Corporate America is on edge and hiring armed guards after the NYC office shooting
A deadly shooting at a New York City office tower on Monday has companies and executives boosting security across Wall Street and corporate America. Firms are scrambling to hire armed guards, conduct risk assessments, review security protocols, and reassure employees that they're safe, security experts said on Tuesday.
"The phone hasn't stopped since this morning," Sean Crowley, the cofounder and CEO of CTS Research and Investigations, told Business Insider. CTS, based in NYC, is a partner and co-owner of Illuno, an app — "Like Uber for hiring security guards," Crowley calls it — that makes it easy to hire law enforcement for security jobs.
Most of the calls, Crowley said, are coming from commercial and office property managers in Manhattan and downtown Brooklyn who want to bring in armed security guards, clad in suits and ties, to post in their lobbies. "This will more than double our workload," said Crowley, a former NYPD captain and commander of the Manhattan District Attorney's Office detective squad.
Corporate leaders are on edge after the second deadly shooting involving business executives in six months. Monday's attack, which played out at the New York City headquarters of the private equity firm Blackstone, left five dead, including real estate executive Wesley LePatner and the gunman. Monday's shooting followed the assassination of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in December. Companies are now rushing to reassure staff and bolster security as haunting images—like barricaded office doors—underscore growing fears that working for corporate America is no longer safe.
Don Aviv, president of Interfor International, a security firm that works with asset managers, told BI on Tuesday that roughly 80% of his firm's clients had "retained additional security for their lobbies and foyers," with some hiking protective services through next week.
"The issue with our society is that we're reactionary and not proactive," Aviv said.
Heightened security comes at a cost
Banks like Goldman Sachs and Citi sought to assuage employees about workplace security on Tuesday.
Goldman Sachs "has robust protocols in place to keep our people safe every day, and is proactively assessing and monitoring the safety of the firm's global campuses to protect our people and facilities around the clock," Goldman said in a memo authorised by Jacqueline Arthur, head of human capital management and corporate and workplace solutions.
"This includes our dedicated team of NYPD officers and security guards at the entrance of and within our buildings, who are trained to carefully manage entry to our offices and respond to any potential incident," Arthur said, adding that Goldman "is constantly assessing" its security protocols.
Citi told New York-based employees on Tuesday that the firm had "increased the security presence and capabilities at our headquarters" within the past year. "This includes working closely with the NYPD," he said. "While we feel confident with the protocols we have in place, we will not hesitate to adjust if necessary," said the memo by Ed Skyler, Citi's head of enterprise services and public affairs.
For companies seeking to boost security, the extra layer of protection won't come cheap. Two security executives in New York City say posting an armed former or off-duty police officer in your lobby will cost building managers $75 to $200 an hour or more. Hiring an armed escort to protect a CEO or other prominent person will cost in the $135 to $200 range per hour.
For now, it's not prohibiting demand. Herman Weisberg said his security company usually hires about 15 armed former military and NYPD officers to protect CEOs and other high-profile individuals in New York and Washington, DC. On Tuesday, that number was up to 30 — and the managing director of SAGE Intelligence thinks it will grow further.
Weisberg, a former NYPD detective, said he is also seeing an increase in requests for "threat assessments," including risks tied to former disgruntled ex-employees.
"One firm," he said, "wants us to work with their customer service department on analyzing current people who are complaining 'outside the norm.'"
He pointed to the back-to-back tragedies of the fatal shooting of UnitedHealthcare's CEO, followed by Monday's attack.
"When this stuff happens more than once, I think anybody with controversial or, at this point, even non-controversial businesses are starting to look at security and take it a little bit more seriously."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
a minute ago
- Bloomberg
David Fiszel's Honeycomb Hedge Fund Is Returning Client Cash
Honeycomb Asset Management — the hedge fund founded in 2016 by Point72 Asset Management alumnus David Fiszel — is returning client cash. Fiszel told investors that he's not optimistic as markets recently reached highs.


New York Post
30 minutes ago
- New York Post
Delta Air Lines tries to calm fury over ticket prices, telling lawmakers it won't use AI
Delta Air Lines said Friday it will not use artificial intelligence to set personalized ticket prices for passengers after facing sharp criticism from lawmakers. Last week, Democratic Senators Ruben Gallego, Mark Warner and Richard Blumenthal said they believed the Atlanta-based airline would use AI to set individual prices, which would 'likely mean fare price increases up to each individual consumer's personal 'pain point.'' Delta has said it plans to deploy AI-based revenue management technology across 20% of its domestic network by the end of 2025 in partnership with Fetcherr, an AI pricing company. Delta has said it plans to deploy AI-based revenue management technology across 20% of its domestic network by the end of 2025. AFP via Getty Images 'There is no fare product Delta has ever used, is testing or plans to use that targets customers with individualized prices based on personal data,' Delta told the senators in a letter on Friday, seen by Reuters. 'Our ticket pricing never takes into account personal data.' The senators cited a comment in December by Delta President Glen Hauenstein that the carrier's AI price-setting technology is capable of setting fares based on a prediction of 'the amount people are willing to pay for the premium products related to the base fares.' Last week, American Airlines CEO Robert Isom said using AI to set ticket prices could hurt consumer trust. 'This is not about bait and switch. This is not about tricking,' Isom said on an earnings call, adding 'talk about using AI in that way, I don't think it's appropriate. And certainly from American, it's not something we will do.' Delta said airlines have used dynamic pricing for more than three decades, in which pricing fluctuates based on a variety of factors like overall customer demand, fuel prices and competition but not a specific consumer's personal information. 'There is no fare product Delta has ever used, is testing or plans to use that targets customers with individualized prices based on personal data,' Delta told the senators in a letter. AFP via Getty Images 'Given the tens of millions of fares and hundreds of thousands of routes for sale at any given time, the use of new technology like AI promises to streamline the process by which we analyze existing data and the speed and scale at which we can respond to changing market dynamics,' Delta's letter said. It added that AI can 'assist our analysts with pricing by reducing manual processes, accelerating analysis and improving time to market for pricing adjustments.'


UPI
31 minutes ago
- UPI
Palantir gets $10B Army contract to improve readiness with AI
1 of 2 | Defense officials on Friday announced that the Army will consolidate 15 prime contracts and 60 related contracts into one enterprise agreement with Denver-based software firm Palantir. File Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI | License Photo Aug. 1 (UPI) -- Denver-based software firm Palantir Technologies secured a 10-year contract worth up to $10 billion to improve the U.S. Army's military readiness and efficiency with artificial intelligence. Palantir specializes in developing software that enables the use of AI to make real-time decisions, such as those that the U.S. Army could face in the future. The contract supports the Army's sustained capability growth and enhances its ability to meet operational warfighting needs with proven [and] commercially available AI technologies, it said in an online announcement on Thursday. "This enterprise agreement represents a pivotal step in the Army's commitment to modernizing our capabilities while being fiscally responsible," Army Chief Information Officer Leo Garciga said. The enterprise agreement with Palantir will help the Army to save money while improving its operational efficiency and military readiness through a "comprehensive framework for the Army's future software and data needs," according to the announcement. "By streamlining our procurement processes and leveraging enterprise-level discounts, we are not only enhancing our operational effectiveness but also maximizing our buying power," Garciga added. The Army will consolidate 15 prime contracts and 60 related contracts into one enterprise agreement with Palantir, which accelerates the delivery of proven commercial software to the Army's military units. "This streamlined approach reduces procurement timelines, ensuring soldiers have rapid access to cutting-edge data integration, analytics and AI tools," according to the Army. The contract also saves money by eliminating contract and pass-through fees, while reducing procurement timelines. The contract enables the Army and other Defense Department to pay up to $10 billion over 10 years to obtain Palantir products, but it does not require the military to spend the full $10 billion. Palantir earlier this year provided the Army with two AI-powered systems as part of a $178 million contract, according to a CNBC news report. The Defense Department in May also increased to $795 million an existing contract with Maven Smart Systems to improve the military's AI capabilities.