Shocking video captures migrant mob beating two NYPD cops in Times Square

Two NYPD cops were badly beaten by a migrant mob in Times Square over the weekend after they asked the group to move along.

What’s worse is that these migrants have already been released without bail.

This from therightscoop.com.

Here’s the video:

 

And more from the New York Post:

Shocking video captured the moment a migrant mob pounded a pair of cops near Times Square over the weekend—but the busted cowardly suspects were still released back on the street without bail, sources say.

The footage shows an NYPD officer and lieutenant initially telling the migrants to move along around 8:30 p.m. Saturday on West 42nd Street in Manhattan—before things quickly get rowdy as a scuffle breaks out between the cops and a suspect who is wrestled to the ground.

That’s when the rest of the punks converge on the officers, raining kicks to the head and body of the pair of New York’s Finest as the cops rumble with their pal, whose yellow sweatshirt is completely torn off in the melee.

The video shows the two officers left on the ground as the pack runs east on 42nd Street toward Seventh Avenue and gets away — although not for long.

Police busted four of the asylum-seeking thugs, identified by sources as Darwin Andres Gomez Izquiel, 19, Kelvin Servat Arocha, 19, Juarez Wilson, 21, and Yorman Reveron, 24.

All four were charged with assault on a police officer and released without bail, sources said.

It wasn’t immediately clear if the charges against the men were bail-eligible. The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office did not immediately respond to a Post request for comment Tuesday.

The two assaulted cops, who were not identified, suffered minor injuries and were treated at the scene.

Police Benevolent Association President Patrick Hendry said in a statement:

Attacks on police officers are becoming an epidemic, and the reason is a revolving door we’re seeing in cases like this one.

It is impossible for police officers to deal effectively with crime and disorder if the justice system can’t or won’t protect us while we do that work.

Final thought: A two-tiered system of justice is not justice.