News Analysis  •  2A Commentary  •  NYC Politics

Zohran Mamdani, Gun Politics, and the Brooklyn Baby Shooting: What Every New Yorker Should Notice

Kaori Patterson-Moore, seven months old, was killed in a suspected gang-style moped shooting. Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s answer was the same one progressives always reach for: “gun violence.” For New York permit applicants and anyone who cares about the Second Amendment, that choice of words matters far more than it looks.

PT

Peter Ticali — Founder, NY Safe Inc.

NRA Endowment Life Member · NRA & USCCA Certified Instructor · Licensed: NY, MD, DC, MA, UT · NY Pistol License Holder Since 1992

Published April 4, 2026 · Not legal advice

Quick answer

The Brooklyn killing was a suspected gang-related shooting. Two suspects have been arrested. Lawful concealed carriers and permit holders had nothing to do with it. And yet New York City’s mayor responded with the political language of “gun violence” — language that shifts focus away from violent criminals and onto the law-abiding. After NYSRPA v. Bruen, public-safety rhetoric alone is not enough to justify burdening the Second Amendment; the governing test is text, history, and tradition. That framing tells permit applicants everything they need to know about the direction of this administration.

NY Safe Inc. is a training organization, not a law firm. This article is commentary and education, not legal advice. Consult a licensed New York firearms attorney for your specific situation.

What actually happened in Brooklyn — and what did not

Kaori Patterson-Moore was seven months old. Two men on a moped allegedly fired into a group of people in Brooklyn. A baby in a stroller was struck in the head. Her older brother was grazed. Police arrested the alleged shooter and later a second suspect connected to the moped. Reporting characterized the incident as suspected gang-related street violence.

That is the story. That is the horror. And that is the part that actually tells you what failed: not too much lawful carry, not too many trained permit holders, not some regulatory gap that let good people exercise a constitutional right. What failed was the city’s capacity — or willingness — to deter, punish, and incapacitate the kind of violent offenders who prey on innocent families.

No new gun-control measure aimed at lawful citizens would have stopped someone already intent on this kind of attack. A person willing to open fire on a crowd from a moving moped is not deterred by permit requirements, registration mandates, or waiting periods applied to the law-abiding. Nothing in the reporting suggests lawful permit holders caused this tragedy; the failure here was violent criminality and the city’s inability to stop it. And the public deserves a mayor willing to say so out loud.

“No new gun-control measure aimed at lawful citizens would have stopped someone already intent on this kind of attack. The failure here was violent criminality — and the city’s inability to stop it.”

Peter Ticali — NY Safe Inc.

The mayor’s response and what it signals

Mayor Mamdani’s public posture after the killing leaned toward the familiar language of combating “gun violence across the city.” That is politically convenient because it converts a concrete failure of order into a generalized argument for more restrictions, more suspicion, and more pressure on the law-abiding. It is much harder to say the obvious part out loud: a city that cannot reliably deter violent offenders, crush gang-style retaliation, and keep dangerous people off the street will keep producing tragedies no matter how many press conferences it holds.

The framing of “gun violence” as a unified phenomenon — lumping a moped gang shooting together with every lawful firearm transaction in the state — is a rhetorical choice, not an analytical one. It conflates predation with rights exercise. It treats the armed criminal and the licensed concealed carrier as participants in the same problem. They are not. One is a felon committing violence. The other is a constitutional right-holder exercising a lawful liberty. The distinction is not technical. It is moral and legal. And a mayor who cannot or will not maintain it is not leading on public safety. He is performing it.

⚠ What this signals for permit applicants

When City Hall’s default response to gang violence is more suspicion of lawful gun ownership, improving the culture of permit issuance and licensing responsiveness is not exactly going to be a political priority. That alone should create urgency for law-abiding adults to get trained and informed now — not after the political environment gets worse.

This is not accidental. It fits his ideology precisely.

Mamdani did not arrive in office as some mystery pragmatist who happens to prefer slightly stricter gun policy. He has been direct about his worldview. In his inaugural address, he declared that City Hall would replace what he called “the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism.” He also said plainly: “I was elected as a Democratic socialist and I will govern as a Democratic socialist.”

For Second Amendment supporters, those words are not abstract. “Rugged individualism” in the self-defense context is not a caricature of selfishness. It is the recognition that when evil appears, the individual victim meets it first — not a slogan, not a task force, not the press office. The person. The mother. The father. The store owner. The commuter responsible for protecting innocent life in the first violent seconds before help can possibly arrive.

“Collectivism” sounds compassionate from a podium. In practice, it tends to mean centralizing power, broadening bureaucratic control, and treating self-reliant citizens as a political inconvenience. Gun owners hear that line differently than a campaign crowd does. They hear the old progressive suspicion of private force, private responsibility, and private moral agency — the same suspicion that has always produced the most aggressive gun restriction proposals New York has ever seen.

The numbers behind the rhetoric

5,000

Additional NYPD officers canceled from previous expansion plan in Mamdani’s first preliminary budget

35,000

Projected NYPD uniform headcount under Mamdani’s preliminary budget — vs. the 40,000-officer force the prior administration planned to build toward

$5.4B

Remaining two-year budget gap after revisions — the environment in which police expansion became “negotiable”

2022

Year the Supreme Court decided Bruen, permanently ending interest-balancing as a valid Second Amendment test

The contradiction: safety language on one hand, weakened policing capacity on the other

Mamdani’s defenders will say crime policy is complex and budgets are constrained. Fair. But priorities are still priorities. His first preliminary budget canceled the plan to hire 5,000 additional NYPD officers and kept uniform headcount just under 35,000 instead of moving toward the 40,000-officer force envisioned under the prior administration. That is not a neutral administrative decision. That is a choice.

Compare that choice to the rhetoric. A baby is murdered in a gang-style street shooting, and the public answer from the mayor is not primarily a moral indictment of the violent criminal class or a forceful case for deterrence. It is another turn toward the conceptual politics of “gun violence.” Police expansion is negotiable. Anti-gun messaging is not. That asymmetry is a policy statement whether City Hall calls it one or not.

This is the pattern New Yorkers keep seeing: the tools that actually deter violent offenders — visible law enforcement, swift prosecution, serious incarceration — get treated as budget problems. The tools that inconvenience law-abiding gun owners — registration, waiting periods, permit bureaucracy, sensitive places — never face the same fiscal constraint.

Constitutional standard — NYSRPA v. Bruen (2022)

The Supreme Court was explicit: the Second Amendment is not subject to free-floating interest balancing. The test is text, history, and tradition. If the plain text of the Amendment covers the conduct, the government must justify any restriction by pointing to a historical tradition of analogous regulation — not by arguing that a restriction would make people feel safer.

When a mayor invokes tragedy to imply that rights must shrink, that is a species of interest balancing. Bruen already rejected that move. The people made the balancing decision when they ratified the right. Politicians do not get to re-open the ledger every time they hold a press conference.

Interest balancing is dead. The Constitution does not vanish at a press conference.

This part deserves direct treatment because New York politicians still talk as if they can weigh away constitutional rights whenever they invoke a tragedy. After Bruen, that is simply not the law. The Court made clear that firearms regulations must be grounded in the Nation’s historical tradition — not in a contemporary official’s assessment of whether a restriction feels useful. The constitutional text is the floor. History defines the permissible walls.

What Mamdani’s rhetoric implies — and what progressive gun politics has always implied — is that there exists some public safety calculus in which enough tragedies justify enough restrictions. Bruen rejects that framework entirely. It does not ask whether restrictions feel proportionate. It asks whether they are historically grounded. Most of what Albany has proposed since 2022 has not cleared that bar, and the federal courts have said so repeatedly.

In plain English: pointing at a moped gang shooting and saying “therefore your rights must shrink” is not constitutional analysis. It is emotional opportunism dressed as governance. The legal framework after Bruen does not permit it. But the political culture around it will keep trying — and every new tragedy becomes another opportunity to press the argument.

Meanwhile — who is New York actually targeting?

While gang-style shootings continue to terrorize neighborhoods, Albany is still pushing aggressive measures around 3D-printed firearms, digital firearm code, and technological blocking requirements for 3D printers. The political pattern is consistent: the state searches for new frontiers of control over tools, files, devices, and law-abiding conduct — while the violent criminal class that produced the Brooklyn killing operates in the gaps left by under-resourced law enforcement.

Kaori Patterson-Moore was not failed by too much freedom for lawful citizens. She was failed by violent men who made a choice. The gap between that reality and the state’s preferred talking points tells you almost everything you need to know about where current political energy actually goes.

Why this creates real urgency for New York permit applicants right now

If you are a New York resident who has been putting off training, the lesson here is not complicated: do not wait for politics to become more respectful of your rights. The current administration has signaled — clearly and repeatedly, in its own words — that it views lawful armed self-reliance as something cold that collective government should replace. That worldview does not naturally produce faster permit processing or friendlier licensing culture. Administrations shape the culture, responsiveness, and discretion of the agencies under them. A mayor who has publicly framed individual armed self-reliance as ideologically inconvenient gives no grounds for optimism that the city will treat permit applicants as a constitutional constituency worth serving.

The smarter move is to get educated, get qualified, and understand the process while you still can. That means learning the law as it currently stands, understanding where you can and cannot carry under New York’s sensitive places framework, building genuine safe handling habits, and taking serious training from instructors who know the New York and NYC systems as they actually operate — not as a political slogan describes them.

The right exists. The permit process exists. The training requirement exists and can be completed now. The only thing that changes when political conditions worsen is how willing the bureaucratic machinery becomes to accommodate you. Waiting for that machinery to become friendlier under this administration is not a serious strategy.

Start here based on where you live

New York City

NYC CCW class — five boroughs process, training, and permit guidance

Go to NYC CCW class →

Nassau County

County-specific class, PDCN portal, and process walkthrough

Go to Nassau class →

Suffolk County

Suffolk-specific process realities and training built for local applicants

Go to Suffolk class →

Westchester County

Westchester-specific class and process guidance for applicants north of the city

Go to Westchester class →

NY 16+2 Concealed Carry Class

The state-required 16-hour classroom + 2-hour live fire training course

Go to 16+2 class →

Know Where You Can Carry

NY sensitive places law analysis — where the restrictions stand and what Bruen says about them

Read the analysis →

Frequently asked questions

Did Mayor Mamdani say anything specific about new gun laws after the Brooklyn killing?

His public comments centered on combating “gun violence across the city” — a phrase that signals ideological direction without necessarily committing to a specific bill. What matters for New Yorkers is not any single legislative proposal but the overall governing posture: does City Hall view lawful armed citizens as a constitutional constituency or as a political problem? Based on the mayor’s stated ideology and public rhetoric, the answer appears to be the latter.

What does Bruen actually change about how politicians can argue for gun restrictions?

NYSRPA v. Bruen (2022) eliminated interest balancing as a permissible framework for Second Amendment cases. Before Bruen, courts would sometimes weigh government interests against the burden on rights. After Bruen, that approach is gone. Regulations must be justified by text, history, and tradition — specifically, a historical analog to the proposed restriction. A politician saying “we think this will make people safer” is not a constitutional argument anymore. NY Safe Inc. is not a law firm and this is not legal advice; consult a licensed NY firearms attorney for your specific situation.

Does the political environment in NYC actually affect how quickly permits get processed?

The permit process in New York City runs through the NYPD License Division and is governed by state and local law, so individual administrations do not unilaterally rewrite the rules. What administrations can influence is culture, resource allocation, responsiveness, and the aggressiveness with which licensing offices interpret their discretion. In a city whose mayor has signaled that armed self-reliance is ideologically contrary to his governing philosophy, assuming the process will become faster or friendlier is not a safe assumption.

What training is required before I can apply for a New York concealed carry permit?

New York requires 16 hours of classroom instruction and 2 hours of live-fire range training as a prerequisite for a concealed carry permit application. This is the 16+2 requirement. NY Safe Inc. offers this training and county-specific classes for NYC, Nassau, Suffolk, and Westchester applicants. Visit the relevant class page linked above for current scheduling and availability.

Is it true that New York’s sensitive places law has been challenged in court?

Yes. Multiple provisions of New York’s CCIA-era sensitive places designations have faced and continue to face constitutional challenges in federal court under the Bruen framework. Some restrictions have been enjoined at various stages of litigation. The legal landscape is actively evolving. NY Safe Inc. is not a law firm; this is not legal advice. For the current state of the litigation and what it means for where you can legally carry, consult a licensed New York firearms attorney.

Take action now

The political climate is not getting more favorable. Start your training while you still can.

If City Hall views lawful armed self-reliance as ideologically inconvenient, waiting for the process to become easier is not a strategy. Get educated. Get qualified. Protect your family and your rights on your timeline — not the government’s.

PT

Peter Ticali

Founder & Lead Instructor, NY Safe Inc.

Peter Ticali has held a New York pistol license since 1992. He is an NRA Endowment Life Member, NRA and USCCA Certified Instructor, and licensed firearms instructor in New York, Maryland, the District of Columbia, Massachusetts, and Utah. He teaches the 18-hour NY CCW class and county-specific courses across the New York metro area.

NRA Endowment Life Member · NRA & USCCA Certified Instructor · Licensed: NY, MD, DC, MA, UT · NY Pistol License Holder Since 1992

Disclaimer

NY Safe Inc. is a firearms safety training and permit guidance organization, not a law firm. Peter Ticali is not an attorney. Nothing in this article constitutes legal advice or creates an attorney-client relationship. Laws governing firearms ownership, licensing, and carry change frequently and vary by jurisdiction. Consult a licensed New York firearms attorney before making decisions based on any legal information presented here.


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