Campus

Woke Brooklyn College bans campus police from carrying guns

Brooklyn College’s woke president has banned campus police from carrying guns and during a recent active shooter threat the school was forced to call for help from other CUNY schools which still allow armed patrols.   

Top administrator Michelle Anderson, formerly a Yale Law school professor who specialized in rape law, yanked the Glock-19 pistols from peace officers on the Flatbush-Midwood campus in early October last year after a school official said she was ‘triggered’ by the sight of a female campus security officer wearing a firearm. 

‘It is all somewhat ironic because this woman peace officer had been personally authorized to carry her Glock on school grounds by Anderson herself several years ago,’ a source told DailyMail.com. 

On February 3, the school issued an ‘active shooter’ threat and at least 10 peace officers from five other institutions were called to respond to the shooting while on-campus security were dispatched to collect their locked up guns from lockers. 

While the threat was not acted on, the new edict raises questions of how the school can ensure the safety of students on campus in a city where gun crime has risen 30 percent year-on-year, according to the latest NYPD crime statistics released on Wednesday. 

In Brooklyn south alone, where the college is located, gun crimes have risen a staggering 111.1 percent year-on-year. 

Brooklyn College's woke president Michelle Anderson has banned campus police from carrying guns and during a recent active shooter threat the school was forced to call for help from other CUNY colleges which still allow armed patrols

Brooklyn College’s woke president Michelle Anderson has banned campus police from carrying guns and during a recent active shooter threat the school was forced to call for help from other CUNY colleges which still allow armed patrols

On February 3, Brooklyn College issued an ‘active shooter’ threat and at least 10 peace officers from four other institutions were called to respond to the shooting while on-campus security were dispatched to collected their locked up guns from lockers

On February 3, Brooklyn College sent an emergency alert to other CUNY schools where they requested help of at least two armed peace officers after an active shooter threat

On February 3, Brooklyn College sent an emergency alert to other CUNY schools where they requested help of at least two armed peace officers after an active shooter threat

Crime in New York City is up 41.65{22377624ce51d186a25e6affb44d268990bf1c3186702884c333505e71f176b1} year-on-year. In Brooklyn South, where Brooklyn College is located, gun crimes have risen 111.1 percent year-on-year

Crime in New York City is up 41.65{22377624ce51d186a25e6affb44d268990bf1c3186702884c333505e71f176b1} year-on-year. In Brooklyn South, where Brooklyn College is located, gun crimes have risen 111.1 percent year-on-year

At least nine institutions of the 25 under CUNY control continue to allow armed patrol guards, including City College of New York in Manhattan, Bronx Community College, Kingsborough Community College and Staten Island College. 

Earlier this month, two unarmed campus cops at Virginia’s private Bridgewater College were shot dead when a former track star, 27, opened fire on them. 

Nine CUNY institutions allow peace officers to carry firearms on campus 

At least nine institutions of the 25 under CUNY control continue to allow armed patrol guards, they include: 

– City College of New York, Manhattan

– Bronx Community College

– Kingsborough Community College, Brooklyn

– Lehman College, The Bronx 

– Hostos Community College, The Bronx

– Guttman Community College, Manhattan

– Medgar Evers College, Brooklyn

– Queensborough Community College, Queens

– Staten Island College 

John Painter, 55, and J.J. Jefferson, 48, were gunned down after confronting a suspicious man stalking near Memorial Hall on the campus of the small college in the Shenandoah Valley at 1:20 p.m. 

The suspected shooter was identified as Alexander Wyatt Campbell, 27, who fled the scene before being hunted down at a nearby waterway about 40 minutes later. Multiple firearms allegedly belonging to Campbell were recovered, with weapons found both on and off campus, officials said. 

Shortly after the October ‘no gun’ policy at Brooklyn College was instituted, Anderson participated in a Zoom meeting with campus administrators, faculty and students with the goal of revamping campus safety by eliminating police involvement and without armed security .

‘She is all about wokeness,’ a CUNY campus police supervisor, who asked not to be named for fear of retribution, said. 

Shortly after Anderson’s disarming edict was handed down, on October 21, there was a shooting just off campus in which four people were wounded.

‘Please be cautious when coming to or leaving the Campus,’ a text alert to students and staff said. 

Although the shooting was off campus, the warning underscored the hazards of the urban campus, especially in light of the city’s rising crime rate.

The union officials who represent the campus cops acknowledged that there was a ‘departure’ in status for their members, but offered a guarded response.

‘Although it is the prerogative of the college president not to utilize the full measure of protocols within the campus security system set up by CUNY, all is well until something bad happens,’ Gregory Floyd, president of Local 237 of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, said.

‘Then, the responsibility of that decision also falls on the president — and CUNY as well, for allowing such a departure.’

Each armed peace officer earns about $50,000 annually and has undergone 50 hours of firearms training, the source said.

No Brooklyn College students were hurt in the off-campus shooting, but other colleges have not been so lucky when it comes to violent crime.

On December 11, 2019, Barnard College student, Tessa Majors, 18, died after she was stabbed by three teenagers during an armed robbery in nearby Morningside Park

On December 11, 2019, Barnard College student, Tessa Majors, 18, died after she was stabbed by three teenagers during an armed robbery in nearby Morningside Park

More recently, in early December 2021, a Columbia University graduate student, Davide Giri, 30, a Ph.D. candidate in computer science who was attending the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, was stabbed to death

More recently, in early December 2021, a Columbia University graduate student, Davide Giri, 30, a Ph.D. candidate in computer science who was attending the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, was stabbed to death

Giri was stabbed to death about two blocks from his apartment building, not far from the college's Upper Manhattan campus

Giri was stabbed to death about two blocks from his apartment building, not far from the college’s Upper Manhattan campus

On December 11, 2019, Barnard College student, Tessa Majors, 18, died after she was fatally stabbed by three teenagers during an armed robbery in nearby Morningside Park.

More recently, in early December 2021, a Columbia University graduate student, Davide Giri, 30, a Ph.D. candidate in computer science who was attending the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, was stabbed to death about two blocks from his apartment building, not far from the college’s Upper Manhattan campus.

And this year marks the 15th anniversary of a mass shooting on the campus of Virginia Tech in which 32 students were gunned down by one of their classmates. 

About 600 peace officers are employed by CUNY throughout the entire university system, but only about 100 are authorized to carry guns while patrolling those schools that permit an armed security presence. Most are in uniform, although a small number of armed campus cops do occasionally patrol in plainclothes.

Despite Floyd’s statement and claims by multiple sources who spoke to DailyMail.com, a spokeswoman for Brooklyn College insisted that armed CUNY peace officer have never been allowed to patrol the campus while armed, but keep their firearms locked in a campus security office.

‘The safety of the students, staff, and faculty in our campus community is of the utmost priority at Brooklyn College and our excellent public safety team ensures this every day.

‘Public safety officers have never been permitted to carry a weapon while on campus patrol. Weapons are secured and brought out in emergency situations. Authorized administrators have always kept firearms on their person while in their secured offices, but they do not patrol the campus.’

One veteran CUNY security official sharply disputed the accuracy of the Brooklyn College spokesman’s statement.

‘It’s an absolute lie that authorized Brooklyn College peace officers were previously not allowed to patrol while armed,’ the official said.

Joseph Giacalone, a retired NYPD sergeant and author who is an adjunct professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, was flabbergasted by the decision to strip guns from trained law enforcement personnel for no discernible reason tied to campus security objectives.

He suggested that Anderson, Brooklyn College’s president — who enjoys a chauffeured vehicle driven by a campus security peace officer, as do all senior-level CUNY executives — was advocating an indefensible policy that was not rooted in public safety.

‘Once again, we see those with school-owned vehicles and private chauffeurs making security decisions for the rest of us.

‘If Brooklyn College thinks their students will be safer with no cops around, go ahead. God forbid something happens. I wouldn’t want to be on the wrong end of that lawsuit,’ he noted.

Joseph Giacalone, a retired NYPD sergeant and author who is an adjunct professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, was flabbergasted by the decision to strip guns from trained law enforcement personnel for no discernible reason tied to campus security objectives. He said: 'If Brooklyn College thinks their students will be safer with no cops around, go ahead. God forbid something happens. I wouldn't want to be on the wrong end of that lawsuit.'

Joseph Giacalone, a retired NYPD sergeant and author who is an adjunct professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, was flabbergasted by the decision to strip guns from trained law enforcement personnel for no discernible reason tied to campus security objectives. He said: ‘If Brooklyn College thinks their students will be safer with no cops around, go ahead. God forbid something happens. I wouldn’t want to be on the wrong end of that lawsuit.’

Giacalone added that ‘criminals are opportunists and if they know cops are not welcome on campus, they will take advantage of it. It’s only a matter of time. One would think that after two students [from Columbia and Barnard] have been murdered . . . you would make your campus more secure, not less.’

Forcing campus cops to rush for their guns during an emergency — or responding while unarmed — can pose unanticipated dangers, he insisted.

‘The confusion this can cause during an emergency or police response is off the charts,’ said.

On October 7, less than a week after the gun policy change, Anderson participated in a Zoom meeting ‘to develop a new CUNY-wide public safety plan’ attended by approximately a dozen CUNY officials and some CUNY students. 

‘Brooklyn College has stated that the impetus for a new strategic plan [on campus security] are the Black Lives Matter and George Floyd movements,’ the source quoted Anderson saying.

‘These two experiences must be incorporated into any new operational plan and any new rebranding efforts of CUNY public safety,’ Anderson added, according to the source.

She sought to do so without police involvement.

‘Brooklyn College has recommended that the relationship with the NYPD and CUNY public safety be eliminated and ‘policing’ be removed from the CUNY public safety mission, its practices and tactics,’ Anderson stated, according to the source.

A source told DailyMail.com that Brooklyn College's new rule barring peace officers from carrying guns was sparked by the BLM protests after George Floyd's murder

A source told DailyMail.com that Brooklyn College’s new rule barring peace officers from carrying guns was sparked by the BLM protests after George Floyd’s murder

'Brooklyn College has stated that the impetus for a new strategic plan [on campus security] are the Black Lives Matter and George Floyd movements,' the source quoted Anderson saying.

‘Brooklyn College has stated that the impetus for a new strategic plan [on campus security] are the Black Lives Matter and George Floyd movements,’ the source quoted Anderson saying.

The college spokeswoman denied that there was any friction between cops and the college.

‘Brooklyn College values its relationship with the NYPD and will continue to work closely with it to keep our campus community safe,’ she said.

The policy change, however, seems to be a continuation of tensions between law enforcement and the administrators at the college.

In November 2017, the New York Post reported how Brooklyn College officials barred NYPD cops from walking on the campus while armed so they could use the bathroom — incidents that purportedly ‘triggered’ some nervous students who felt threatened by the prospect of seeing cops with guns in their midst.

Donald Wenz, a retired NYPD captain who currently serves as Brooklyn College’s director of public safety, told the student newspaper, The Excelsior, that he was trying to keep New York’s Finest out of sight.

Police were only allowed to use a dirty bathroom in the isolated West End Building that had a broken toilet with a stained seat and no soap or paper towels, the Post reported.

Joseph Tirella, spokesman for CUNY, did not respond to a DailyMail.com request for comment.

Wenz declined to comment. Hector Batista, CUNY’s CEO and André Brown, the university’s director of public safety — both of whom attended the recent Zoom meeting in which Anderson spoke — did not return phone calls.

Giacalone warned that the Brooklyn College president may be playing with fire.

‘Any policy that limits their certified armed personnel from carrying their weapons while on the campus is only inviting trouble. When mass shootings are unfortunately common in and around educational facilities, one would think that this plan is short-sighted. Even more so, have there been complaints of misconduct or unlawful use of weapons by the staff? If not, I need to ask, why this now?’ he said.

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