Blakeman Vows Pardon for Convicted NYPD Sergeant
Bruce Blakeman, the GOP candidate for Governor in New York, has drawn a sharp line in the ongoing debate over public safety and law enforcement. If elected this fall, he says his first act in office would be to pardon former NYPD Sgt. Erik Duran, the officer sentenced last week to three to nine years in state prison for throwing a picnic cooler at a fleeing drug suspect in the Bronx.
The incident occurred during an undercover narcotics operation in August 2023. Duran, a 13-year veteran and father of three, grabbed the nearest object available when the suspect, Eric Duprey, attempted to escape on a motorized scooter directly toward other officers and bystanders. One could even reasonably argue he would have been justified using his gun to stop the suspect from using a deadly weapon — the speeding vehicle — from hitting cops and innocent bystanders. The cooler struck Duprey, causing him to lose control, crash into a tree and die from his injuries. A judge convicted Duran of manslaughter after a bench trial.
The coming election presents an opportunity to reaffirm that public safety depends on trusting and supporting the men and women who confront risks every day.
Blakeman argues that Duran acted to protect his colleagues and the public in a high-pressure moment, and that sending a decorated officer to prison for such a split-second decision represents a profound miscarriage of justice. The pledge highlights a core divide in the 2026 gubernatorial race between Blakeman and incumbent Gov. Kathy Hochul, and more broadly between the approaches to policing taken by Republicans and Democrats across the nation.
Republicans maintain that officers confronting dangerous situations on the streets deserve support and the presumption of good faith, especially when seconds matter. The Duran case is the predictable outcome of years of policies in New York that have eroded that support: bail reform that cycle repeat offenders back onto the streets, lenient treatment of juvenile crime, and a prosecutorial mindset that often frames police use of force through the lens of systemic problems rather than the chaotic realities officers face daily.
Hochul’s office has offered no public comment on Blakeman’s pardon pledge or on the sentencing itself. That silence, coming after Duran’s conviction, sends its own signal to law enforcement across the state. While some celebrated the verdict outside the courthouse, no prominent Democrats pushed back against the outcome or the message it carries for officers who must make life-or-death calls under extreme pressure.
The chilling effect is already evident. Police work has always demanded quick judgment in unpredictable environments. Now officers must weigh not only the immediate threat but the risk that any intervention gone wrong could end their careers, strip their pensions and land them behind bars. When hesitation becomes the safer career choice, the consequences extend far beyond one case. Streets grow less secure. Retail theft proliferates with little consequence. Open drug markets expand. Families in too many neighborhoods hesitate to walk outside after dark.
This pattern is not confined to New York City. Across the state, from upstate communities to Long Island suburbs, residents have watched subway violence, migrant-related incidents, and persistent quality-of-life crimes erode confidence in public safety. Many see the Duran verdict as emblematic of a deeper philosophical difference: one side views law enforcement as essential partners in restoring order, while the other often treats police with reflexive skepticism and prioritizes restraints on their actions.
Republican reaction to the sentencing has been swift and consistent, reflecting a belief in the basic social contract that officers who run toward danger should receive backing from elected leaders rather than prosecution for good-faith efforts. Democratic responses, ranging from quiet acceptance to outright defense of the verdict by some, underscore a contrasting set of priorities that have contributed to declining morale within police ranks nationwide.
The choice before New York voters this November extends well beyond one officer’s fate. It is about whether the state will continue down a path that has left too many communities feeling less safe or whether it will empower those charged with protecting the public. Blakeman’s straightforward commitment to stand with officers offers a clear alternative to the status quo under four more years of the current approach.
New York has seen enough consequences of hesitation and second-guessing. The coming election presents an opportunity to reaffirm that public safety depends on trusting and supporting the men and women who confront risks every day, rather than treating them as suspects in their own right. The contrast could not be more clear.
READ MORE from Bob Capano:
Restoring the Rule of Law: Why Lee Zeldin Belongs at the DOJ Helm
I Miss the NYC Democrats I Used to Work With
From Patriotic Bay Ridge, Brooklyn to Hamas Haven
Bob Capano has been an adjunct political science professor for almost two decades, including at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City. X: @bobcapano
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By mfnnews
Blakeman Vows Pardon for Convicted NYPD Sergeant
Bruce Blakeman, the GOP candidate for Governor in New York, has drawn a sharp line in the ongoing debate over public safety and law enforcement. If elected this fall, he says his first act in office would be to pardon former NYPD Sgt. Erik Duran, the officer sentenced last week to three to nine years in state prison for throwing a picnic cooler at a fleeing drug suspect in the Bronx.
The incident occurred during an undercover narcotics operation in August 2023. Duran, a 13-year veteran and father of three, grabbed the nearest object available when the suspect, Eric Duprey, attempted to escape on a motorized scooter directly toward other officers and bystanders. One could even reasonably argue he would have been justified using his gun to stop the suspect from using a deadly weapon — the speeding vehicle — from hitting cops and innocent bystanders. The cooler struck Duprey, causing him to lose control, crash into a tree and die from his injuries. A judge convicted Duran of manslaughter after a bench trial.
The coming election presents an opportunity to reaffirm that public safety depends on trusting and supporting the men and women who confront risks every day.
Blakeman argues that Duran acted to protect his colleagues and the public in a high-pressure moment, and that sending a decorated officer to prison for such a split-second decision represents a profound miscarriage of justice. The pledge highlights a core divide in the 2026 gubernatorial race between Blakeman and incumbent Gov. Kathy Hochul, and more broadly between the approaches to policing taken by Republicans and Democrats across the nation.
Republicans maintain that officers confronting dangerous situations on the streets deserve support and the presumption of good faith, especially when seconds matter. The Duran case is the predictable outcome of years of policies in New York that have eroded that support: bail reform that cycle repeat offenders back onto the streets, lenient treatment of juvenile crime, and a prosecutorial mindset that often frames police use of force through the lens of systemic problems rather than the chaotic realities officers face daily.
Hochul’s office has offered no public comment on Blakeman’s pardon pledge or on the sentencing itself. That silence, coming after Duran’s conviction, sends its own signal to law enforcement across the state. While some celebrated the verdict outside the courthouse, no prominent Democrats pushed back against the outcome or the message it carries for officers who must make life-or-death calls under extreme pressure.
The chilling effect is already evident. Police work has always demanded quick judgment in unpredictable environments. Now officers must weigh not only the immediate threat but the risk that any intervention gone wrong could end their careers, strip their pensions and land them behind bars. When hesitation becomes the safer career choice, the consequences extend far beyond one case. Streets grow less secure. Retail theft proliferates with little consequence. Open drug markets expand. Families in too many neighborhoods hesitate to walk outside after dark.
This pattern is not confined to New York City. Across the state, from upstate communities to Long Island suburbs, residents have watched subway violence, migrant-related incidents, and persistent quality-of-life crimes erode confidence in public safety. Many see the Duran verdict as emblematic of a deeper philosophical difference: one side views law enforcement as essential partners in restoring order, while the other often treats police with reflexive skepticism and prioritizes restraints on their actions.
Republican reaction to the sentencing has been swift and consistent, reflecting a belief in the basic social contract that officers who run toward danger should receive backing from elected leaders rather than prosecution for good-faith efforts. Democratic responses, ranging from quiet acceptance to outright defense of the verdict by some, underscore a contrasting set of priorities that have contributed to declining morale within police ranks nationwide.
The choice before New York voters this November extends well beyond one officer’s fate. It is about whether the state will continue down a path that has left too many communities feeling less safe or whether it will empower those charged with protecting the public. Blakeman’s straightforward commitment to stand with officers offers a clear alternative to the status quo under four more years of the current approach.
New York has seen enough consequences of hesitation and second-guessing. The coming election presents an opportunity to reaffirm that public safety depends on trusting and supporting the men and women who confront risks every day, rather than treating them as suspects in their own right. The contrast could not be more clear.
READ MORE from Bob Capano:
Restoring the Rule of Law: Why Lee Zeldin Belongs at the DOJ Helm
I Miss the NYC Democrats I Used to Work With
From Patriotic Bay Ridge, Brooklyn to Hamas Haven
Bob Capano has been an adjunct political science professor for almost two decades, including at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City. X: @bobcapano
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By mfnnews
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