Mayor Eric Adams on Monday praised the controversial NYPD unit that has taken heat for its handling of 2020 protests, as police higher-ups continue to dodge City Council inquiries into it.
“I think the [Strategic Response Group] … [is] an appropriate tool used effectively, just as we use our other agency apparatus to keep bringing down these [crime] numbers,” Hizzoner told “CBS News New York.” “That’s where these [declining] numbers come from. Proper policing, not heavy-handed policing, is moving us in the right direction.”
Adams also defended the NYPD’s no-show at City Council hearings into the unit’s handling of the 2020 protests, claiming there are legal hurdles that prevent the Police Department from sending reps to speak publicly about the unit.
“We always participated in the hearings” when allowed, Adams said. “You can see the number of hearings our agencies have participated in throughout last year, and we’ll continue to do so.”
Mayor Eric Adams said the SRG is an “appropriate tool.” CBSThe unit, which has been tasked with terrorism and protest response, came under fire for the way it handled demonstrations in the wake of George Floyd’s death.
It was also tapped last year to provide additional support for 20 of the most crime-ridden city precincts.
The City Council has been trying to get police brass to testify before its Public Safety Committee on allegations of abuse by the unit during the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, but the NYPD has twice requested that its appearance be postponed.
The controversial unit faced blowback from its 2020 George Floyd protest response. Stephen Yang
The Strategic Response Group responds to protests and terrorism threats in the city. Getty ImagesPolice brass were asked to attend the hearings a third time — at a session last week — but continued to avoid appearing.
The same day, news broke that the city would pay out a total of $6 million to the protesters who were kettled and beaten by police during the infamous Mott Haven demonstrations.
The settlement amounts to $21,500 for each of the more than 300 protesters who were confined, with some beaten or pepper-sprayed, by NYPD officers in the Bronx.
Three SRG cops involved in the response had at least one substantiated civilian complaint of wrongdoing, according to sources. The squad’s highly touted bike unit appeared to be involved in the June 4 response, the sources said.






