US Victims of Random Street Attacks Face an Outdated Police System - Standard practices are not helping the victims — and they also prevent the ATTACKERS from getting help they need.

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/31/nyregion/random-attacks-new-york-city-women.html
Archive: https://archive.is/wr7Ik

Victims of Random Street Attacks Face an Outdated Police System​

Standard practices are not helping the victims — and they also prevent the attackers from getting help they need.
By Ginia Bellafante
Ginia Bellafante writes the Big City column, a weekly commentary on the politics, culture and life of New York City.
May 31, 2024


Earlier this year, I wrote about a friend who was attacked and thrown to the ground on a September afternoon, while she was walking toward Borough Hall in Brooklyn to go to the post office. She was on the phone with her mother when a man, whose erratic behavior she had noticed in the distance, pushed her into the street, leaving her with bruises, a chipped tooth and fear new to her after decades of living in New York.
At the time, it did not seem as though the assault might be part of a dark emerging trend. But the incident would presage many others — instances in which women in New York were randomly punched on the street in the middle of the day.

At the end of April, Joseph Kenny, the chief of detectives for the city’s Police Department, reported that 50 women had suffered this sort of unprovoked brutality since the beginning of the year in the lower half of Manhattan alone. A few days before the announcement, a 9-year-old girl standing with her mother was punched in the face by a man at Grand Central Station.

The incidents came to public attention largely via TikTok videos that some of the victims posted right after they were attacked — vivid accounts from young women with bruised faces and black eyes, which led to questions about how seriously the police were pursuing these cases as acts of violent misogyny. Then, just this week, the Manhattan district attorney’s office indicted a man — a 40-year-old fringe political candidate named Skiboky Stora — on hate crime charges “for assaulting, stalking and harassing strangers in a series of anti-female, anti-white and antisemitic incidents.” He had been arrested in March two days after he was accused of punching a 23-year-old woman, a social media influencer whose video describing what had happened so unexpectedly one morning in Chelsea has been viewed tens of millions of times.

Ever since smartphones with cameras became ubiquitous, technology has come to play an increasingly crucial role in modern law enforcement both as a means of fomenting national outrage over otherwise obscured injustices and tackling the more mundane challenges of solving crimes. In the case of my friend, Laura, the attack had been recorded on a security camera, and she had also managed to take a very clear close-up of him — head to toe — with her phone. What intrigued me was what her situation revealed about the legal system’s latent and quasi-romantic faith in the power of human perception over the more conclusive determinations supplied by digital imaging.

A precinct lineup today is nothing like the familiar scene in police procedurals. Five weeks after her attack, Laura, a successful artist in her 50s (who asked that I not use her full name because her case is ongoing), was given a set of photographs selected by an algorithm. Faced with a “lineup” of headshots, she was unable to identify her assailant with any confidence. This bothered her, she told me, precisely because she was a painter in the realist tradition who prided herself on an adept eye for physical detail. Any other characteristic she might have registered about her attacker, like his carriage or the way he held his hands, became meaningless.

Laura’s mistake meant the police did not take her assailant into custody. When a witness — a private-school security guard who had seen her assailant immediately following the attack — was brought in to look at a lineup, he too misidentified him. But rather than questioning the efficiency of a system that delivered images of people solely from the neck up, who looked so alarmingly alike they stumped two people whose work demanded a high level of visual acuity, the case essentially fell away.

After my column about the strange handling of the attack was published, Laura received a call from an assistant district attorney in Brooklyn who hoped to find some resolution. The man who had attacked her had previously been charged with misdemeanor assault. He had skipped a court date and as a result had been issued a bench warrant, which led to his arrest in May. In custody for missing his appearance, he was shown the picture that Laura had taken of him after the attack. He was asked if he recognized the man in the photo. He did. Only because he identified himself could the case proceed.

Laura’s assailant has been detained at Rikers ever since. It is an outcome that neither she nor the prosecutors she has been in contact with see as ideal. The man had been living in a homeless shelter, officials said, and he struggled with mental instability. Had he been charged with felony assault on the grounds of the photographic evidence last fall, he would have had a good chance of being remanded to a diversion program, where he could have been given the help he presumably needs, months ago.

Here was a case in which someone dangerous to others (and potentially to himself) was kept on the streets not out of deference to progressive criminal justice politics but rather because of a stubborn insistence on what seem like benighted protocols in the face of stronger evidence and the reality that victims’ identification of suspects is notoriously unreliable.

As these recent assault cases go forward — cases in which, Chief Kenny, has said often involve men struggling with mental illness — the question of whether the accused is charged with misdemeanor versus felony assault becomes quite significant. The second charge is obviously more serious, coming with the risk of more severe punishment. Working to bring a felony charge against a mentally ill person might not seem in the vein of reform, but because felony assault cases are brought in State Supreme Court rather than criminal court, they allow for the far greater possibility of landing the accused in a mental health program over prison. So in another baffling aspect to the system, some are left to hope for the “worst.”
 
A precinct lineup today is nothing like the familiar scene in police procedurals. Five weeks after her attack, Laura, a successful artist in her 50s (who asked that I not use her full name because her case is ongoing), was given a set of photographs selected by an algorithm. ... Any other characteristic she might have registered about her attacker, like his carriage or the way he held his hands, became meaningless.
Lol. This "algorithm" is almost certainly a Prog activist disaster of rich sheltered women and spiteful dinduishas, whose entire goal is minimizing conviction rates for DEI violence.

Laura’s assailant has been detained at Rikers ever since. It is an outcome that neither she nor the prosecutors she has been in contact with see as ideal. ... Had he been charged with felony assault on the grounds of the photographic evidence last fall, he would have had a good chance of being remanded to a diversion program, where he could have been given the help he presumably needs, months ago.
Clearly the assaults are not violent or frequent enough, if even their Prog victims believe there should be no actual consequences. NYC deserves defunding of whatever remains of their police.
 
Had he been charged with felony assault on the grounds of the photographic evidence last fall, he would have had a good chance of being remanded to a diversion program, where he could have been given the help he presumably needs, months ago.
cases in which, Chief Kenny, has said often involve men struggling with mental illness
Working to bring a felony charge against a mentally ill person might not seem in the vein of reform
because felony assault cases are brought in State Supreme Court rather than criminal court, they allow for the far greater possibility of landing the accused in a mental health program over prison
in case you hadn't guessed it already, yes this is a bughiver white woman. white wimmins and simping for violent niggers, name a more iconic duo
Ginia-Bellafante.jpg
 
Had he been charged with felony assault on the grounds of the photographic evidence last fall, he would have had a good chance of being remanded to a diversion program, where he could have been given the help he presumably needs, months ago.
A diversion program? Diverting him to where, the streets? I assume after slapping a bottle of lithium he won't take into his hands...
 
WHY WON'T SOMEONE DO SOMETHING?*



*but not something racist or sexist or dehumanizing or violent or extreme or prejudicial or insensitive or unethical or chauvinistic or patriotic or "law and order" or mean or impartial or uncaring or unsympathetic or
 
The only "help" the attackers need is trip to a mental institution .

Aren't these types of people the whole reason why the concept of prison was invented in the first place? It's partially a deterrent sure, but I think most societies recognize (or used to) that there will always be some people who just need to be warehoused somewhere because they cannot or will not reign in their retarded chimpanzee behavior and will always pose unwarranted danger to innocent people, but it'd set a bad precedent to kill them. Mental institutions used to be the exact same deal but the only difference is you didn't actually have to do anything really fucked up before being thrown in there. It's always been a polite fiction imo to claim most people in there were put away to "help them" rather than it being in the interest of their family members or society in general.

I understand why deinstitutionalization had to happen because of how flagrantly the process was abused, but the current year "mental health awareness" shit where there are no moral failings or bad habits, only diseases and disorders which are medical conditions warranting endless accommodation akin to providing wheelchair ramps per the ADA, is legitimate fucking cancer. On one end you have the naive bleeding hearts whose "depression&anxiety" is cured with self-care and a retard therapist blowing smoke up their ass a few hours a week making policy, not understanding that approach won't cure low-IQ psychopathic behavior by violent homeless niggers with FAS and shit. And on the other hand you have shitty people more than happy to take an easy out if someone is offering. It's peak smoothbrain retardation to blame the involvement of police for the laughable ineffectiveness of what passes for "mental health care", and if someone regurgitates the line about defunding the police and sending social workers and therapists to calls instead, I enthusiastically support shoving them unarmed with no police backup to talk reason into every violent raving bum being sexually aggressive towards commuters or having a crack-fueled meltdown threatening to kill people who tell them no after demanding money.
 
Faced with a “lineup” of headshots, she was unable to identify her assailant with any confidence. This bothered her, she told me, precisely because she was a painter in the realist tradition who prided herself on an adept eye for physical detail.
The ideal article should read:
While there was a police investigation, the suspect was readily apparent as they were identified in the morgue by the victim. Apart for the physical and clothing description, the victim identified the suspect by the two gunshot wounds to the upper torso in addition to the two more gunshot wounds to the suspects head. The suspect was pronounced dead at the scene.
 
WHY WON'T SOMEONE DO SOMETHING?*
*but not something racist or sexist or dehumanizing or violent or extreme or prejudicial or insensitive or unethical or chauvinistic or patriotic or "law and order" or mean or impartial or uncaring or unsympathetic or
In one of the recent "random" DEI attacks on a Manhattan woman, one of the local pols who heads their Stronk Womyn's Caucus kvetched online about no bystanders stepping in, for which she was rightfully spammed with Daniel Penny memes.

But even her complaint was of the effeminate Prog variety: "Why aren't men calling this out?" Longhoused NYC men were supposed to nag, shame, and finger-wag the diversity attacker, maybe report him to Faceberg HR, and if they got stabbed, shot, or AIDS-infected, well that's just a tragedy that shows we need mo' money fo' dem programs.

Physically stop the violent attack and she'd be right there calling you oppressor and demanding felony charges.
 
The only "help" the attackers need is trip to a mental institution .
What they need are beatings, savage and often. The older I get, the more I understand why the punishments of the past used to be so severe. I think we need some old-fashioned justice back, the more painful the better. Pain is the best teacher.
 
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