Son carries on dad’s NYPD Bomb Squad legacy at Gracie attack

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Bomb Squad Detective Sean Mulcahy was carrying on his dad’s legacy when he responded to the homemade bomb attack by two Islamist fanatics at Gracie Mansion.

Mulcahy, 51, was driving to work in Manhattan Saturday when he saw cops flying up the West Side Highway in a Bomb Squad truck and wondered what job they were on. He found out moments later.

“The sergeant who was on the scene called and said, ‘You guys can start gearing up and come up here because this is turning into something a little bit more,’” he told The Post in an exclusive interview at the West Village’s Sixth Precinct stationhouse.

Bomb Squad Detective Sean Mulcahy followed in Irish father’s footsteps when he joined the NYPD Bomb Squad. J.C. Rice for NY Post

When they arrived at East 88th Street and East End Avenue, one of the officers who was there was dressed in a bomb suit.

Mulcahy and his partner quickly readied the NYPD’s robot. After the bombs were removed, other squad members took them away for testing.

Mulcahy and his bomb-sniffing dog Tony then conducted “secondary searches,” he said.

He didn’t even tell his two sons, 19 and 16, that he had been there.

The detective learned that from his father, Denis Mulcahy, who retired from the same squad in 2022 after 33 years in the department. 

Sean Mulcahy responds to calls of suspicious devices with the NYPD Bomb Squad. J.C. Rice for NY Post
The feds filed charges against Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi alleging that they attempted to detonate two explosive devices in the vicinity of Gracie Mansion in support of ISIS. AFP via Getty Images

“This is what you’re trained for,” said the 82-year-old, who was born in Ireland and joined the department in 1989

He worked on abortion-clinic bombing cases in the 1980s,including a particularly harrowing experience at a Queens docctor’s office.

“We lifted one of the seat cushions and there were three sticks of dynamite with a travel alarm clock,” he recalled. “So we made the decision of removing the power source . . . a visible nine-volt battery.” 

Both men who came to the anti-Muslim protest in Manhattan were from Bucks County, Pa., a Philadelphia suburb.
An analysis of the device Balat allegedly threw into the crowd of anti-Muslim protesters found it contained TATP, a highly volatile explosive known as the “Mother of Satan” and extremely sensitive to impact, friction, and heat. AFP via Getty Images

It worked — the device never detonated and he received the Medal of Valor, one of the department’s highest honors.

His daughter, Maureen Mulcahy, an NYPD lieutenant who retired in 2019, didn’t sweat it that her brother Sean was at the chaotic Gracie scene.

“But I mean, I grew up with it with my father,” she said. “We didn’t know too much until we saw in the The Post.”

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