NEW YORK — New York City extended an 8 p.m. curfew all week as officials struggled Tuesday to stanch destruction and growing complaints that the nation's biggest city was reeling out of control night by night.
After chaos erupted again overnight amid protests over George Floyd’s death — despite an 11 p.m. curfew — Mayor Bill de Blasio doubled down on a citywide curfew but rejected urging from President Donald Trump and an offer from Gov. Andrew Cuomo to bring in the National Guard. Cuomo gave a particularly scathing assessment of the city's response to the unrest, saying authorities had not done their job.
“We’re going to have a tough few days. We’re going to beat it back,” de Blasio, a Democrat, said at a news conference as he announced that an 8 p.m.-to-5 a.m. curfew would remain through Sunday.
As he spoke at City Hall, midtown Manhattan was pocked with smashed storefronts, with Macy's iconic flagship store among those hit. A police sergeant was hospitalized after being hit by a car in the Bronx, where people tread Tuesday between broken-into buildings and a burned-out car on the Grand Concourse, a commercial thoroughfare, wondering aloud why people attacked their neighborhoods.
“This is our community,” Nelson Bauza said as he inspected the damage to his pawn shop. “I have good relationships with people in this community, and to do this, it makes no sense.”
The violence threatened to overshadow the anger over the death of Floyd, a black man who died on May 25 after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed a knee on his neck until he stopped breathing.
While de Blasio insisted the city would put a stop to the violence and vandalism that have marred largely peaceful mass demonstrations surrounding Floyd's death, both the Republican president and the Democratic governor laid into the city's handling of the mayhem thus far.
“The NYPD and the mayor did not do their job last night,” Cuomo said at a briefing in Albany. “Look at the videos. It was a disgrace.”
He said the mayor was underestimating the problem and the nation's largest police force wasn't deployed in sufficient numbers, though the city had said it doubled the usual police presence.
Unprompted, Cuomo brought up the possibility of using his power as governor to replace the mayor and deploy the National Guard over de Blasio's objections, then immediately shot down the idea as legally impractical and unnecessary.
On Twitter, Trump urged a 7 p.m. curfew and National Guard deployment in his native city.
“The lowlifes and losers are ripping you apart. Act fast!” he wrote.
But de Blasio said he felt that the New York Police Department was “best equipped” to handle the lawbreaking and that bringing in the National Guard risked fueling worse conflict in a city on edge.
"We will regret it if we bring outside armed forces,” he said. “When you bring in people not trained for the circumstance but still with loaded weapons and put under horrible stress, really bad things happen.”
That struck Rep. Max Rose, a Staten Island Democrat and an Army National Guard member, as “borderline offensive.”
“The guard provides support, resources, and additional manpower to safeguard businesses," he said. "This isn’t for the peaceful protests, it’s to assist the men and women of the NYPD with the curfew, and for him to conflate the two is totally dishonest.”
The mayhem over the last four nights has clearly challenged the 36,000-officer police force, which has a reputation as a muscular, well-resourced agency that has driven down crime and faced down terror threats in the nation's biggest city.
On Monday night and early Tuesday, police again struggled to keep up with, let alone get ahead of, groups of people roving and bashing their way into shops, including Macy’s flagship Manhattan store.
De Blasio said the city had expected potential smash-and-grabs and vandalism farther downtown, as had happened the night before, and “adjustments were made” once officials realized that the hotspots had shifted. Police Commissioner Dermot Shea said officers were been juggling multiple problems in an “extremely fluid” situation.
Vandals who struck in the Bronx kept saying, “‘We’re going to hit this store, we’re going to hit this store,’ and it didn’t have any purpose to it,” Felix Gonzalez recalled Tuesday as he helped sweep candy bar wrappers, water bottles and lottery tickets from the floor of a pharmacy. He was among dozens of volunteers helping to clean up on a stretch of the Grand Concourse.
Nearly 700 people were arrested, and several officers were injured. A sergeant was struck by a hit-and-run driver in the Bronx and was hospitalized in serious but stable condition, police said. Another video showed a group of men hitting a police officer with pieces of wreckage until he pulled his gun and they ran.
As day dawned, the city appeared to have made progress limiting violent clashes between police and large groups of demonstrators. Several big marches went off peacefully Monday, with one hourslong demonstration in Brooklyn allowed to continue long after curfew.
Some officers in New York City and around the nation have sought to show solidarity with demonstrators protesting Floyd's death while urging calm. New York City's highest-ranking uniformed member, Chief of Department Terence Monahan, clasped hands with protesters and took a knee Monday in Manhattan's Washington Square Park.
Back in the Bronx on Tuesday, Gonzalez said he saw people arrive from various neighborhoods spontaneously show up to help.
“They just got up, got brooms, got garbage cans, garbage bags and started cleaning up,” Gonzalez said. “I had to come out.”
__
Villeneuve reported from Albany. Contributing were Associated Press writers Michael R. Sisak and Karen Matthews in New York and Michael Hill in Albany.