‘Sketchy’ DA: Bragg paints tree, as junkies get free needles and nod off in NYC’s famed Washington Square Park

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Manhattan’s top prosecutor showed off his painting skills at Washington Square Park this week in a bizarre bid to “heal” the city, while drug addicts nodded off all around.

Soft-on-crime District Attorney Alvin Bragg was spotted by The Post brush in hand, lost in a watercolor sketch, as part of his “art of healing” July workshop series.

The choice of location was no coincidence — the northwest corner of the park has spiraled into a depraved drug den, with syringes littering the ground and zombies shooting up on park benches and under trees.

Bragg painted a tree in watercolor in the infamous northwest section of the park. J.C. Rice

“We want to take back the park and make it available for those who live and visit the area to do things like the artwork we were just doing, you know listen to music, enjoy the park,” Bragg told The Post.

“It’s very intentional to pick that part of the park which has had some challenges,” Bragg, who was there for about an hour with his entourage and fielded questions from a handful of community members, added.

The DA’s office has been putting on these taxpayer-funded summer art workshops annually – in past years focusing on gun violence.

“It’s absolutely baffling,” fumed Trevor Sumner, Greenwich Village resident and president of the Washington Square Association.

“The whole thing is an utter farce. To have the guy who’s most responsible for the rampant drug use, mental illness and violence in the park come here to gaslight the entire neighborhood like it doesn’t exist. It’s infuriating.”

Moments before Bragg began painting a tree in watercolor, the city’s drug crisis blossomed in real time a few feet away.

Officers tried clearing out the park’s “drug den” before Bragg’s arrival. J.C. Rice
A couple hours before Bragg’s arrival, workers from George Soros’ nonprofit handed out free needles in the park. J.C. Rice

Police officers tried to revive a glassy-eyed junkie slumped on a bench — and workers from the nonprofit Drug Policy Alliance were seen covertly slipping free syringes to addicts.

The needles are part of so-called “harm reduction kits” the $13 million pro-drug non-profit touts online.

They come complete with drug paraphernalia that includes syringes, alcohol wipes, cotton, tourniquets and cookers, according to the group.

It’s unclear how long the group – which was founded in 1994 with funding from far left-billionaire George Soros and lobbied for marijuana legalization – has been operating in the junkie-filled section of the park.

Bragg painted a tree Wednesday at Washington Square Park. J.C. Rice

Soros is the Drug Policy Alliance’s chief donor and previous chairman. His son Alex Soros still sits on its board.

The organization, which said its philosophy is about “meeting people where they are,” declined to comment.

Harm reduction enables addicts to shoot up rather than getting them to quit, critics have charged.

The group touts its harm reduction kits online. Drug Policy Alliance
The group hands out “harm reduction kits” with complete drug paraphernalia to safely shoot up. Drug Policy Alliance

“The idea is that people should only seek treatment when they’re ready. But most people addicted to drugs are addicted for their whole lives,” Charles Fane Lehmann, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute, recently told The Post.

“They often regard efforts to get people into treatment . . . as actively hostile to the interests of people who use drugs.”

Meanwhile, the NYPD’s Sixth Precinct continues to arrest the park’s regular half a dozen dealers — most of whom are released shortly after.

One of the outreach workers was wearing a Drug Policy Alliance tee-shirt, a pro-drug group started with Soros’ backing. J.C. Rice
A woman walks by with a baby in a stroller this week at the park, while people smoke crack. J.C. Rice

“No one should feel comfortable selling drugs in the West Village, especially Washington Square Park,” cops posted this week after another bust.

A record 471 narcotics arrests have been made in the precinct alone so far this year, up 68% from a year ago, according to NYPD data.

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