Police suicide epidemic continues to grip Long Island as cops confirm body found on Nassau beach — believed to be retired NYPD officer
A retired NYPD officer appears to have taken his own life on Lido Beach Monday morning, a source tells The Post — the latest in an alarming number of law enforcement suicides on Long Island.
Nassau County police confirmed they discovered a body on the Hempstead beach Monday, but have yet to identify the person or release many details about the incident.
Cops admitted they believe the death was a suicide.
A source close to the investigation said the male victim was a former New York City cop who came to the beach and fatally shot himself with a handgun during the early morning hours.
'Its a sad situation that we're not really looking to report on,' Nassau police told The Post.
If an autopsy confirms the self-inflicted killing, it would mark the seventh police officer to commit suicide in New York state this year.
At its current pace, the state is on track to see more than 20 police suicides by the end of 2025 — far surpassing 2024's total of 13.
'The numbers are alarming, which is why our mental health should be a priority,' Nassau County PBA President Tommy Shevlin told The Post.
Just last month, Shevlin blew the whistle on police suicides across the state, with more than half now coming out of Long Island.
'We are in the midst of a quiet crisis,' Suffolk County PBA President Lou Civello previously said.
In Suffolk, four officers took their own lives last year. Allfour of the Long Island police suicides this year have occurred in Nassau.
'The suicide rate among law enforcement is 60% higher than the average population,' Gov. Kathy Hochul acknowledged on X last year, in allocating $13 million toward mental health support for cops across the state.
But the police union presidents believe more is needed, urging Albany to pass the Lt. Joseph Banish Mental Health Act that would create a mental health support program for officers.
'This legislation is not just necessary — it's long overdue,' Civello said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
NYPD searches Bronx River for missing 2-year-old boy
HUNTS POINT, The Bronx (PIX11) — The 20-year-old father of a missing 2-year-old Bronx boy is being held at Rikers Island after allegedly telling the child's mother he threw him in the Bronx River, according to law enforcement sources. NYPD dive teams searched for the boy in the river near the Bruckner Expressway Monday night and for most of the day on Tuesday, but didn't find him. More Local News Police said the boy was last seen by his mother at 827 Hunts Point Avenue in the Bronx at around 10 p.m. on May 10. He was wearing a white shirt and a diaper. The dad took the child, Montrell Williams, to see his paternal grandmother for Mother's Day in Hunts Point. The father then stormed out of the home with Montrell following an argument, according to his grandmother. She spoke with PIX11 News by phone on Tuesday. She said that on May 11, the day after her son had exited her home with her grandson, she went to the local NYPD precinct, and spoke with an officer. 'I said, 'My son kidnapped my grandchild out of my house,'' she told PIX11 News. After making the report, she said in her Tuesday interview, officers told her that because the toddler's father took him, it's not necessarily a criminal act. Her son never returned the boy to the toddler's 17-year-old mother. They share custody of the child. The grandmother, who wished to remain anonymous, said that she'd reached the boy's father, her son, by phone, days after the toddler had gone missing. 'At first, he didn't say nothing,' the grandmother recounted. She continued, though, that the toddler's father tried to reassure her. 'He was like, 'Oh, he's good, he's good. Don't worry about it. He's all right.'' He didn't provide believable proof to support that assessment, the grandmother said. Later, the teen mom told police that she gave Montrell to his dad on May 10, but she has not seen the boy since, sources said. The father was supposed to bring the boy back to his mother on May 30. When she saw him without the boy, the dad allegedly told her he'd thrown him in the river, sources said. The father did not tell police that. Police searched the river based on what the mom had told them. After refusing to speak with detectives, the father was taken to family court Monday in the Bronx on charges of custodial interference. A judge remanded him to Rikers Island. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Disturbing': NYC lawmakers seek investigation into NYPD-ICE collaboration
Editor's note: The video above aired in a previous newscast. NEW YORK (PIX11) – New York City Council members are urging the Department of Investigations (DOI) to investigate whether the NYPD is sharing information with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Speaker Adrienne Adams, Council Member Gale Brewer, and Commissioner Jocelyn E. Strauber have requested the DOI investigate the NYPD's alleged collaboration with federal authorities. They are concerned that civil immigration enforcement may violate local laws. More Local News 'In recent days, we've witnessed masked agents of the Trump administration detain people following the law targeting our neighbors,' Speaker Adams said in a video posted to her X account. 'This is not about public safety; it makes us less safe. Reports that NYPD collaboration and information shared with federal agencies are being used in civil immigration proceedings are disturbing.' Adams also pointed out that sharing information with ICE for immigration enforcement violates New York City law since New York is a sanctuary city: a sanctuary city limits or declines to cooperate with the federal government's immigration law enforcement. In a press conference on Monday, NYPD Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said the force does not engage in civil immigration enforcement. In an email to PIX11 News, a spokesperson for the NYPD issued the following statement: 'The NYPD does not engage in civil immigration enforcement, period. As it has for many years, the NYPD works with local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies on criminal investigations, including work on federal criminal task forces. That work is critical to getting dangerous individuals out of our communities, protecting our city from terrorism, and keeping our families safe.' Since January, the department has been under fire for working with ICE agents to 'go after criminals.' In May, the NYPD gave federal immigration authorities an internal record about a Palestinian woman arrested at a protest, now used by the Trump administration as evidence to deport her, according to court documents obtained by The Associated Press. Matthew Euzarraga is a multimedia journalist from El Paso, Texas. He has covered local news and LGBTQIA topics in the New York City Metro area since 2021. He joined the PIX11 Digital team in 2023. You can see more of his work here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


New York Post
6 hours ago
- New York Post
LA looters target popular sushi restaurant: 'Everybody is scared'
LOS ANGELES — The criminal mobs taking advantage of the upheaval caused by the anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles smashed their way into a popular downtown sushi joint, leaving its owner and workers terrified. Video posted online shows one of the wooden front doors of Otoro Little Tokyo on East 2nd Street hanging bashed off its hinges and dozens of mask-wearing hoodlums trashing the inside of the restaurant and grabbing whatever they could early Monday. 'There were so many people from the outside, I was so scared, I was worried they would steal everything and destroy everything,' owner Kurt Kawai Chin told The Post on Tuesday. Advertisement 4 Video posted online shows one of the wooden front doors of Otoro Little Tokyo on East 2nd Street hanging bashed off its hinges. Chris Without a Hellcat via Storyful 4 Members of law enforcement keep watch as protests against federal immigration sweeps continue, in downtown Los Angeles, California, U.S. June 9, 2025. REUTERS He said he expects his shop to now be closed for at least a week — with his restaurant staff too frightened at the moment to show up. Advertisement 'Everybody is scared. If the protests go longer, we may lose more. We hope the protests will be over soon, otherwise people will still be scared to come downtown,' Chin said. Some protesters had gathered outside the restaurant during the mayhem in a vain attempt to stop the looters from pillaging yet another local shop, a day after thieves targeted businesses including a downtown Foot Locker, a T-Mobile store and a convenience store. 'Hey get the f–k out!' a protester yelled at the throngs of troublemakers streaming inside. The man filming the footage followed a hooded man who snatched the restaurant's cash register drawer into the street, calling after him, 'Making us look bad!' Advertisement 4 National Guard and LAPD stand guard outside of the Robert Young Federal Building as protesters gather on June 9, 2025 in Downtown Los Angeles, California. Getty Images The looter turned around and flashed a gloved middle finger, at which point the photographer, presumably looking to avoid a confrontation, said, 'Nah, you good.' More video posted on Instagram shows protesters closing the door behind the looters, then appearing to stand in front of it to prevent more people from getting inside. Chin said he expects to be out around $100,000 from the looting when everything is tabulated — including $10,000 for the broken door alone. Advertisement 4 Multiple looters broke into a sushi restaurant during an anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) protest in Los Angeles on Monday, June 9. Chris Without a Hellcat via Storyful 'The security company called us, and we looked at the camera. … We were very lucky' considering what could have happened, he said. LA has been embroiled in chaotic and at times violent protests since Friday, following a series of raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement which resulted in the arrest of around 100 illegal immigrants. Cops have arrested dozens of the more violent protesters and are on the lookout for others they've identified but have yet to capture, including Elpidio Reyna, 40, who was caught on video throwing objects at federal vehicles in the city of Paramount. President Trump has called in 4,000 National Guard members and around 700 active-duty Marines in an attempt to bring the civil unrest under control, which lefty politicians and media outlets claim have fanned the flames of the violence.