Crime Prevention Message from Assemblyman Joe DeStefano


Crime Prevention Month | Office of Assemblyman Joe DeStefano

National Crime Prevention Month represents an opportunity for individuals and organizations of every type to recommit to making our communities safer and to show our appreciation for the dedicated law enforcement agents who tirelessly work toward those goals every day. During October, government agencies, community groups, businesses, schools and more focus on ways to educate individuals about crime prevention and promote awareness about how crime impacts victims and damages our communities.

My colleagues and I in the Assembly take crime prevention very seriously. One of our key priorities each year is to promote legislation that protects residents and those who risk their well-being to keep us safe. Our commitment to crime victims and law enforcement is something I am extremely proud of; I have always believed the most important role of government is to keep those it represents safe.

Considering our substantial commitment to protecting the state, we have worked hard on programs and policies to that end. For example, our recently launched Task Force on Human Trafficking has already garnered considerable feedback in an area of growing concern in New York. With the insights we’ve gained during recent forums, we have been able to begin crafting legislation to protect vulnerable individuals from the terrors of forced sex work and abuse.

We’ve also looked closely at fixing some of the chief issues driving crime in New York like the near elimination of bail, numerous anti-police reforms, a massive influx of migrants and misguided laws like “Raise the Age.” The way the state mitigates and prosecutes crime has drifted too far from the common-sense, accepted practices governing most of the country. Here, we treat criminals better than cops, and that has to stop.

In addition, we have also offered a number of ways to protect our law enforcement agents already fighting an uphill battle in New York. We have written legislation:

Making life imprisonment without parole mandatory for defendants convicted of murder in the first or second degree if the victim is a police officer, specified peace officer, first responder or correctional officer.

Designating offenses against law enforcement, emergency medical services personnel and/or firefighters as hate crimes, thereby increasing the penalty for the offense.

Allowing judges to consider the safety of any person or the community when determining pre-trial release for a criminal suspect.

Reinstating the death penalty in New York state and making it an available sentence for those convicted of the intentional killing of police officers, specified peace officers and first responders, among others.

During October, consider ways you can better educate yourself about the impact crime has, especially on vulnerable individuals like children, the elderly and those in the disability community. Also, consider taking time to show appreciation for the individuals who keep us safe every day. Together, we can find ways to strengthen the fabric of our state and our nation through education, compassion and commitment to protecting one another. Thanks.

Daily Feed

Local

Investors Throw Millions at Suffolk

The sale of $350 million in Tax Anticipation Notes at 2.94% and $46.4 million in Refunding Serial Bonds at 2.66% was reported by Comptroller John Kennedy. He attributes the impressive number of bidders to the county’s improved credit ratings which resulted in healthy competition, and significant cost savings for the residents of Suffolk County.


Local

History Comes Alive at Military Museum

The museum is the dream of the nearby Rocky Point VFW Post 6249 membership, whose stories are befitting of the many heroes depicted in the gallery’s hallowed halls. There’s museum advisor Joe Cognitore, the post’s commander, whose Army service in Vietnam earned him a Bronze Star with a “V” for Valor.


Local

Fort Sumter Pilgrimage Explores Family’s Civil War Legacy

Following the War of 1812 with Britain, President Andrew Jackson realized the need to strengthen the new nation’s coastal defenses, especially to protect the Atlantic entrance to Charleston, the south’s busiest port. Millions of tons of Massachusetts granite created an island at the confluence of the Ashley and the Cooper rivers where none had been before