops were almost in danger themselves, with one of them not leaping back onto the platform immediately, before the man who had provided medical assistance lifted the officer to safety.

 The cops were almost in danger themselves, with one of them not leaping back onto the platform immediately, before the man who had provided medical assistance lifted the officer to safety.

Four seconds later, as the video shows, the 6 train safely arrived on the northbound track. The rescued man was taken to a local hospital with injuries to his right hand and back but is in stable condition.

Four seconds later, as the video shows, the 6 train safely arrived on the northbound track. The rescued man was taken to a local hospital with injuries to his right hand and back but is in stable condition. 

Bystanders then helped the officers climb back to the platform, just before a 6 train pulled into the station.

'Our daily thing is to help people. We don´t care what if we have to put ourselves on the line. That´s why we do, that´s why we take this job,' Victor told WABC-TV.

The officers were able to haul the man back onto the platform before the train hurtled into the station. The man has since made a full recovery. 

'They jumped to the rescue, even risking their own lives,' said Adams. 'The blue surge in the subway system is working,' he continued with the two officers, NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell and several other transit and police officials standing by his side. 

'Thanks to these officers we're making enormous strides in keepin the subway system safe. Major felonies are down.'

Adam said rescue demonstrates the very success of the public safety initiative he and New York State Governor Hochul started in October which provided the money for 1,200 additional overtime shifts in the subway system every day.

Blood was left on the L-train platform in November after a man slashed a man and a woman before fleeing the Union Square subway station

Two people were cut at the Union Square subway station last Tuesday in a violent attack in New York City's transit system. Pictured: The bloody aftermath of the incident 

The NYPD said the slasher cut a woman in her face at the subway station on 14 Street, and when a man rushed to her aid, he was cut repeatedly in the back of the head

The NYPD said the slasher cut a woman in her face at the subway station on 14 Street, and when a man rushed to her aid, he was cut repeatedly in the back of the head 

Since the beginning of 2022, there have been a large handful of high-profile deaths that occurred on the city's network of underground tubes, including the shoving death of Michelle Go, who was killed by a crazed homeless man

The suspect then fled the bloody scene and has yet to be arrested 

'We're on the right train, we're moving in the right direction,' he said. 'We're going southbound on crime.' 

During his campaign, Adams had promised to cut the NYPD's overtime budget in half yet this summer the department spent an almost record-breaking $762 million on overtime in the last fiscal year, six months which Adams was in office for.

Pat Lynch, president of the Police Benevolent Association, used Bokth and Victor's heroics as a means to push for better pay for police officers. 

'Like all New York City police officers, they are overworked and underpaid,' the NYPD union boss Pat Lynch said on Monday. 

'They deserve a competitive salary that will reverse the current NYPD staffing emergency. Press conferences and mayoral proclamations will not stop cops from quitting in droves. If our city doesn't immediately fix our low pay and brutal work schedule, there may not be a hero police officer available to help the next time a New Yorker is in distress in the subway.' 

The number of homeless men prowling subway stations has increased dramatically since before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Despite a plan outlined by Adams to deter homeless people from sheltering in the city's subway system, the issue has not visibly been mitigated and travelers continue to be harassed and made uncomfortable during their daily commutes.

Last year, 2021 saw more subway assaults than any other year before - even in the 80s, when the then-crime ridden city was dubbed 'Fear City.' 

But Adams has still struggled to address the issue - both on its streets and below them - almost a year since assuming office.

The current murder rate, with less than two months of the year to go, is already higher than annual averages recorded since 2011, before unrest brought by the pandemic caused killings to spike.

The city has since yet to recover from that wave of crime, evidenced by the ever-increasing overall crime rate.

Meanwhile, NYPD officers are reportedly leaving the department at a record rate amid the violent crime surge, sparking officials and fed-up citizens for the mayor to make good on his promises.

But, Adams has remained confident that he can address the crime - which was spurred by the pandemic and recent soft-on-crime policies implemented by woke DAs such as Alvin Bragg, who have sought to find alternatives to incarceration.

'We are going to turn around this city in crime - I know that,' he asserted earlier this month when confronted with the crime surge.

A recent poll, however, showed that Big Apple residents are sick of waiting for the mayor, whose approval ratings have fallen to a new low. 

The Spectrum News NY1/Siena College poll survey found 70 percent of New Yorkers feel less safe than before the coronavirus pandemic. And 76 percent of residents interviewed said that also fear they could be a victim of violent crime. 

The city's transit system has seen a surge in violent crime, pushing officials to add more officers on the subway cars. Pictured: two men fighting inside a subway car in a recent instance of felony assault, which is up nearly 14 percent from last year

The city's transit system has seen a surge in violent crime, pushing officials to add more officers on the subway cars. Pictured: two men fighting inside a subway car in a recent instance of felony assault, which is up nearly 14 percent from last year 

What does Adams's subway safety plan for NYC look like?

The mayor's plan lays out how the Adams administration, in partnership with the MTA and other state entities, will confront these concurrent challenges on New York City's subway systems. Investments in people will provide immediate support and protection to New Yorkers, while investments in places like drop-in-centers, safe havens, stabilization beds, and Street Homeless Outreach Wellness vans, as well as policy changes at local, state, and federal levels will provide medium- and long-term solutions. These include:

  • Deploying up to 30 Joint Response Teams that bring together DHS, the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, NYPD, and community-based providers in high-need locations across the city
  • Training NYPD officers in the city's subway system to enforce the MTA and New York City Transit Authority's rules of conduct in a fair and transparent way
  • Expanding Behavioral Health Emergency Assistance Response Division 'B-HEARD' teams to six new precincts, more than doubling the precincts covered to 11. These teams will expand on the already-successful pilot of answering non-violent 911 mental health calls with mental health professionals
  • Incorporating medical services into DHS sites serving individuals experiencing unsheltered homelessness. Expanded DHS Safe Havens and stabilization bed programs will offer on-site physical and behavioral health care to immediately address clients' needs
  • Immediately improving coordination across government with weekly 'Enhanced Outreach Taskforce' meetings that bring together senior leaders from 13 city and state agencies to address issues quickly
  • Creating new Drop-in-Centers to provide an immediate pathway for individuals to come indoors, and exploring opportunities to site Drop-in-Centers close to key subway stations to directly transition individuals from trains and platforms to safe spaces
  • Streamlining the placement process into supportive housing and reducing the amount of paperwork it takes to prove eligibility
  • Calling on state government to expand psychiatric bed resources and amending Kendra's Law to improve mental health care delivery for New Yorkers on Assisted Outpatient Treatment
  • Requiring — instead of requesting — everyone to leave the train and the station at the end of the line