NYC Democrat demands firings after violent criminal is released early, then arrested in triple slashing

Rep. Ritchie Torres blasts Gov. Kathy Hochul, Mayor Eric Adams and NYC Department of Correction for multilayered failures that set violent madman loose.

NYC Democrat demands firings after violent criminal is released early, then arrested in triple slashing

U.S. Rep. Ritchie Torres, a Democrat from the Bronx, blasted New York leaders over the weekend for failed criminal justice reforms that enabled "a homicidal rampage" in broad daylight last week, resulting in the murders of three innocent people at the hands of a violent, mentally ill man released from custody early.

"The bureaucrat in DOC [Department of Correction] who authorized the early release of Ramon should be fired," Torres wrote in a fiery letter to Gov. Kathy Hochul and New York Mayor Eric Adams, both Democrats. "Those who cannot be entrusted with public safety should no longer be employed by the people of New York."

He added that "layers upon layers of government failure" enabled Ramon Rivera, an eight-time criminal whose most recent stint behind bars involved a transfer to the psych ward at Bellevue Hospital, where he attacked a correction officer.

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He blasted Hochul last week as "the new Joe Biden" and urged her to get out of the way if Democrats want to maintain their grip on power in the Empire State.

"She may be in denial about the depth of her vulnerabilities as a Democratic nominee," he wrote on X. "A Democratic incumbent who is less popular in New York than Donald Trump is in grave danger of losing to a Republican in 2026."

Torres took aim at Hochul again this week, along with Mayor Eric Adams, writing that "Enough is enough," and that criminals in New York aren't facing consequences.

Police last week arrested Rivera, a 51-year-old homeless man, for allegedly fatally knifing three people in separate Manhattan stabbings on Nov. 18.

Torres blasted the city's DOC as "the worst offender" in Rivera's case after it released him from custody four months early for "good behavior" despite the Bellevue assault, which he wasn't even punished for, according to Torres.

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Read the letter:

"These tragedies are preventable but neither the city nor the state seem to possess the political will to prevent them, despite having the tools to do so," Torres wrote. "The state refuses to grant the mayor the legal authority he needs to prevent dangerous people from roaming the streets. The city refuses to hold DOC accountable for the early release of a demonstrably dangerous criminal who went on a stabbing spree. The end result is incompetence that is not only destructive but deadly for New Yorkers."

Adams also placed some of the blame for the stabbing spree on Hochul, calling on Albany to give city police greater power "to institutionalize people" during a news briefing last week.

Homelessness, mental illness and violent recidivism each continue to plague New York City.

Two tourists were stabbed last week in random attacks, one a 55-year-old from Denmark who was knifed on the Upper West Side, the other a 42-year-old Italian slashed on the hand. Police arrested a 25-year-old Manhattan man for the first attack after his mother turned him in, and they were looking for a woman in connection with the second, according to FOX 5 New York

SUSPECT IN CUSTODY AFTER 'UNPROVOKED' NEW YORK CITY STABBING SPREE LEAVES 3 PEOPLE DEAD: POLICE

The stabbings come as Daniel Penny, a 26-year-old Marine veteran studying architecture in the city, is on trial for the chokehold death of another homeless man, Jordan Neely, who died after Penny grabbed him during an outburst of shouted death threats on a subway car.

The defense rested its case Friday by revealing Neely had an open warrant out for his arrest the day he died.

Torres has a history of moderate stances and opposes the left wing of his party for its support of pro-Hamas protesters, soft-on-crime policies and other "ivory-towered nonsense" that he argued cost Democrats on Election Day.

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