NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell visited the crime-ridden Stapleton area of Staten Island over the weekend
Photo by Dean Moses
Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell visited a crime-heavy area of Staten Island over the weekend, where she pledged to bring more police resources to the embattled borough in preparation for the summer months.
The Stapleton neighborhood has become a hotspot for crime in the Big Apple in recent months, making it one of the most dangerous areas in the city statistics-wise. The dire situation only a mere ferry ride from the tip of Manhattan became apparent on May 19 when a 13-year-old was fatally shot by a 16-year-old while he was playing in the Stapleton Houses playground.
This tragedy shone a light on the threat facing the borough. Despite murders being down nearly 14% citywide, homicides have skyrocketed year-to-date in Stapletonโs 120th Precinct, up 250% compared to 2022, according to Police Department data. As of May 14, when the most recent data is available, burglaries were up by nearly 79% and robberies by a whopping 118%.

On June 9, top cop Sewell endeavored to put her own boots on the ground, walking the neighborhood and meeting with locals and business owners to see the area for herself and learn from residents first-hand what improvements they would like to see. Beginning at the JCC Gerard Carter Center on Broad Street, Sewell met with locals of all ages, even leaving some inspired.
Fifteen-year-old Tia Mapp was sitting by herself in a room inside the community center when she just so happened to meet Sewell, who was being given a tour by staff. Mapp shook hands with the commissioner, a brief encounter the teen said had a profound effect on her.

โI never saw women in charge, like ever. This is crazy, and sheโs Black,โ Mapp said.
The moment also seemed to move Sewell, who returned to Mapp minutes later to give the young woman a challenge coin, a piece of police memorabilia special to each commissioner and doled…
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