Join Fox News for access to this content Plus special access to select articles and other premium content with your account - free of charge. By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News' Terms of Use and Privacy Policy , which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive . Please enter a valid email address. A massive police crackdown on crime in "defund the police" advocate Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s district – which had descended into a lawless cesspool of open-air prostitution, robberies and illegal vending – is being hailed as proof that more policing results in less crime and not the other way around. Residents and local activists have been heaping praise on New York City Mayor Eric Adams after he spearheaded an aggressive 90-day police operation that has resulted in crime plummeting by 25% in a Queens neighborhood represented by Ocasio-Cortez and her Democratic colleague Rep. Grace Meng. And while locals say they are feeling safer now – but reiterate more still needs to be done – the mayor’s office said Ocasio-Cortez showed little interest in participating in the crime crunch and that she and her office never coordinated with the Adams administration’s efforts. "She hasn't even reached out for an update on the operation," Adams’ press secretary Kayla Mamelak Altus told Fox News Digital. "Our office has relationships with local leaders. But in this case, she really has been radio silent." Ocasio-Cortez did not respond to Fox News Digital for comment on this story or other similar stories on the crime crisis along Roosevelt Avenue in Queens. She has not made any recent social media comments about the crime there or the subsequent police crackdown. In 2023, she and other progressive Democrats took part in a rally in support of illegal vendors in the neighborhood, insisting they should be given licenses to operate. The 90-day police operation, called "Operation Restore Roosevelt," consisted of more than 200 NYPD officers and state troopers descending on the nearly two-mile commercial strip of Roosevelt Avenue in the Queens neighborhoods of Elmhurst, North Corona and Jackson Heights. The immigrant-heavy area has been plagued by crime and the unsavory sights of illegal vendors overrunning sidewalks selling unlicensed food and hawking secondhand merchandise – scenes that garnered comparisons to third world country conditions. Others have said the scores of prostitutes who have been openly soliciting themselves on sidewalks are akin to a "red light" district. The prostitutes have been known to chat up men on the sidewalks and then bring them into massage parlors or shuttered stores for sex. The operation resulted in nearly 1,000 arrests, including more than 130 for prostitution-related offenses. Nearly 300 buildings have been inspected, resulting in 18 vacate orders and two locations padlocked by the New York City Sheriff's Office for illegal cannabis sales. More than 520 vendors have been inspected, resulting in 94 propane tanks confiscated and more than 15,000 pounds of food taken off the streets. Elsewhere, 464 vehicles have been confiscated, including 419 illegal two-wheeled vehicles and ATVs. The Queens District Attorney’s Office told Fox News Digital that 62 people have been charged with prostitution and 15 locations have been shut down. Altus said the operation was a testament to more boots on the ground equating to less crime. "That's been Mayor Adams' perspective from day one, right, he's a former cop himself," Altus said. "More police officers don't only make people safer, but they make people feel safer. Maybe somebody illegally vending on the corner of the street is not putting them in physical harm's way, but it makes them feel unsafe and makes them feel like there's lawlessness in their streets. And if there's cops enforcing that, that just makes quality of life better." She also praised local City Council Member Francisco Moya, who she said played an integral part in the operation. Moya, a Democrat like Adams, has often found himself at odds with other local progressive Democrats who represent the area, many of whom support illegal vendors, for instance, and do not align with his tough-on-crime position. Adams, too, took a victory lap for the operation. "The community spoke, and the administration delivered," Adams said as the 90-day operation came to an end. He promised a heavy police presence would remain. "Since its launch in October 2024, 'Operation Restore Roosevelt' continues to restore safety and deliver for New Yorkers. And our work here is not done – you will continue to see a police presence, as well as other various agencies in the corridor addressing quality-of-life and public safety issues," Adams said.
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