
By Gus Saltonstall
If you frequent Columbus Avenue on the Upper West Side, there is a good chance you have noticed one of the many dozen examples of the word “Smoke” recently graffitied onto storefronts and buildings.
The graffiti was tagged on multiple facades along the avenue at some point at the end of last week.
“Any news about the SMOKE graffiti that has come up on Columbus for 8 streets in a row,” Jon Courtney asked West Side Rag in an email.

Upper West Side Councilmember Gale Brewer also took note of the new neighborhood graffiti, and penned a letter Monday to the New York Police Department and New York City Department of Sanitation about the issue.
“I write to bring to your attention to an outbreak of graffiti – “SMOKE” – on almost EVERY storefront on the west side of Columbus Avenue and other streets. I saw dozens of SMOKE tags today from 96 Street to 72 Street, but it likely exists elsewhere as well,” Brewer wrote. I am urging NYPD to apprehend the person or persons who are defacing structures with this tag. I also urge DSNY, the MTA, and USPS to remove the SMOKE tags as soon as possible.”
The Department of Sanitation told Brewer that they would look into the issue on Monday, according to her office.
The New York Police Department did not immediately respond to the Rag’s request for comment.
As of Monday, the Rag counted six examples of the word ‘Smoke” still up on the west side of Columbus Avenue from 70th to 76th streets.
We will update this story, if we learn more.
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Just remember SMOKE, don’t admit to anything verbally or in writing. Your first name is Lawyer and your last name is Lawyer, and your address is Lawyer!