The tragedy in the New York City area was one of seven murders on the same day. Davell is just the youngest victim in a deadly killing spree in the nation's largest city. In one bloody 28-day period, New York City recorded 42 murders, a 13.5% increase from the same period a year ago.
Davell's sad death was the exclamation point to New York City's 24% spike in murders from 2019. The boy's father, Davell Gardner Sr., had a message for the thugs who killed his infant son: "These guys just took my son's life. For what? He didn't do nothing to nobody."
The boy's grandmother Samantha Gardner minced no words. "For the cowards that did this, you should be ashamed of yourself because everybody talks about Black Lives Matter. What about baby lives? You took an innocent from his mother and father as well as the grandparents."
New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio presides over the crime outbreak with appalling ineptness. He has the audacity to proclaim his administration has been tough on crime, while leading the effort to defund the police department, the thin blue line that stands between peace and anarchy on the streets.
De Blasio championed the city council's recent vote to slash $1 billion from the police department's $6 billion budget. The mayor pledged the funds would go to "youth programs and recreation centers." It wouldn't have prevented Davell Gardner's murder. He was wounded near a Brooklyn playground.
De Blasio, a harsh critic of the police department, ignores the soaring number of shootings. Last week New York passed another grisly milestone when it recorded shooting number 777, surpassing the figures for all of last year. The mayor has done nothing but assure New Yorkers he is praying for the victims.
Since the George Floyd death on May 25, there has been a nationwide escalation in crime. The last time the country witnessed such a rise of this magnitude was in 2015 and 2016, after the controversy connected to the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.
Gotham City's crime surge pales in comparison to gory Chicago. In the Windy City, murders are up 51% from 2019. In one 28-day period, Chicago killings soared 89% compared to the same period a year ago. Shootings have increased 47%, There have been 414 murders this year, a record clip even for Chicago.
One of the latest victims is a nine-year-old boy who was playing in a vacant lot near the site of a former housing project. Janari Ricks and a few friends were caught in deadly gunfire that ignited nearby. A stray bullet struck the youth in his chest. He was pronounced dead at a local hospital.
A few days earlier 15 people were wounded in an a mass shooting at a funeral. Gunmen fired from a vehicle that sped away before it crashed one block later. The criminals fled. The victims included at least 10 women, according to police reports. The scene is all too familiar to Chicagons.
Last year 13 people were wounded, four of them critically, in a memorial gathering. In 2018, six people were shot as mourners were leaving a church. In 2013, gunmen shot 13 people outside funeral services, wounding a three-year-old boy. In 2012, two men were shot outside a church memorial service.
Police have not escaped violence. Three Chicago police officers were shot by a carjacking suspect on a Thursday morning. The prisoner was taken out of a patrol van and walked into the Northwest Side police station when he opened fire wounding the officers. Police are investigating where the suspect got the gun.
In the midst of a crime rampage, Chicago's tragically incompetent Mayor Lori Lightfoot has stiff-armed growing calls to defund the police by city council members. Her stance has more to do with racial politics than her support for the city's men and women who are hired to protect citizens.
"When you talk about defunding, you're talking about getting rid of officers. Most of our diversity lies in junior officers. Which means you are getting rid of black and brown people," she told the Chicago Tribune. Like many mayors, she views the police department as part of the political spoils of her office.
West Coast cities have been some of the most aggressive in scaling back police budgets. In Seattle the city Council carved 50% out of the current budget and has already chopped spending for next year by $76 million. Seattle experienced a stunning 525% increase in crime in July.
During the height of violent protests, Police Chief Carmen Best warned local residents and businesses that her department would not be able to contain unruly crowds to prevent looting, arson and rioting. The city council had shackled police by outlawing the use of pepper spray, a tool for dispersing crowds.
Portland's City Council sliced $15 million from its police budget. "Defunding the police is a victory," the City Council said in a statement. And the council threatened: "We are not done." Violent shootings have surged 240% in the city compared to the same period a year ago.
Portland recorded more homicides in July than in any other month over the last 30 years. And the violence is spreading like a cancer. In the latest incident, rioters doused an elderly woman with white paint and harassed another who was using a walker to shuffle through the crowd.
In Minneapolis, scene of the George Floyd incident, the city council ripped $10 million from the police budget. Homicides have jumped 60% from 2019. Violent shootings have totaled 269, surpassing the number for all of 2019.
There are two ironies to the cities' Bataan-like march to defund police. The overwhelming majority of shooting victims listed in this article are African-Americans. Secondly, the neighborhoods most impacted by the crimes are predominantly black. African-Americans are demanding more police presence not less.
That is paradoxical because the loudest voice for defunding police has been the Black Lives Matter crowd. There are other organizations that have joined the chorus too. However, if activists are concerned for black lives they should be advocating for beefed up police funding and presence in black neighborhoods.
A recent Pew Research study found more Americans agree with increasing local police spending (30%) than endorse defunding (25%). A total of 42% of those surveyed support the current level of funding as appropriate. Despite the media drumbeat, most Americans are not in favor of defunding police.
The fact is Black Lives Matter and other politically motivated organizations care more about creating chaos and spreading a false narrative than about African-Americans. Appallingly, the result has been a media-backed stampede in support of BLM's campaign to defund the very people protecting black lives.
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