 https://nypost.com/2020/07/12/nypd-c...p-bronx-crowd/
https://twitter.com/SBANYPD/status/1...571154432?s=20
  
NYPD cop placed in headlock while trying to break up Bronx crowd, video shows
https://nypost.com/2020/07/12/nypd-c...p-bronx-crowd/
https://twitter.com/SBANYPD/status/1...571154432?s=20
  
NYPD cop placed in headlock while trying to break up Bronx crowd, video shows            
 
                                          By 
Joe Marino
                             
                          July 12, 2020 | 12:59am                | 
Updated  COREY JOHNSON your STUPID law is about to be  signed by NYC STUPID Mayor it’s time you both take your community input  & grab these perps yourself. @IngrahamAngle @RealCandaceO @CoreyinNYC @NYCMayor @TuckerCarlson @JudgeJeanine @w_terrence @charliekirk11 @JCats2013 @kristyswanson pic.twitter.com/lHBqWI89st
 — SBA (@SBANYPD) July 11, 2020
A pair of NYPD cops simply wanted to disperse a crowd gathered on a hot July night at a Bronx street corner.
 But as 
this disturbing video shows, in an instant the two officers found themselves surrounded by angry, taunting bystanders.
 And as the crowd cheered, a man they were trying to arrest put one of  the two officers in a headlock — one of the very maneuvers they  themselves will, under a 
new City Council bill, soon face misdemeanor charges for using.
 “F–k him up! F–k him up!” an unidentified man who filmed the lawless  encounter shouts as the suspect wraps his right arm around one of the  cops’ necks.
 The dangerous grip lasts a chilling four seconds, video from the July 1 melee at Grand Concourse and Morris Avenue shows.
 Then the captive cop falls to the ground. At that point, the suspect breaks the headlock and runs off.
 “They smoked you, p—y!” the man filming is then heard taunting. “You just got smoked, p—y!”
 The video came to light Saturday when it was 
tweeted by the Sergeants Benevolent Association.
 The union used the video to vent its fury over a City Council bill now 
awaiting Mayor Bill de Blasio’s signature  that will make it a misdemeanor offense for cops to use any maneuver  that restricts a suspect’s airflow by compressing the neck.
 Sitting, kneeling or standing on a suspect’s chest or back in a  manner compressing their breathing would face the same penalty — up to a  year in jail.
 “COREY JOHNSON your STUPID law is about to be signed by NYC STUPID  Mayor it’s time you both take your community input & grab these  perps yourself,” read the SBA tweet, posted with the video.
 “Putting a cop in a headlock could mean a death sentence if they lose  control of their gun,” an outraged law enforcement source told The Post  in response to the video.
 “A cop in a headlock can’t maintain weapons control.”
 The cop who’d been put in a headlock that night suffered a gash to the head that required staples, sources said.
 The NYPD knows who the “headlocker” is — he is a known gang member  who turned himself in a week later to the 46th Precinct, where the brawl  happened, a law enforcement source said.
 He has a long rap sheet, according to police sources. He’s been  arrested 11 times for charges including gang assault, criminal  possession of a loaded firearm and robbery, amongst others.
 With him at the precinct was his lawyer and a copy of the video,  which the lawyer believed exonerated his client, as it also shows the  cop lunging at the suspect before the grappling began, the source said.
 But the video does not show what caused the cop to lunge — which was  the suspect allegedly kicking down the street a body camera that had  fallen off the uniform of one of the cops.
 The suspect wound up released without charges pending further investigation by the Bronx DA’s office, sources said.
 “The NYPD was disappointed that the individual was not charged initially,” an NYPD spokesperson said.
  “The violence against the police officer speaks for itself. We are  now in discussions with the District Attorney regarding the case.”
                                                                                                                                                   
                                                                                             City Hall already walking back mayor's plan for NYPD, community leaders
                                                                                                                                                                                                                               City Hall already walking back mayor's plan for NYPD, community leaders                            
                                                                       
                 Multiple law enforcement sources allege this account of what happened that night:
 The two cops — both of them Neighborhood Coordination Officers,  tasked with tackling quality of life issues — were part of an NYPD  initiative to discourage outdoor crowds, in hopes of minimizing the  multiple people getting injured during individual shootings.
 When the crowd hanging out at the Bronx intersection ignored their  instruction to disperse, the cops began writing a summons for a  double-parked car at the scene.
 The car owner then arrived at the scene and began complaining, and  insisting, “Well, now that you wrote the summons, I can park here for  hours and hours.”
 Told that’s not how it works, the car owner became “combative,” sources said.
 It was while the two were trying to handcuff the belligerent car owner that the crowd began taunting the officers.
 “He act gangsta because he got a badge and a gun,” the man filming is  heard saying on the video. “F–k outta here. Y’all n—-s is p—y, bro.”
 At some point, one of the cops’ body cameras is knocked to the  pavement, only to then be kicked away by the man whose confrontation  with the pair allegedly ended in a headlock.
Despite police concern, de Blasio has stated he plans to sign the chokehold bill next week.
 “We’re going to do the retraining of officers to address the features of the law,” de Blasio said at a Tuesday news conference.
 “And as with everything in life, we’re going to work hard to make it work.”
 A City Hall rep did not immediately respond to a request for comment late Saturday.
 
Additional reporting by Vincent Barone and Laura Italiano