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Officers Stabbed, Shot in NYC Amid Anti-Police Rhetoric

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A New York City police officer on an anti-looting patrol was ambushed Wednesday in Brooklyn by a man who walked up behind him and stabbed him in the neck, police said, setting off a struggle in which the assailant was shot and two other officers suffered gunshot wounds to their hands.

The bloodshed happened just before midnight, in the hours after an 8 p.m. curfew that was intended to quell days of unrest over the death of George Floyd in Minnesota.

All three injured officers were expected to recover. The man who attacked them was shot multiple times and hospitalized in critical condition, Police Commissioner Dermot Shea said.

“What we know at this point and time is that it appears to be a completely, cowardly, despicable, unprovoked attack on a defenseless police officer, and thank God we aren’t planning a funeral right now,” Shea said.

It was one of several attacks on police officers in recent days, he noted, including ones in which a driver plowed into a sergeant trying to stop looting in the Bronx and a lieutenant was struck in the helmet by a brick during a brawl with protesters in Manhattan.

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The attack shows the difficult balance police must strike, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said.

“They have an impossible job, and they need support,” Cuomo said on Long Island News Radio.

“They’re out there, they’re getting hurt, last night again, they are the best, they are the best, and God bless them because I don’t know that I would want to do the job that they’re doing now.”

New York City has been roiled by days of protests over Floyd’s death, and the spot in Brooklyn where Wednesday night’s attack took place is just a block from where demonstrators and police engaged days ago in an hours-long standoff, during which a police car was burned and rioters were beaten with batons.

Are protesters and rioters wrongly directing their anger toward police officers who have nothing to do with the death of George Floyd?

There were peaceful marches and protests throughout the day Wednesday, but police moved in to break them up when the curfew took effect.

Mayor Bill de Blasio, who appeared with Shea outside the hospital where the officers were being treated, called it a “very tough night” and lauded the officers for their bravery.

Shea said the man casually approached two officers stationed in the area to prevent pilfering around 11:45 p.m. and stabbed one of them.

Officers a short distance away heard gunshots, rushed to the scene and saw the man with a gun in his hand, believed to have been taken from one of the officers, Shea said. The responding officers then opened fire.

The commissioner said 22 shell casings were recovered.

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Police Benevolent Association President Patrick Lynch blamed the stabbing on anti-police rhetoric during the protests.

“Are we surprised? Are we surprised we’re here in the hospital again? Did we doubt because of the rhetoric we’re hearing, the anti-police rhetoric that’s storming our streets, are we surprised that we got this call? I’m not. We said it’s going to happen,” he said.

William F. Sweeney Jr., head of the FBI’s New York office, condemned the “cowardly attack on the NYPD” in a statement posted to Twitter.

Sweeney said the bureau would use “every federal statute available to hold the perpetrator accountable.”


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