NYC Mayor Eric Adams ousts head of NYPD’s hate crimes unit after surge in attacks on Asian-Americans because the department is ‘too slow to act’: 524 complaints filed in 2021 but fewer than HALF resulted in arrests
- Adams reassigned Inspector Jessica Corey, but didn’t say where she was placed
- His office hasn’t clarified who will take over the NYPD’s Hate Crime Task Force
- Hate crimes were up a shocking 96 percent in 2021, reaching 524 complaints
- Only 219 people were arrested last year, and just 93 were arrested in 2020
- An Asian woman who was spat on and called a ‘carrier’ by a man on the subway last year said Corey tried to blame her for the attack
- Hate crimes against Asian-Americans were up 343 percent in 2021
New York City Mayor Eric Adams says the NYPD has been ‘too slow’ to investigate incidents as hate crimes, weeks after he reassigned the head of the police department’s hate crimes unit.
Adams reassigned Inspector Jessica Corey, who led the Hate Crime Task Force, last month. She was placed in the firearms & tactics section, a police spokesman told DailyMail.com Tuesday.
‘We were too slow in investigating [crimes] as possible hate crimes,’ Adams said Monday. ‘I wanted a new face there, a new vision.’
Racially-motivated attacks, especially toward Asian-Americans, skyrocketed during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the virus that caused it originating in China.
Hate crimes were up a shocking 96 percent in 2021. But only 219 people were arrested for hate crimes last year, even though there were 524 hate crime complaints.
In comparison, there were 265 hate crime complaints and 93 arrests in 2020, according to the NYPD.
In October, a man spit at Esther Lee, a Korean-American woman, and called her a ‘carrier’ aboard an A-train in Manhattan.
Lee told WABC that an officer refused to write down the words hurled at her in a police report. Moreover, she said Corey chastised her for filming the man.
Adams reassigned Inspector Jessica Corey, who led the Hate Crime Task Force, last month. His office has not clarified where she was placed or who would replace her
Only 219 people were arrested for hate crimes last year, though there were 524 such complaints. In 2020, there were 265 complaints and 93 arrests
Asian Americans have experienced a 343 percent increase in hate crimes in 2021 with 133 attacks. Hispanics are also seeing a rise in attacks with eight attacks happening in 2021, compared to one in 2020
‘Jessica Corey telling me, “You know you really should not have filmed him, you really should not have taken your phone and started taking footage of him because you probably triggered him,”‘ Lee said.
Adams reassigned Corey a day after WABC informed him about Lee’s experience.
‘I don’t want a leader in that area that starts off with saying why something is not a possible hate crime,’ Adams said at the time.
An NYPD spokesperson added: ‘The incident was looked into by the Hate Crime Task Force and both parties were interviewed. A conferral was made with the NYPD’s Legal Bureau as well as the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and a legal determination was made that the facts of the case did not meet current hate crime statutes.’
Deputy Inspector Michael King, head of the Special Victims Division, was also reassigned. He was placed in the Patrol Bureau Queens South, according to the NYPD.
Both moves were characterized as routine reshufflings, according to WABC, but Corey’s controversial tenure has sparked whispers that her removal was performance-related.
Hate crimes surged by 96 percent in the Big Apple throughout 2021.
Asian hate crimes skyrocketed 343 percent from 2020 to 2021 as the pandemic rattled on, with 133 Asian Americans experiencing terrifying and dangerous experiences of discrimination, according to the data, which was first reported by Fox News.
Hispanic hate crimes were also up a staggering 700 percent last year with a total of eight people being harassed or harmed in 2021, up from one in 2020.
A total of 538 hate crimes occurred throughout 2021, compared to 275 in 2020.
Esther Lee, a Korean-American woman, says Corey tried to pin the blame on her after she was attacked in subway in October
In October, a man spit at Lee and called her a ‘carrier’ aboard an A train in Manhattan as anti-Asian crime was spiking, driven in part by the COVID-19 pandemic
Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg, 48 – who has found himself in hot water after downgrading many crimes and claiming that ‘prison is a last resort’ – said in January that his office will expand the hate crimes unit, created in 2018, to help address the increase in radically motivated attacks.
‘Our [Asian-American and Pacific-Islander] brothers and sisters have been spit upon, coughed at, told to go back home. In my office we are deepening our capacity,’ he said.
‘We’re expanding our hate crimes unit so that we can give these cases the resources that they deserve.’
Manhattan’s DA Alvin Bragg, 48, said he was will be partnering with local communities and expand resources to address the increase in hate crimes
Bragg, the first black man to hold his position, said that he would be expanding resources by partnering with local communities to ‘strengthen our community ties,’ but commended the existing ‘small’ hate crimes team for having ‘great leadership.’
‘What I’ve heard as I’ve traveled throughout Manhattan is that there’s a reluctance to come forward to law enforcement from some communities, and some people are more willing to go forward through a community group,’ Bragg said on Friday.
‘We are both focusing on building cases and prosecuting cases and [are] also mindful that we might not be hearing about everything that we want to be, so strengthening our community ties as well.’