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Adams announces removal of over 2,200 illegal firearms from City streets
New York City Mayor Eric Adams and New York City Police Department (NYPD) Commissioner Jessica S. Tisch on Tuesday, June 3, announced that the NYPD has already removed more than 2,200 illegal firearms from New York City streets since the beginning of 2025 — bringing the total number of firearms seized since the start of Adams administration to 22,016.
Adams said the significant firearm seizure figure represents more than 3,000 additional illegal guns removed from New York City streets compared to the three years before he came into office, between 2019 and 2021 — all leading to a 53.9 percent decrease in shootings and a 41.4 percent decrease in homicides under Adams’ leadership.
Tuesday’s announcement comes during National Gun Violence Awareness Month — a time to honor victims of gun violence and call for meaningful action to end it.
“This National Gun Violence Awareness Month, as we honor and remember victims of gun crimes, we are making good on our promise to eradicate gun violence from our city, once and for all,” said Mayor Adams. “Since the beginning of this year alone, the NYPD has already removed more than 2,200 illegal firearms off our streets — weapons that can no longer threaten the safety of our neighborhoods, our families, or our children.
“Each illegal gun we take off our streets is saving lives and damming up one more river that leads to the sea of violence,” he added. “And, as a result, last month, we saw record decreases in shootings and homicides — helping lead to the lowest number of shootings and homicides year-to-date in recorded history.
“Thanks to the tireless work of the NYPD, and the upstream and downstream investments our administration is making, New York City remains the safest big city in America,” the mayor continued.
“Today, the mayor announced an unprecedented achievement: the lowest number of shootings and homicides in recorded history over the first five months of the year,” said NYPD Commissioner Tisch. “Results like this never happen by accident, and certainly not at a time when the state’s criminal justice laws have made a revolving door out of our criminal justice system.
“Here’s how your mayor and your NYPD cops delivered the safest January–May for gun violence in New York City’s history: three-plus years of relentlessly going after guns on our streets and a data-driven policing strategy that puts more cops in the right places at the right times to do what they do better than anyone else in the world,” she added. “We will not let up. Our summer violence reduction plan is bold and aggressive and designed to continue driving the same historic safety gains.”
Adams said the NYPD is one of New York City’s first lines of defense against gun violence, stating that officers “continue to save countless lives every day by continuing to take illegal firearms off the streets.”
The mayor said last year marked the fourth-lowest year in recorded history for shooting incidents citywide, and from January through May 2025, shootings and homicides declined to historic lows, with homicides falling 27.3 percent to 112 homicides, and shooting incidents plummeting to 264, or declining 20 percent.
In May 2025, Adams said shooting incidents decreased by 38.6 percent compared to the previous year, representing 41 fewer shooting victims, following a decrease of 23.1 percent in shootings in the first quarter of 2025 (January to March) — the lowest number of shooting incidents in New York City’s recorded history for any quarter.
Overall, the mayor said major crimes also continue to trend downward.
In May 2025, he said there was a 4.9 percent decrease in major crime citywide, led by double digit declines in murder, which plummeted 45.5 percent, and burglary, which was down 12.5 percent.
Adams said significant declines continued in robbery, felony assault, and grand larceny, resulting in 3,128 fewer victims of major crime in New York City so far this year, when compared to the same period last year.
“Every firearm taken off a city street is only one part of the equation — ensuring meaningful consequences for the small percentage of New Yorkers who possess illegal firearms and commit violence against one another,” Adam said.
“The 2019 state legislative changes to discovery were necessary to improve the fairness of the criminal justice system, however, some of the consequences have crippled the system, leading to case dismissals for technical violations and increased case processing times, including for firearm charges,” he added.
“Prior to discovery reform, local district attorneys declined to prosecute or dismissed 32 percent of non-violent felony cases in New York City — that number increased to 51 percent in 2023,” he continued.
Out of the more than 22,000 guns seized since the beginning of the Adams administration, nearly 1,500 of them have been identified as ghost guns — un-serialized, and, therefore. untraceable, firearms that are put together by components purchased either as a kit or as separate pieces or printed through 3-D printers, and that are fully functioning as fully-finished, serialized firearms.
“These untraceable firearms often end up in the hands of criminals, as well as underage purchasers,” Adams said.
He said incidents involving ghost guns reflect “a dangerously escalating trend — one that the NYPD is leading the charge against.”
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