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SUDDEN & DRAMATIC: Hochul places 1,000 armed & uniformed National Guardsmen and state cops into NYC subways to carry out bag checks

March 7, 2024
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Noticeably missing from the Governor’s Wednesday press conference: Showboat NYC Mayor and former high-profile Police Captain Eric Adams – What’s going on?

By Nolan Hicks, Craig McCarthy, Vaughn Golden, Emily Crane | The New York Post

Hundreds of National Guard troops began flooding city subways Wednesday as part of a crime-fighting plan suddenly unveiled by Gov. Kathy Hochul following a series of attacks underground.

The governor defended the major show of force — not seen since the aftermath of the 9/11 terror attacks — as an “even better” way to help New York City “solve this crisis.”

“These brazen heinous attacks on our subway system will not be tolerated,” Hochul declared from the MTA’s Transit Rail Control Center in Midtown, pointing to last week’s random slashing of a train conductor and other recent acts of violence.

In total, 750 National Guardsmen and 250 state and MTA cops will help the NYPD patrol “the city’s busiest transit stations” and check commuters’ bags, Hochul said – adding the initiative came after meetings with Mayor Eric Adams, MTA officials and the NYPD last week.

The announcement of her “five point plan” to combat transit crime came the day after Adams — who was noticeably absent from the gov’s press conference — had already revealed the NYPD would be enhancing bag checks and stepping up its presence in the system.

A National Guard member stands watch as MTA police conduct a random bag check at the entrance to the 7 train at Grand Central Station on Wednesday.Stephen Yang
Gov. Kathy Hochul announced Wednesday she is deploying 1,000 state cops and National Guardsmen to patrol NYC’s subway system.Stephen Yang
The additional forces — 750 guardsmen and 250 law enforcement officers — will work alongside the NYPD.Stephen Yang

Still, the governor pinned her deployment and wider safety crackdown on the brutal Feb. 26 slashing of an MTA conductor in Brooklyn and a 64-year-old postal worker being kicked onto the tracks at Penn Station over the weekend.

“No one heading to their job or to visit family or go to a doctor appointment should worry that the person sitting next to them possesses a deadly weapon,” she said. “They shouldn’t worry about whether someone’s going to brandish a knife or gun. That’s what we’re going to do with these checkpoints.” ##