DA Alvin Bragg put criminals first — I'll end era of excuses
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Last month, a Manhattan courthouse turned into a crime scene when a man with multiple ongoing criminal cases attacked two law enforcement officers by slashing their neck and face — all happening within the premises of a building where justice is expected to prevail.

Not on the subway. Not in the street. In the courthouse itself.

It’s hard to imagine a clearer sign of how broken our justice system has become under Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

The place where consequences are supposed to be delivered has now become one more place where criminals act without fear.

In any other city, this would be shocking. In New York, it feels familiar.

When a District Attorney spends three years conveying to violent offenders that there will always be another justification, another reduction, another path to escape consequences — the outcome manifests in incidents like this. The very first signal given on Day 1 is that avoiding accountability stands as the top priority for the office.

Bragg’s notorious “day one memo” wasn’t just internal guidance; it was a manifesto.

The directive instructed prosecutors to refrain from pursuing imprisonment in the majority of instances, to lessen the severity of grave felonies such as armed robbery to misdemeanors, and even to cease the prosecution of certain offenses altogether.

Fare evasion, resisting arrest, trespassing were suddenly off the table. Even when the law said otherwise, Bragg instructed his staff to stand down.

That memo sent a clear message: consequences don’t matter.

And the results have been just as clear, with repeat offenders cycling through the system, emboldened criminals targeting stores and subway riders, and an entire city worn down by lawlessness and fear.

That’s why my first act as district attorney will be to rescind Bragg’s memo and replace it with my own.

I call it the “People’s Plan for Public Safety”: a focused, commonsense framework to restore accountability and protect Manhattan neighborhoods.

The plan is built around three simple principles.

First, prosecute violent crime fully and fairly. Manhattan families have the right to feel safe in their homes, on their blocks and in the subways.

Under my plan, violent felony crimes including robbery, assault and weapons charges will be treated with the seriousness they deserve.

I’ll empower prosecutors and instruct them to pursue felony charges and real consequences, not discourage and prohibit them from doing their jobs.

Second, fix what’s broken in our bail system.

New Yorkers understand that bail reform went too far. It tied the hands of judges and made it harder to hold even dangerous repeat offenders.

New York is now the only state in the union in which a judge may not consider a defendant’s “dangerousness” when setting bail.  

We’ve all seen the stories: individuals with long rap sheets released again and again — until someone else gets hurt.

My office will work with state lawmakers and the NYPD commissioner to restore judicial discretion and make sure pretrial release decisions account for real-world risks.

Third, stand with law enforcement and the public.

I will rebuild trust between prosecutors and police, while keeping both accountable to the people they serve.

Manhattan needs a DA’s office that’s willing to work with officers to keep our streets safe — not one that second-guesses every arrest, refuses to prosecute suspects who resist our cops, and undermines any effort to restore and maintain order.

To rebuild the quality of life we have lost under Bragg, we must go back to crime-fighting basics.


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No more catch-and-release.

No more revolving doors for career criminals.

No more policies that confuse compassion with chaos.

On Day 1 of my term, the era of excuses ends, and the era of accountability begins.

I say this not just as a candidate, but as a mother raising four kids in Manhattan — and a former public defender who’s worked in these courtrooms.

I’ve seen what happens when the system fails, and I know what it will take to fix it.

Because Bragg’s memo didn’t just alter how cases are handled; it changed the entire expectation of justice in Manhattan.

It told victims they wouldn’t be our top priority.

It told criminals they wouldn’t be punished.

And it told law enforcement they’d be fighting crime with one hand tied behind their back.

That’s why on my Day 1, I will remind every would-be offender that in Manhattan, we don’t hand out permission slips for crime.

We will make accountability the standard again, restore the rule of law — and, at long last, protect the public. 

Maud Maron is a candidate for Manhattan district attorney and a former Legal Aid Society public defender.

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