NEW YORK, N.Y. – For more than three weeks, the New York City Police Department’s public information channels have remained virtually silent — an unprecedented communication freeze that began almost immediately after Zohran Mamdani took office as mayor.
The blackout has halted decades of routine NYPD updates to the press and public, leaving reporters, residents, and even city officials struggling to access basic information about ongoing crimes, missing persons, and major incidents.
The NYPD’s Office of the Deputy Commissioner, Public Information (DCPI), historically the heartbeat of communication between the department and the city’s media, has gone quiet.
For years, DCPI distributed near-daily bulletins detailing homicides, arrests, missing children, and crime scene updates. Now, those once-regular alerts have stopped entirely, creating what some describe as the longest lapse in NYPD transparency in recent memory.
When contacted last week, a representative from the DCPI office described the problem as “a simple email glitch,” claiming it began immediately following Mamdani’s swearing-in and had yet to be resolved.
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An unidentified sgt. told us the problem will be fixed soon. It’s not his fault, of course, but the blackout continues.
However, multiple independent sources have suggested the issue extends far beyond a technical malfunction. According to several insiders, the communication blackout may be part of a broader directive from City Hall aimed at reshaping how the administration controls information flow surrounding law enforcement.
Reports from NYC Scoop — an independent news outlet closely monitoring the issue — allege that senior members of the Mamdani administration have restricted public-facing NYPD communications.
The outlet characterized the situation as a deliberate “defund-era” information chokehold, asserting that the mayor’s office has deprioritized police visibility in favor of centralized, politically filtered messaging. “While he postures with his fake smile, agencies are drowning, workers are stretched thin, and people are literally freezing to death,” one Scoop editorial wrote, blaming the administration for a lack of leadership and transparency.
The Mamadani administration is keeping quiet, and keeping the city in the dark, with a police media blackout.
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Luckily, there’s a temporary workaround. NYPD Crimestoppers, a service run by the New York City Police Foundation is keeping some of the information flowing through their channels, but Crimestoppers does not report on missing persons, or death investigations, just wanted criminals.
A decades-old communication link gone dark
The DCPI’s responsibilities have traditionally extended far beyond simple press releases. Acting as the official voice of the NYPD, the office handled breaking news, coordinated with reporters on crime scenes, issued AMBER Alerts, and helped identify victims. Its swift dissemination of details often meant the difference between life and death in missing person cases.
With the blackout now entering its second month, several missing child alerts have reportedly gone unpublicized, and news outlets have had to rely on scanner traffic and unofficial sources for updates on major crimes.
Public safety advocates argue that the absence of communication not only breeds confusion but could also hinder investigations.
The media freeze has also created logistical complications for citywide outlets that depend on NYPD data feeds for breaking crime coverage. The once bountiful information flow has stopped.
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Mayor’s office silent amid growing criticism
Mayor Mamdani’s office has not issued a formal statement addressing the blackout. Submitted requests for comment remain unanswered.
City Hall insiders claim that Mamdani has instructed departments to “streamline communications” as part of a broader transparency review, though no formal policy has been announced.
Transparency concerns ripple through media and law enforcement
Historically, the DCPI has served as one of the city’s most visible and respected public-facing police offices. Its staff — typically a mix of police officers and civilian press officers — are trained to provide immediate factual updates while protecting the integrity of ongoing investigations. Many New Yorkers first hear about crimes, arrests, or emergencies through its statements.
For now, no clear timeline exists for when or if the DCPI will resume normal communications. The alleged “email glitch” explanation remains unverified, and the mayor’s office has offered no alternative explanation.
Today, a DCPI member said the press email lists are being reviewed and that there is no timeframe for when reporters removed from the lists will be re-added. We were instructed to once again submit a request and wait.
Key points:
• NYPD’s DCPI has stopped releasing public crime information since early December.
• Officials claim the blackout stems from an “email glitch,” but insiders suspect political directives.
• Missing person alerts and crime reports have gone unpublicized during the silence.
• Media organizations and transparency advocates are calling for an immediate restoration of updates.
• Mayor Mamdani’s office has not commented publicly on the continuing information freeze.
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