Multiple kids subway surfing on the 7 train near 46th Street again. Under @NYCMayor and @GovKathyHochul we’ve seen diminished police presence, weak enforcement, and safety deprioritized.
The result? Kids treating subway roofs like playgrounds. This is what happens when ideology overrides reality. New Yorkers deserve leadership.
Marine veteran fights back on Wednesday after a group of teens attempted to rob him at gunpoint in front of his home in Oxon Hill, Maryland. Jheyco Chura was installing a dashcam in his truck when the teenagers allegedly demanded his car keys, phone and belongings.
Chura’s younger brother and father helped him fight them off, during which time the teen with the gun pulled the trigger. Chura said no one was injured in the incident..
This incident was posted courtesy of wubbzyy52 from Instagram. This incident occurred in transit involving NYPD officers responding to a dispute. One female officer whose name is on the video, forgot they were a cop and left their partner in the lurch fighting for their life. 😳
🚨 SHOCKING: Olive Garden in Fayetteville, GA just FIRED a server over her $700 tip — then called the cops on her?!
Waitress Brook Skyes gets a huge $700 tip, asks management about it… and they allegedly steal it, fire her on the spot, and have her escorted out like a criminal.
Her mom, Buni Williams, just blew the story wide open on Facebook. Single mom trying to survive — and this is how they treat her?!
@OliveGarden — y’all got some explaining to do.
This is straight-up outrageous. Drop your thoughts below 👇
#OliveGarden #TipTheft #ServerLife #FayettevilleGA #BrookSkyes #BuniWilliams #Viral #BoycottOliveGarden
🐍 Cobra Commander...the most dangerousssss man alive.
New to the G.I. Joe Classified Series line, the hooded Cobra Commander comes dressed for world domination, with multiple points of articulation for high poseability.
Pre-order now: https://t.co/h9LX0qTaQJ
#GIJoe
God of War Laufey is the next mainline chapter in Santa Monica Studio's series.
First gameplay and story details of the newly announced PS5 action adventure: https://t.co/VTg1O9UNYX
Karen showed some Bruce Lee style moves and just like that, it was time to end the fury..
Never bring your Karen to A water cannon fight..
Cool down Karen!! 🫵😆
U.S. serviceman stationed overseas discovers through a home security camera that his girlfriend has brought another man into his house and confronts the them from the camera’s speaker.
It’s my birthday and I’m serving cake, curves, and bad decisions con my OF🎂 👉🏻https://t.co/UXFw2kwXzE
-
Es mi cumpleaños y estoy sirviendo pastel, curvas y malas decisiones con mi OF🎂 👉🏻https://t.co/UXFw2kwXzE
To all MOS: did you know that when corruption complaints involve inspectors and above, those messages are allegedly encrypted and transmitted through a restricted executive channel — directly to “Footsie 1” and “Footsie 2” only?
That is not oversight.
That is a shadow tickler system.
A quiet executive-lane mechanism designed to control, contain, and potentially shitcan corruption complaints involving the very people who are supposed to be investigated.
This is the problem with NYPD Internal Affairs. The public hears “IAB investigation” and assumes neutrality. But inside the machine, the question is always the same:
Who gets investigated?
Who gets protected?
Who gets classified?
Who gets buried?
Who gets routed into a real case?
And who gets quietly handled through some executive-only back channel before the file ever sees daylight?
If rank-and-file cops are accused of misconduct, they get hammered with Charges and Specifications, modified duty, suspension, lost overtime, public embarrassment, and career damage.
But when allegations point upward — inspectors, chiefs, executive-level actors — suddenly the system gets delicate, encrypted, selective, and quiet.
That is not integrity.
That is institutional self-protection.
This information is coming straight from the belly of the beast: IAB.
Mayor Mamdani and Council Speaker Menin, you have a major corruption problem inside the NYPD.
@NYCMayor@NYCCouncil
Not a messaging problem.
Not a morale problem.
Not a “few bad apples” problem.
A structural corruption problem.
If Internal Affairs has a private executive-routing system for allegations involving high-ranking officials, then the public deserves to know:
Who created it?
Who authorized it?
Who controls it?
How many complaints were routed through it?
How many became real investigations?
How many were buried?
How many involved chiefs, inspectors, executive staff, or politically protected members?
And how many complainants thought they were reporting corruption, when in reality they were feeding information into a containment system?
What are you going to do about it?
Has anyone in the NYPD seen Captain’s Endowment Association President Chris Monahan? Where does Chris stand on allowing NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani to raid our pension fund?