Empire City: The Untold Origin Story of the NYPD - What’s Done Can Be Undone | 3
Episode Date: September 16, 2024New York’s power-hungry mayor weaponizes the police to help him control the city – and bulldoze a thriving Black community for his own real estate profits. The state, fearing that the may...or and his police have become too strong, wage a war for control – and create their own rival force. From Wondery, Crooked Media and PushBlack.Empire City is made with a commitment to ensure the stories of those who were and are still impacted by the NYPD are always part of the stories we tell ourselves about the police, about America, and about democracy.Voices & References:Jeff Broxmeyer https://www.jeffbroxmeyer.com/Mariame Kaba https://mariamekaba.com/Leslie Alexander https://drlesliealexander.com/Gregg Simmons https://www.imdb.com/name/nm4206025/Follow Empire City: The Untold Origin Story of the NYPD on the Wondery App or wherever you listen to your podcasts. You can binge all episodes early and ad-free on Wondery+. Join Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/empire-city/ now. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wondry Plus subscribers can binge all episodes of Empire City early and ad-free.
Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple Podcasts.
At a recent NYPD Police Academy graduation,
the keynote speaker offered some powerful words to the crowd of 631 new recruits.
I thank God every day that we have a cop that's the mayor of the city of New York that has
went through the training that you have gone through and is ready to serve this city in
the manner that it should be served.
And the man thanking God that a cop is the mayor of New York City is a cop that's also
mayor of New York City, Eric Adams.
When Adams won the election two years earlier,
I'm not sure anybody was thanking God,
but a lot of folks did celebrate.
I mean, Adams was a Democrat, and he wasn't just a cop.
He was a black cop who bragged about having been a leader on police reform.
And right now in this audience, when you finish your career,
one of you will be a congressman, one of you will be a governor, one of you will be a mayor, one of you may even be the
president of the United States. You're going to take that experience that you have and you're
going to show how to lead, how to lead from the front. As a black man raising my daughter here, I'm worried about what a former cop as the
mayor leading from the front means for everyday New Yorkers. And looking at the police data since
Mayor Adams has taken office, it looks like my worries are justified. At a moment when Adams
was threatening to cut social programs and public goods, he increased police overtime, and he's refused to support any kind of police oversight.
All of this while the NYPD recorded more stops in New Yorkers in 2023
than it has in nearly a decade,
and 89% of those who were stopped are Black and Latino.
It's a pattern that's persisted since George Kirk,
and it stretches all the way back to the kidnapping club.
But last year, New York City Council decided to do something to try to disrupt that pattern.
In a vote with overwhelming support, they passed the How Many Stops Act.
It would force NYPD officers to document these street stops with New Yorkers.
When I heard about it, it sounded so basic that I was sort of amazed it wasn't already the law.
This was a clear chance for Mayor Adams to lead from the front.
All he had to do was sign it.
But that's not what happened.
Instead, on January 19, 2024, Eric Adams held a press conference and announced that he was
vetoing City Council's vote on the How Many Stops Act.
In press conferences and social media, he lambasted City Council for even suggesting
it.
At a private NYPD gala, surrounded by cops and members of the Sopranos cast, he really
let loose. And I will be damned if I was willing to stand up against bullies as a cop, I'm going to
stand up against socialist organizations as the mayor, and I'm going to fight back.
And so this is how it's done. So stand tall.
This is the greatest profession
and the greatest police department on the globe.
Watching him stand there and foam at the mouth
about a bill that just asked cops to document what they're doing
is a cartoonishly clear example of why having a former police officer as mayor
might be great for cops, but horrible for New Yorkers.
This closeness between police and mayors, it's not new.
That collapsing of police and politicians was supercharged
10 years after New York got its first formalized police force, with a mayor who was willing to spill police blood to stay on top.
From Wondery and Crooked Media, I'm Chinjarai Kumaneka,
and this is Empire City, Episode 3. What's done can be undone.
What's the first step to growing your business?
Getting people to notice you.
But how do you do that?
Two words, constant contact.
Your struggle with expensive, slow, and unmeasurable approaches to marketing your business is over.
With Constant Contact, get email marketing that helps you create and send the perfect email to every customer.
Connect with over 2 billion people on social media with an all-in-one tool for posting and sharing.
And create, promote, and manage your events with ease, all in one place.
Join the millions of small businesses that trust Constant Contact with their marketing success.
So get going and growing with Constant Contact today.
Ready, set, grow. Go to ConstantContact.ca and start with Constant Contact today. Ready, set, grow.
Go to ConstantContact.ca and start your free trial today. Go to ConstantContact.ca for your free trial.
ConstantContact.ca. For most of my life, I didn't really pay much attention to Shakespeare.
I was getting all the drama I needed from hip-hop and Toni Morrison,
you know, the regular old movie theater.
Shakespeare just felt British and far away.
But to early New Yorkers, theaters are places that belong to them.
Where they come together, catch up with each other,
and experience epic, riveting storytelling as a community.
And you know, let off some steam.
Sorry.
So imagine one night, you're leaning back into your aisle seat,
enjoying the latest performance of Macbeth at the newly opened Astor Opera House,
when a rock flies through the window.
It could have been an accident, but then another rock comes pummeling down,
hitting a person to your left, and then another, and another,
until nearly every window in the opera house is broken, and the theater is in chaos. I know Shakespeare is
supposed to bring the drama, but I don't think running for your life is the experience any
theatergoer was expecting that night. But apparently this is what you get when you cast a British actor
as Macbeth. Out, out, brief candle. Life's but a walking shadow.
On the same night, an American actor performs Macbeth in a working class theater across town.
If it were done when it is done, then, to a well, it were done quickly.
See, working class New Yorkers look at this bougie-ass theater with British actors
as a symbol that New York is growing into a place where ordinary folks and their culture won't be welcome.
So before the performance,
they put up flyers all over the city
to persuade New Yorkers to heckle the British production.
The flyers say things like,
Working men, shall Americans or English rule this city?
One night, police chief George Matzo gets word that some shit's about to go down,
and he sends 200 police to post up inside the opera house.
But this crowd is infuriated, and them cops ain't enough to turn them away.
They descend on the theater.
In between hurling rocks through windows, people curse at the stage and throw furniture.
The police just can't handle the people inside the theater, and they really ain't ready for
the enraged crowd of thousands of folks outside.
So they stay, or you might say, hide inside.
The state militia gets called in, and after a single round of warning shots, the militia starts firing into the crowd.
More than 20 people are killed,
almost all of them bystanders struck down
walking past the theater.
The youngest was 15 years old.
People are pretty upset
at the disastrous performance of the police.
It's been four years since they formally became the NYPD,
but clearly they still don't have their shit together.
Even James Gordon Bennett basically calls them cowards.
It's the first time one ever heard of police being shut up in a house
in order to quell a riot in the street.
And other elite New Yorkers have to admit that having to call the military to put down
a theater riot, it's not a good look for business.
Now, obviously, none of this is good news for Police Chief George Matzl.
He's been trying to get the police to function like professionals since the NYPD started.
But the Astor Place riot showed that so far, it isn't working.
Matzl needs to take his plans for professionalization to the next level.
One big thing he has to tackle is uniforms. Without them, you can't tell who's a police officer in a crowd. And that's a problem in a riot. But some New Yorkers still don't want the
police in uniform because it looks too much like a standing army. And the truth is,
the police hated the idea of uniforms
from the very beginning.
They're expensive.
They make it easier for their bosses to surveil them.
And they're demeaning.
Police grumbled that wearing uniforms
makes them akin to servants.
But after years of debate,
Matzl gets a uniform designed for his force,
a blue coat and a leather hat.
And he parades uniformed officers around at society events.
And it's not enough for them to look the part.
Matzel also has to address their lack of training.
He orders his captains to train officers in the School of the Soldier.
He hires a drill captain to train new recruits and tries to command more military-style discipline.
But some neighborhoods in New York don't get soldiers.
They get thugs.
When Matzo tells some of his police to go deal with Irish gangs, they organize strong-arm squads,
groups of cops in regular clothes with clubs made of locust wood that are strong enough to break bone on impact.
When these squads hit the street, anybody they run into would get their head cracked open.
Innocent people get caught up in the violence, but New York's business community loves it. The
response is so positive that clubs become standard issue, and this is the first way that the NYPD officially arms its officers. But these changes
to the NYPD pale in comparison to what happens when the city elects a new mayor, Fernando Wood.
Fernando Wood is one of the great scoundrels of the 19th century. And by great, I don't mean in terms of, you know, good.
I mean in terms of magnitude.
According to Jeff Broxmire, a professor who writes about this period,
the new mayor sees this army of men with clubs, uniforms,
and the power to arrest and says,
I can use this.
Fernando Wood is a risk taker.
Sometimes it works out really well,
and sometimes it just is a disaster.
And just like Macbeth, Wood's quest for power ends in bloodshed.
All his life, Wood is chasing after two things,
money and respectability.
Wood was a very ambitious figure who grew up in poverty,
who had nothing, really.
So he does things like he tries his hand at a career in the theater, actually,
and that doesn't work out.
And then he moves to New York and he tries his hand
at all of these small shops, which mostly fail.
But Wood is willing to go to any length to come up, and eventually learns that his real
power isn't going to be the value he brings as a business person.
It's that he can look people right in the face and knife them in the back.
He'll make an agreement with someone in secret and then another agreement with someone else
that is completely contrarian
to what he has previously said he would do.
And this talent for lying and double-crossing people
that he claims he's helping
proves useful in this new world that Wood is about to enter,
the world of politics.
He also starts hanging out with members of New York's strongest political machine, Tammany Hall.
Tammany Hall is the main political machine
that's really the dominant force
in Democratic Party politics throughout the mid-19th century,
all the way up into the 1960s in New York, actually.
Tammany Hall had figured out how to appeal
to New York City's marginalized white ethnic immigrants.
And Wood learns that race and nationality
are powerful political wedges
that he can exploit to his advantage.
He isn't scared to take controversial positions
and say the quiet part out loud.
This helps him to rise through the ranks of Tammany.
And as he's gathering political clout
and knifing people in the back,
he winds up making a windfall of cash
the old-fashioned way.
He inherits it.
His wife dies and leaves him a ton of money.
And now, what is more than just rich?
Fabulously wealthy for the age, in the period when he's in. In an age when very few people were millionaires, and that was a new thing. He was a millionaire.
His worn-down shoes and cheap suits had always given him a way as a scrappy con man.
But now,
shit was different.
He starts buying
the most fashionable clothes
and hanging with
the wealthier crowd.
But Wood decides
that it's not enough
to be a rich New Yorker.
He wants to be king.
So Wood runs for mayor
in 1850 and loses,
but tries again in 1854
and wins.
Thinking about Wood's rise to power, I can't help but think back to when those folks were sitting in the Astor Opera House looking up at Macbeth on stage before all hell broke
loose.
They weren't just enjoying the drama of Shakespeare.
They saw more than an
actor in a costume. They saw their own political leaders motivated by greed and power. It will have
blood. They say blood will have blood. And one thing that Macbeth drives home is that ambition
comes with a cost. And that thirst for power is definitely going to cost Fernando Wood.
As soon as he's inaugurated,
Wood sets his sights on transforming the police into his personal army.
An army that'll do anything he needs them to do,
including fighting to the death.
In 1921, Tulsa, Oklahoma was home to one of the nation's
most prosperous African-American communities
until a shocking campaign of violence destroyed it.
Hi, I'm Lindsey Graham, the host of Wondery Show American History Tellers.
We take you to the events, the times, and the people that shaped America and Americans,
our values, our struggles, and our dreams.
In our latest series, an accusation of assault leads to the systemic destruction of Greenwood,
a neighborhood nicknamed the Black Wall Street.
Listen to the Tulsa Race Massacre from American History Tellers
on Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, or the Wondery app.
Join Wondery Plus and the Wondery app to listen ad-free. We're standing in front of both City Hall and City Hall Park across the street.
Organizer Miriam Kaba and I are standing on a crowded corner in Lower Manhattan,
and she calls attention to something right above our heads.
There's a street sign that says Elizabeth Jennings Place.
Thousands of people pass this sign every day.
But I would suspect that most people,
even people who are from New York,
when they look up and they see Elizabeth Jennings Place,
probably have no idea who the hell Elizabeth Jennings was.
And one person who probably hadn't heard
of Elizabeth Jennings Graham
was New York Mayor Fernando Wood, at least at first.
When Wood takes office in January of 1855, Jennings is a teacher, and as a Black woman,
she isn't someone that would be on the mayor's radar. But a month into Wood's first term, Jennings grabs the city's attention.
The story starts a year earlier.
Jennings and her friend Sarah Adams are waiting for a rail car.
It's a Sunday, and they're dressed up in hats and fancy dresses.
She was going for service as the church organist.
She was running late.
So she decided to board a horse-drawn rail car
here in New York.
As soon as Jennings and her friend get on,
some white folks start complaining
that Black women are on their streetcar.
The conductor stops the streetcar
and tells them to leave.
At that point, most Black folks
would have just rolled their eyes and gotten off.
That's just the way things work.
You comply.
But Elizabeth Jennings Graham has support that other people don't have.
Her father is well known because he was a black abolitionist here in New York City.
Both her mother and father had worked with David Ruggles in the Committee of Vigilance.
She grew up around adults who preached, wrote, and fought for Black liberation.
And on that day, she's just trying to get to church.
So she looks at the conductor like, nah, we not doing this today.
She told the conductor he was a good-for-nothing, impudent fellow for insulting decent persons while on their way to church.
More than 100 years before Rosa Parks refuses to give up her seat on a bus in Alabama,
Elizabeth Jennings Graham clings to the window ledge
and refuses to leave a streetcar in New York.
The conductor drags her and her friend off the car.
But before the driver can speed away,
Jennings and her friend get right back on.
And so the conductor calls for backup from the police.
And the cops show up, and here's what Jennings says.
The officer, without listening to anything I had to say,
thrust me out and tauntingly told me to get redressed if I could.
Kaba says this was a typical move for the NYPD.
The cops were pulling people off trains and subways and stuff in 1854 and telling them,
you can try to fucking get, you know, satisfaction, but you're not going to get satisfaction
because who are they going to believe, you or me?
But this time, it ain't gonna be that easy.
This is the definition of the wrong one.
They got the wrong one.
When Jennings gets home, she tells her people what happened,
and they were like, oh, hells no.
They pull together the most influential folks they can contact.
They publish a story in the papers, they form an organization, and they say,
since you fuck with us, we're going to go big.
We're going to fight to desegregate every streetcar in New York.
They hire a white lawyer, future U.S. President Chester A. Arthur, and head to court.
And when they get there, the judge surprises everybody by ruling in Jennings' favor.
Elizabeth Jennings is compensated for her treatment at the hands of the police.
And some but not all streetcars in New York are officially desegregated.
Her victory rings from Five Points to Seneca Village.
Black folks even create a holiday called Elizabeth Jennings Day.
According to historian Leslie Alexander, Mayor Fernando Wood isn't celebrating with the rest of the city.
Fernando Wood was just sort of a devout and committed racist. He was just wholly opposed to emancipation and equality for the Black population and opposed their existence in the United States.
Wood is a Democrat, but they were kind of the opposite of how we think of the Democratic Party
today. Democrats were a pro-slavery party. They supported states' rights and the fugitive slave
law. Later on in his career, during the Civil War, he gave a full speech calling for New York
to secede from the Union, like the Confederate States.
And by the way, he had a lot of support for that.
If this was like an old school cartoon,
he would like be the guy like twisting his mustache,
you know, looking kind of evilly to the side.
So if I were him, and I just watched Elizabeth Jennings Graham and other Black folks who
are barely citizens win a battle to desegregate streetcars, I'd be worried about their growing
power in the city.
And Wood doesn't want to share power with anyone.
In his first statement to the city council, Wood declares that New York's government is
a bureaucratic monster with too many heads.
He says that it's time to chop off every head but one, that the mayor should be the absolute power in the city.
He calls it one man rule. He wants to be a kind of one man power in the city.
He's basically saying the city is broken and I'm the only one who can fix it.
And he has lots of battles over that, and he largely loses.
He's not really able to centralize authority into his hands in the way that he wants to,
except the one place where he is successful is the police.
Even though Wood is the mayor, he starts acting like he's the police chief.
And he worked to gain control over appointments.
Who was going to be a police officer, who was going to be a police captain.
And the way in which he does that is he makes the police really part of the party machinery and the financing of his political machine.
This isn't Matzl trying to professionalize the cops.
It's about pimping them.
What starts offering up police jobs in exchange for money or political favors?
If you want to be a police officer, first, you've got to make a donation.
So $25, $50, you've got to pony that up to the party treasury, right, the Tammany Hall treasury.
And then that's going to go towards the mayor's reelection.
And he raised a lot of money that way.
And then, to show off his power to the public, Wood has his new and improved uniformed police march up and down Broadway in the city's first police parade.
Many of these cops
walking past New Yorkers in full regalia
were chosen because they could afford
to pay to become a cop
and because they had the right connections,
which means that the NYPD
is now even more bound to the mayor
than to the people,
especially black people.
He sees a way to use these loyal cops to take his personal wealth to a whole new level,
and he realizes it's also going to deal a serious blow to Black political power.
The community like Seneca Village, it sent a very clear and distinctive message to white New Yorkers and to the society at large,
saying, actually, this is a nation that exists because of our blood and sweat and tears,
and we intend to stay here. Seneca Village is a free black settlement founded in the 1820s,
one of the few black enclaves where black New Yorkers are able to own property.
It's a thriving community full of homes, schools, and gardens.
It becomes a symbol of power and resilience
in a city that has never really been safe for Black people.
It's also a symbol of Black political power, because in order to vote, Black people are required to own a certain amount of property. So the few Black people that could vote in New York
lived in Seneca Village, and it's one of the few places in the city that could happen.
But this bastion for Black safety is at risk,
because Wood starts to eye their land.
Wood makes a plan for a big park of town
that'll increase the value of property he already owns.
This new park, Central Park,
will go straight through the middle of Manhattan
and straight through Seneca Village.
So starting in 1855, he sees his hundreds and hundreds of acres of land north of 42nd Street, the eminent domain.
The more than 200 residents of Seneca Village are ordered to evacuate their homes.
There is a group of residents of Central Park in 1857 who refuse to vacate their homes and insist that they have a right to remain in their community.
But Wood has an army of white cops that answer solely to him.
So you can probably guess what he does next. He calls forth the police, and the police are unleashed on the remaining Seneca villagers,
and they are subjected to extreme brutality and violence and are removed from their homes.
A report from the New York Times describes the scene this way.
The supremacy of the law was upheld by the policemen's bludgeon.
Seneca Village is destroyed.
So thoroughly destroyed that it nearly vanishes from public memory.
And if you were to enter Central Park right around 87th, 88th Street. There's a little playground there.
A playground!
A playground!
And right adjacent to the playground,
if you walk there,
you will be walking over the graves of Seneca villagers.
It was a win-win for Mayor Fernando Wood.
The new Central Park borders some of Wood's real estate holdings,
and once the park
is built, he makes a killing. Plus, hundreds of Black folks lose their property and the voting
rights that come with it. Like a lot of politicians, when Wood makes decisions about what the police
should do or how they should do it,
he's not thinking about what's going to make most New Yorkers safer or what's good for the city.
He's thinking about winning the next election.
And at this point, Wood has proven that the NYPD can be an extremely effective way to line his pockets and to build political power.
It almost feels like nobody can stop him, but there is one group who definitely wants to try.
They don't care about Seneca Village or how the police are treating working-class New Yorkers.
For them, it's about party politics.
Fernando Wood got to be mayor because he had help from Tammany Hall, New York City's Democratic machine.
And that meant Republicans didn't have much power over the most populated city in the state.
So up at the statehouse in Albany, they start asking, what's the best way for us to weaken Tammany Hall?
And then a light bulb goes off. They say, well, let's do something about Fernando Woods' control over the police because they rightly identified it as the central pillar of his political machine.
So they pass an act that essentially says New York City is too corrupt to police itself.
So we're abolishing the New York City Police Department.
And then those same Republican politicians create another equally corrupt and racist police force called the Metropolitan Police.
Mayor Wood is openly defiant of that.
He is very, very clear that he's going to resist this with all of the means that he has.
Wood challenges the order to shut down his police.
And he sends the word out to all of his cops that he's not backing down.
He says, my police are still the real police.
And he directs all city officials not to obey metropolitan police commissioners and their orders. And then that's the way in which you get this very strange situation where there are two police forces.
So in June of 1857, there are two warring New York City police departments,
the state's new Metropolitan Police
and Fernando Woods' old, supposedly abolished Municipal Police.
These two police forces hate each other,
not just because one works for Mayor Wood
and the other is run by folks up in Albany.
Wood's municipal police are also largely Irish Catholic immigrants,
a demographic shift from just a few years prior.
And the Metropolitan Police are mostly white Protestants
who don't think Irish Catholics or other immigrants are real Americans.
Imagine being arrested by the state metropolitans one night.
And then the next night, Woods Municipal show up and set you free.
Or even wilder, imagine police from these competing forces fighting over who gets to arrest you.
And then they just arrest each other.
It was chaos.
Republicans up in Albany realized that Wood is not giving up.
They're going to have to find someone brave enough or stupid enough to take him and his men down. When I was a kid, my family told me this crazy-ass story.
That back in 1964, my father, Mikasa Kumanika,
marched up the steps of City Hall with two other activists
and announced that they were placing the mayor under arrest
for his
shady and racist use of city funds. This was just four months after he had handcuffed himself inside
the police station. NYPD officers intervened and quickly grabbed all three of them, threw them in
front of a judge, and even carted my dad off to the psychiatric wing of Bellevue Hospital.
For a long time, I felt like having a family member that tried to arrest a mayor
was a one-person club.
Until I met this guy.
This.
You'll want to see this.
Oh, man.
Okay, let me get my glasses.
Hold on.
This is Greg Simmons.
Oh, that's the original?
This is a second edition.
Oh, my God.
Greg Simmons is a costume supervisor
for a long-running police procedural show.
And he's showing me a 19th century copy of the memoir written by his great-great-grandfather,
a guy named George Washington Walling.
And what's wild is that George Walling winds up right smack in the middle of Mayor Wood's battle with the state.
I was quail hunting in New Jersey when a friend accosted me and asked...
In his memoir, Walling says that he didn't become a cop
because he wanted to catch criminals or keep anybody safe.
He says a friend just randomly asked him,
and in his words,
I decided to carry a club until something better turned up.
And just like that,
Walling becomes one of the first officers in George Matzl's NYPD.
Kind of on a whim.
And get this, his boss is none other than Captain Tobias Boudinot.
And for someone who really didn't even want to be a cop,
somehow George Walling always winds up where the action is.
He was on duty in the theater during the Astor Place riots. He was the cop who
led the first strong-arm squads that went out with clubs and beat up random folks. So
when the state decides to abolish his police force, Wood basically tells his men,
I need to know how many of y'all are with me. If you're not, this is your chance to leave before shit gets real.
Walling has a choice to make.
All of these police officers in the force have to decide who they're going to go with.
Right? Are they going to throw their hat in with Wood?
Are they going to throw their hat in with the Metropolitans?
And Walling decides to break
from wood. And about 800 police and 15 captains, which is the majority of the force, right, they
go with wood. And only 300 policemen and seven captains go with the Metropolitans. With 800
police and the state firmly against him, Wood starts becoming even more crazed and paranoid.
Is this a dagger which I see before me, this handle toward my hand? Come, let me clutch thee.
He goes full-on Macbeth. He wants to prove that he can be strong enough and cold enough to vanquish any threat to his power. Wood starts egging on his political supporters,
and they start hunting down any police that aren't loyal to him.
One even stabs a Metropolitan officer in the stomach with an ice pick.
Until finally, everything comes to a head.
Now that the state has abolished his force,
Wood won't let any Albany-backed officials work for him.
When a state-appointed hire shows up at City Hall, Wood has his police throw him out on the street.
And since Wood knows there's going to be backlash, he barricades himself in his office and puts 300 of his police around the perimeter to protect him.
The guy who was tossed out on his ass is infuriated. He gets up, dusts
himself off, and stomps off to get some backup and a warrant for Wood's arrest.
It's noon, and George Washington Walling gets called into Metropolitan Police Headquarters. in police headquarters. He expected a little something,
but not the storm that he walked into.
Walling was given the job to arrest the mayor.
And according to his great-great-grandson,
they ask him,
how many men do you need?
And according to his memoir, he says,
I'll do it.
I can do it by myself, sure.
I mean, that's some brass balls.
And it's like, man, thick-headedness runs in the family.
Apparently, without any backup, Walling marches through lower Manhattan to City Hall.
He manages to make it past the hundreds of municipal police officers without saying what he's about to do.
And he bursts into Wood's office and tells him,
Hey, Mayor, you're under arrest.
At first, Wood just brushes him off.
He tells him, Bro, if you ain't working for me,
you ain't even a real police officer.
But then he orders his police to toss Walling out of City Hall.
He's basically thrown out on his ear by former co-workers and literally like
four guys chucked him out on the street. So Walling leaves to get some backup.
Word gets out about the mayor's arrest warrant and wood loyalists are starting to gather around
City Hall. A writer at the time refers to the crowd as a miscellaneous assortment of suckers,
soapblocks, Irishmen, and plug uglies operating in a guerrilla capacity. By 3.30 in the afternoon,
a group of 50 metropolitans arrive at City Hall to deliver the warrant that George Walling hadn't
been able to deliver alone. They come marching up toward the rear gate and Woods police are there to meet them.
At that point, municipal police chief George Matzl says, wait a minute, let's calm down.
We are officers of public safety.
We have to show people that we can resolve conflict in a way that respects the law, human
rights and dignity.
No, actually, I'm just joking.
They beat the shit out of each other.
As soon as the two groups of police see each other, someone in the pro-wood crowd shouts,
pitch in to the sons of bitches.
And right there on the steps of City Hall, the New York police goes to war with itself.
There is a knockdown, drag out, street brawl of the kind which is common in the
working class neighborhoods, but it happens on the steps of City Hall. And you have fists flying and
clubs flying. The battle lasts for almost half an hour. Twelve people are seriously wounded and one
is permanently disabled. The headline in the New York Times
the next day reads, Civil War. The Times describes the riot this way, the scene was a terrible one.
Blows upon naked heads fell thick and fast and men rolled helpless down the steps to be leaped
upon and beaten until life seemed extinct. And just like the Astor Place riots,
the fighting only ends when a regiment of the state militia gets called in and disperses the crowd.
But later that day, Wood finally allows himself to be arrested.
His bail is set at $50,000, almost $2 million today.
Wood spends the night in City Hall with the police official keeping an eye on him.
And from his office, Wood issues a statement. He basically says, look, everybody's blaming me, but I'm the one protecting our city, and I'm still not stepping down.
Wood's strategy is pretty much the same throughout the entire police riot. These are nefarious political forces
that have usurped the traditional local governance of New York
and that he's expecting the public to rally behind him.
The next day, Wood pays his bail and he's released.
Fernando Wood had lost control
and even the support of his personal army,
and he lost his next election.
When I think of Fernando Wood and how he wrapped the police around him
to consolidate his power at any cost,
I can't help but think of more recent politicians
who pander to police and stoke people's fears about crime for votes.
When you have incidents that makes you feel
as though there's no law and order, let me tell you, you have a law and order mayor and you have
a law and order commissioner, and this is going to continue to be the safest big city in America.
Eric Adams says it's about safety. But when I think about what would make the city safer for
my daughter, it's about access to health care and education, getting to the roots of why people turn to violence to solve problems, and making New York a place where my daughter can run, play, and express herself without worrying about the police.
Because here's the thing.
Adam's vision of law and order might be good for his election campaign.
But I think it also makes the city more dangerous for everyone,
including the police who get dispatched as the solution to everything
and who, unlike him, are on the front lines.
And those front lines are increasingly everywhere,
from the subway to sidewalk food stands to protests on university lawns.
And that definition of safety is how I ended up handcuffed at one police plaza,
surrounded by the full force of the NYPD.
That's next time on Empire City.
Follow Empire City on the Wondery app, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes early and ad-free right now
by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app
or on Apple Podcasts.
Before you go, tell us about yourself
by completing a short survey at wondery.com slash survey.
If you have a tip about a story
you think we should investigate,
please write to us at wondery.com slash tips.
Empire City is a production of Wondery and Crooked Media.
I'm your host and executive producer, Chinjarae Kumunika.
For Crooked Media, our senior producer is Peter Bresnan.
Our managing producer is Leo Duran.
Our senior story editor is Diane Hodson. Our producer is Sam Riddell.
Bowen Wong and Sidney Rapp are our associate producers.
Sound design, mixing, and original score by Axel Kukutye.
Our historical consultant and fact checker is History Studios.
For Wondry, our senior producer is Mandy Gorenstein.
Our senior story editor is Phyllis Fletcher.
Our coordinating producer is Mariah Gossett.
The executive producer of Push Black is Lily Workne.
Executive producers at Crooked Media are Sarah Geismar, Katie Long, Tommy Vitor, and Diane Hodson.
Executive producers at Wondery are Nigery Eaton, George Lavender, Marshall Louis, and Jen Sargent. Thank you.