Curfew-defying looters with free rein beat a cop to the ground in a disturbing scene caught on video, set fires on streets and ransacked stores in the Bronx late Monday into early Tuesday.
The chaos finally prompted Mayor Bill de Blasio to dispatch extra police officers to the area, the New York Post reported Tuesday.
“Fordham is on fire,” Uptown Collective tweeted, showing a half dozen fires burning along a trash-strewn Fordham Road in the West Bronx.
“This is an ominous sign familia,” the tweet said, the Post reported. “This is not good for communities of color. Protest is called for but destroying our own community is not. Stay safe.”
The cop being beaten was caught on cellphone video and posted on Twitter by an NYPD police union.
It shows the uniformed officer on the ground as a man attacks him. A second man then runs up and throws an object at the officer. That person runs away as a third man picks up the object and hurls it at the officer. The person who shot the video is heard cursing the police.
The video shows the dazed officer getting to his feet with his gun drawn, holding it down at his side.
"NYPD Cop attacked in the Bronx," the Sergeants Benevolent Association tweeted. "I guess the critics will now say he overreacted. NYPD Cops defend yourselves, you are alone!"
Other video shows dozens of looters racing from a jewelry store as cops pull up close to the fires, according to the Post.
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“How are we destroying our own communities and are ok with it?” Jose Daniel Rojas asked in a tweet with video of the destruction, according to the paper. “There are serious problems we need to address.”
The mayor tweeted early Tuesday that he had “just left the Bronx.”
“Real problems on Fordham Road, also Burnside Avenue,” his tweet said. “Spoke with Councilman Fernando Cabrera about immediate steps to address the situation.
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“Also spoke to Commissioner Shea + Chief Pichardo, who are sending additional help,” de Blasio said.
A few hours later at a morning news briefing, de Blasio called the "vicious attacks" "wholly unacceptable."
He slammed his fist down as he said, "It does not represent the people of this city. Anyone who attacks a police officer attacks all of us. I want to be abundantly clear about that.”
He added, “I was in the Bronx last night and I said I’ve seen the Bronx in its toughest moments and I know the extraordinary strength and goodness of the people of the Bronx. What we saw took place over hours does not represent the people of the Bronx. And the people of the Bronx will not accept it. When a criminal few try to tear down the progress people fought for, for years and decades.”
The looting happened amid protests over the death of George Floyd, who died in police custody May 25 after Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin pinned him down and kneeled on his neck for more than 8 minutes -- an incident caught on cellphone video.
Chauvin has since been charged in Floyd's death. Three other officers at the scene have not been charged but were fired.
Cabrera called on Gov. Andrew Cuomo to activate the National Guard, as in other states, WNBC-TV reported Tuesday.
“Fordham Road is the lifeblood of the West Bronx, providing jobs as well as essential goods and services,” Cabrera said, according to the station. “We are already suffering physically, socially and emotionally from the COVID-19 pandemic. We can’t afford to lose our economic engine."
Cuomo has placed the National Guard on standby but believes the NYPD has the manpower to handle the protests, according to the station.
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WCBS NewsRadio 880 traffic reporter Todd Kaminski tweeted photos showing the looting aftermath shot from his chopper Tuesday morning.
“Heartbreaking scenes of looted stores, littered streets, and shattered dreams on East Fordham Road and Grand Concourse in the Bronx,” Kaminski said.