Quickbyte
Jan 15, 2026

Zohran Mamdani Takes Unbelievable Action After Suspect Arrested In The Snowball Attack On Uniformed Police Officers

NEW YORK, NY — The "innocent snowball fight" narrative peddled by City Hall has officially frozen over.

On Thursday, the NYPD’s warrants squad executed a 5 a.m. raid on a Bronx apartment, taking Gusmane Coulibaly, a 27-year-old social media personality, into custody. Coulibaly, who posts under the moniker “Diaper Man,” is the first of four suspects to be arrested in connection with a violent Washington Square Park melee that left two uniformed officers hospitalized.

The arrest has detonated a political firestorm, exposing a massive rift between Mayor Zohran Mamdani and his own police force.

"A 27-YEAR-OLD IS NOT A KID"

The controversy began Monday when viral videos showed a rowdy crowd pelting retreating NYPD officers with snowballs packed with ice and rocks. While Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch immediately labeled the behavior "disgraceful" and "criminal," Mayor Zohran Mamdani took a shockingly different tone.

“I’ve seen the videos of kids throwing snowballs at members of the NYPD... it looked like kids at a snowball fight,” the Mayor stated earlier this week, suggesting that criminal charges were not warranted.

The Police Benevolent Association (PBA) wasted no time in torching the Mayor's assessment following Coulibaly's arrest.

THE "PRANKSTER'S" VIOLENT RECORD

Gusmane Coulibaly is far from the "innocent child" portrayed by the Mayor's rhetoric. A self-described content creator, Coulibaly records videos of himself pretending to be the "most disrespectful homeless man" in the city.

Most disturbingly, Coulibaly was arrested just three weeks ago on February 6th for an attempted robbery in a Bronx subway station. Video from that encounter shows Coulibaly approaching a stranger and demanding money, stating: “If I get mad I’m gonna have to run your pockets.”

While Coulibaly's attorney, George Vomvolakis, maintains the subway incident was a "prank" for a YouTube channel titled “Life of a Diaper,” the victim told police he feared for his life. Coulibaly was released on his own recognizance for that case and is due back in court on March 15.

CHARGES DOWNGRADED AMID OUTRAGE

Despite the NYPD originally seeking felony assault charges, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office chose to downgrade the charges against Coulibaly to misdemeanor obstructing governmental administration and a harassment violation.

Assistant District Attorney Vicki Notaro admitted that video clearly shows Coulibaly striking an officer in the face near his eye, but claimed they could not prove the officer's head and neck injuries were "directly caused" by Coulibaly's conduct specifically, as three other suspects were also throwing projectiles.

At his Thursday night arraignment, which was attended by a dozen stony-faced uniformed officers, Coulibaly was once again released on supervised release.

THE FALLOUT AT CITY HALL

The incident has become a rallying cry for critics of Mayor Mamdani’s past anti-police rhetoric. Former Governor Andrew Cuomo joined the fray, stating on X, “This is disgraceful. But with a mayor who has a history of calling the police ‘racist, evil, wicked and corrupt,’ he set the tone.”

While the Mayor's office continues to maintain that the situation was simply a "snowball fight that got out of hand," Commissioner Tisch and union leadership are vowing to find the remaining three suspects.

As PBA President Patrick Hendry told reporters after the court proceeding: “This was an attack on the uniform that these police officers wear so proudly every day. It didn’t end when the snow melted.”

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