22 September 2011

Tough Love for Knox and Hester

Tough Love for Knox and Hester

The Bears receivers had a tough game against the Saints. Roy Williams didn't play because of a groin injury, Earl Bennett was knocked out early with a chest injury, and Devin Hester and Johnny Knox made three catches -- combined.

But receivers coach Darryl Drake would like you to ease up on his players.

"We've got what we've got, and people need to embrace what we've got and stop (whining) about it," he said. "Things are not going to change, so why talk about them? If you're a true Bears fan why beat them up? They're ours. Let's embrace them so they know we love them and they'll continue to play to the best of their abilities. Complain about them at the end of the year. But right now, don't complain." 

Perhaps Drake is right. We just need to use a wide-angle lens on the Bears receivers, tell them we love them and wait to judge until the season is over. And after we show the Bears receivers love, we'll be sure to give them orange slices, juice boxes, and invitations to our birthday party at Monkey Island. 

It's not odd for Drake to protect his players, as he nearly ran over a group of reporters  with a golf cart in Bourbonnais when a story was published that Knox had asked for a trade after losing his starting spot (OK, it was just me, and maybe I need to improve my reflexes). But does he really think fans should be satisfied with Sunday's performance? 

The truth is that the Chicagoans love the Bears, and they're just showing the Bears receivers tough love. Though Williams will likely be back Sunday, Earl Bennett is likely out for the game. The Bears will be facing the Super Bowl champs. Though safety Nick Collins is out for the season, the rest of the Packers secondary will apply the same kind of pressure that the Saints did. 

A true fan expects more out of the team they love, so Bears fans hope to see that Knox and Hester show that they can deal with the Packers defense to the best of their abilities. It's just some tough love, Coach Drake. 

Cracking the Linkedin Code: Guest

Cracking the Linkedin Code: Guest

One of the biggest overlooked tools for businesses LinkedIn. I once posted a discussion in one group that was e-mailed to over 30,000 people twice. It didn’t cost me a dime.

This is going to be a two-part post. First, we are going laser in on getting the best exposure.

LinkedIn allows users to create groups to better facilitate more meaningful connections.

This includes professional groups like estate-planning attorneys, association groups like Booth MBA Grads, interest groups like dog owners, etc. This is important to note as you plan what kind of groups to join.

So what groups should you join?

1) Target joining five to seven groups

2) Each group should have 500 or more people

3) Groups should be active (at least 1 post a day)

Targeting the groups that you join:

1) Create a complete ideal client profile (include age, education, likes, dislikes, professions, hobbies, as much information as you can compile)

2) Find 1 peer group that has the most members

3) Search for 4 plus groups that match at least one component of your ideal client e.g. Estate Planning Attorneys that are part of firm with less than 15 attorneys

How to search:

>You will find a search box in the upper right corner of the page. This box has the option to search by group with the pull down tab.

>I’ve joined groups, now how do I dominate LinkedIn (in a polite way)?

>The main function of groups is discussions. You will see a box where you can add a discussion to the group. These steps will help you get results and fast.

>

  • Discussions should be relevant to the group. If you only post discussions that promote your business you will quickly be ignored.
  • Comments drive discussion rankings. The more comments posted on a discussion lead to that discussion becoming the number one post. A great tip is to ask people you know in the group to add to your discussion.
  • Comment on your discussion when people comment. The best thing you can do here is avoid just saying “thanks” and say something compelling or that promotes follow-up commenting.
  • The discussion with the most recent and total comments gets emailed to the entire group. This is huge. Some groups have tens of thousands of members. If you get a few comments and you post responses to each, that is six total comments and usually enough to push you towards the top.
  • Post on other peoples' discussions. Contributing will help people see you are active and that leads to more comments on your discussions.
  • Avoid flat-out pitching. If you must, invite people to your blog, but do so sparingly. This is a place for information, not a sales pulpit.

>A good thing to know is about 80 percent of your discussions or more are never going to get commented on. This happens to the best of us and shouldn’t get you down. That is why you should post one new discussion per group per day (If you are in five groups that would be one discussion a day or about 5-10 minutes).

>Next week we will look at how to convert people that view your profiles into leads by creating an incredible profile.

>Jabez LeBret has authored three books and is a managing partner for Get Noticed Get Found. Over the last 9 years he has delivered over 700 keynote addresses in five countries. His main area of expertise is managing Gen Y in the workplace, advanced Facebook strategies, LinkedIn strategies, Google+, SEO, local directory optimization, and online marketing. He recently relocated to Chicago.

Metro-North to Test Quiet Cars on Harlem, Hudson Lines

Metro-North to Test Quiet Cars on Harlem, Hudson Lines

The Metro-North is launching a Quiet Car pilot program on its Hudson and Harlem lines beginning Monday, Oct. 17, the agency announced Thursday.

The new program will be instituted on select peak-hour trains, according to a press release from Metro-North.

The last car on certain morning peak trains and the first car on certain evening peak trains will be set aside for customers "who would like an environment free of cell phones, loud conversations and all manners of beeps and buzzes," said Metro-North.

Cell phones, iPods, DVD players, laptops, and other electronic devices will be banned from the quiet cars, unless they can be used in a way they stay silent, said Metro-North. Passengers wearing headphones will have to keep the volume low enough so that others can't hear the sound.

The program will be voluntary in nature, and customers are expected to monitor themselves, said Metro-North, though conductors may issue "Shh" cards to customers who are non-compliant.

The agency said it will evaluate customer reaction to the pilot program and decide whether to expand it.

A similar pilot program on other Metro-North lines and on some New Jersey Transit lines was well-received and recently expanded to all of their peak trains.

Dix Hills Parents Arrested in Deadly Drinking Party

Dix Hills Parents Arrested in Deadly Drinking Party

A mother and father in Dix Hills, Long Island, have been arrested, accused of hosting a party in which underage teenagers consumed alcohol, including one who wandered from the home and was fatally struck by a car.

Bob and Lorri Gelb were arrested on a charge of violating Suffolk County's social host law, which makes it illegal for adults to allow minors to drink alcohol in their homes or at gatherings they are hosting.

The Gelbs, according to police, allowed as many as 20 to 30 teens to drink in their home last April and did nothing to stop them.

One of the partygoers, 16-year-old Taylor Cavaliere, wandered from the house and was struck by a car on the Northern State Parkway. State Police said Cavaliere had alcohol in her system when she died.

"They were home at the time of the party," said State Police investigator James Chadwick. "They didn't contribute to the consumption of alcohol but they were aware of what was going on inside the home."

Chadwick said the Gelbs were decent people who were distraught about what happened, but they needed to be held responsible. 

Elisa Romaniello, a mother of two students at Commack High School where Cavaliere was an honors student, said, "When you're giving a party, you have to be aware of what is going on and a lot of people aren't."

Cavaliere would have graduated from Commack next June.

"She was a bright light who had a big future," said Debbie Fields, a family friend.

>Cavaliere's parents chose not to comment on the arrest of the Gelbs.

>No one answered the door at the Gelbs' Dix Hills home Thursday.

>A clerk from a Commack 7-11 convenience store was also arrested for selling the beer to the teenagers who attended the party.

>The clerk, 54-year-old Mohammed Ellahi, is due back in court, along with the Gelbs, in November.

>The Gelbs face a $500 fine if convicted of violating the social host law.

>@GregCergol4NY

Halal Eateries, Barber Shops Watched in NYPD Ethnic-Based Spying

Halal Eateries, Barber Shops Watched in NYPD Ethnic-Based Spying

The grainy photographs look like they could have come from any undercover police file: A man in jeans talking on his cell phone. Another in a windbreaker walking past patrons at a coffee shop. A car parked outside a grocery store.

But the photos were not part of a criminal case. They were snapped as part of secret New York Police Department intelligence program that singled out people and businesses based on their ethnicity.

Police documents obtained by The Associated Press show how the city's rich heritage as a place where immigrants can blend in and build their lives now clashes with today's New York, where police see blending in as one of the priorities for would-be terrorists. The documents describe in extraordinary detail an NYPD program to build a database of daily life, cataloguing where people ate, worked and prayed.

Read a selection of NYPD documents on the Moroccan Initiative.

It started with one group, Moroccans, but the documents show police intended to build intelligence files on other ethnicities.

Undercover officers photographed restaurants frequented by Moroccans, including one that was noted for serving "religious Muslims." Police documented where Moroccans bought groceries. While visiting an apartment used by new Moroccan immigrants, one officer noted in his reports that he saw two Qurans and a calendar from a nearby mosque.

"A lot of these locations were innocent," said an official involved in the effort, who, like many interviewed by the AP, spoke only on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive police operations. "They just happened to be in the community."

It was called the Moroccan Initiative.

The goal, officials said, was a database so complete that if police ever received a tip about a Moroccan terrorist, they would have the entire community at their fingertips.

>Police monitored the path that generations of immigrants followed: getting an apartment, learning English, finding work, assimilating into the culture. Activities such as haircuts and gym workouts were transformed from mundane daily routines into police data points.

>"In America, you don't put people under suspicion without good reason," said Rep. Rush Holt, D-N.J., who has urged the Justice Department to investigate the NYPD. "The idea that people in a group are suspect because of being members of a group is profiling, plain and simple."

>The AP previously revealed the NYPD intelligence unit's efforts to map the Muslim community, monitor ethnic neighborhoods and scrutinize mosques. The Moroccan Initiative was one of the division's projects.

>Such programs began with help from the CIA under President George W. Bush and have continued with at least the tacit support of President Barack Obama, whose administration repeatedly has sidestepped questions about them. It is unclear whether Mayor Michael Bloomberg oversaw the programs.

>Asked about the story Thursday, Bloomberg said, "You're just factually wrong," but he did not elaborate. His spokesman, after being shown the documents, also declined to say what the mayor believed was inaccurate.

>NYPD spokesman Paul Browne did not return messages seeking comment about the Moroccan Initiative. In an earlier email, he said police weren't involved in wholesale spying but rather tried to document the likely whereabouts of terrorists.

>"The unit's personnel would try to establish, for example, what border crossing a terrorist entering New York would use, what flop house he'd use, what Internet cafe he'd frequent to communicate, etc.," he wrote.

>Current and former officials said the program started in response to the 2003 bombings that killed 45 people in Casablanca and the 2004 train bombing in Madrid that was linked to Moroccan terrorists.

>Police were told there was no specific threat to New York from Moroccans, officials said, but they were instructed to gather intelligence because of concerns Moroccan terrorists might strike here, too.

>NYPD intelligence chief David Cohen, a former senior CIA officer, oversaw the program, current and former officials said. Many of the documents obtained by the AP were prepared for Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, but it's unclear whether he saw them.

>New York City law prohibits police from using race, religion or ethnicity as "the determinative factor" for any law enforcement action. Civil liberties advocates have said that guide is so ambiguous it makes the law unenforceable. The NYPD has said intelligence officers do not use racial profiling or trawl ethnic neighborhoods.

>The documents, many of which were marked "secret," include a list of "Moroccan Locations," with photos and notes from plainclothes officers, known as rakers, who quietly kept tabs on ethnic neighborhoods and eavesdropped on conversations.

>"The majority of the customers are religious Muslims," a report on a local sandwich shop said.

>Some business owners in the Astoria neighborhood of Queens were frustrated and angry about being included in police documents.

>"All I want is the best for my daughter and my community and to be treated like a new American citizen," said Sanaa Bergha, whose travel agency was among the businesses photographed.

>The documents on the Moroccan businesses were compiled by a team called the Demographics Unit.

>Browne, the department's spokesman, has said the unit only followed leads. There is no indication in the documents, however, that police were only investigating criminal leads. Police were told to canvass the city for Moroccan businesses. Information about crimes was included in the files, but these do not appear to be the program's focus.

>One police document, for example, lists taxi companies and Dunkin' Donuts and Subway franchises known to hire Moroccans and other Arabs. A gym and barber shop also are mentioned. The end of the document includes a section about criminal activity and identifies four businesses believed to be involved in marriage and document fraud and drug dealing.

>Another document describes 14 restaurants, two travel agencies and a meat market catering to the Moroccan community. Another says the NYPD produced a list of every Moroccan cab driver in the city.

>When a Moroccan was arrested, according to the documents, police visited him in jail or at home. Each was asked how someone coming to the United States from Morocco might keep a low profile. Officers had a list of 13 questions, including where such a person might live, obtain identification cards, eat, worship and learn English.

>The questions helped police identify Brooklyn apartments where Moroccans shared rooms soon after arriving in New York. Police visited one apartment in 2007 to meet someone who had been arrested the prior year, according to the files. The officer noted the apartment layout, the furnishings and a wall calendar from a nearby mosque.

>"There were two Korans," the document said.

>Police officials said such note-taking was the result of enormous pressure inside the department. Officers assigned to conduct interviews were told by supervisors that, if their subjects one day turned violent, the reports would be scrutinized with an eye for what warning signs were missed, officials said.

>It was intended to keep officers sharp and remind them of the seriousness of the job, but officials said it also encouraged officers to record even innocent details.

>Because of lawsuits by civil liberties groups, police lawyers have set stricter limits in recent years about information the NYPD compiles about people not accused of any crime, current and former officials said. Lawyers review police reports and sometimes require officers to remove information or rewrite their reports. Some information on innocent behavior is removed. Other information is labeled "sealed," which means it can be seen only by very senior officials, the officials said.

>Meanwhile, police received from the U.S. government regular updates on foreign visitors to New York, according to documents and interviews. Police departments often receive information on visitors on a case-by-case basis. U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which maintains the documents, declined to tell the AP whether such broad access by a police department was unusual.

>Using the documents, police located and interviewed Moroccans and, when possible, the families they were visiting. Often, that would take them to the homes of U.S. citizens.

>Police couldn't force people to talk to them or let them inside their homes, so officers often used a cover story about a crime in the neighborhood or a report of a missing child nearby, officials said.

>During such interviews, the officer would note the surroundings: What was on TV? How many people lived there? If possible, police would collect names, phone numbers and occupations.

>All this underscores the NYPD's transformation from a police department solving murders and muggings to one that also acts as a domestic intelligence agency. It's a transformation that Kelly, the police commissioner, makes no apologies for. He has credited intelligence efforts with thwarting terrorist attacks, and White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan has called those efforts heroic.

>At a barber shop in Queens, Amine Darhbach said he agrees police should keep the city safe. But he also said that, as an American citizen, he feels his business shouldn't be listed in police files just for serving Moroccan customers. Still, like many of his neighbors who grew up under the oppressive police forces of the Middle East and North Africa, he said things could be worse.

>"In Morocco," he said, "police just come and take you away."

Son Testifies: Mom Killed Dad Because She Was Abused

Son Testifies: Mom Killed Dad Because She Was Abused

The son of a Queens woman who shot her husband to death in their home testified at her trial Thursday that the family endured years of abuse from him.

"My mom was abused my entire life, and my father tortured her," Raymond Sheehan told NBC New York outside court. "She protected her own life in doing what she did."

Barbara Sheehan has pleaded not guilty to murder charges in the death of her husband, also named Raymond Sheehan. Prosecutors say she shot the retired New York Police Department sergeant 11 times, using two loaded handguns he kept at the home. The 50-year-old school secretary said the shooting was self-defense and that her husband had threatened her with a gun hours before.

"Everyone's telling the truth," she told NBC New York on Thursday, "and I just hope that the jury sees it for the truth."

Raymond Sheehan, now 21, testified about several instances during his life where he witnessed his father abusing his mother.

Prosecutors introduced a letter the younger man had written when he was about 14 years old that told of his rage at his father, touched off because he believed his dad was having an affair. The profanity-laced rant included statements that he wanted his father dead.

Sheehan was shocked when Assistant District Attorney Debra Pomodore handed him the document. He read the first line aloud, then put his head in his hands and wept, his lanky shoulders shaking, and could not continue reading.

Pomodore asked about the father's behavior outside of the home, and Sheehan said he was gregarious and outgoing and kind — until they were alone.

"He acted like the perfect father, but when we got in the car, he was always berating me," he said.

>Sheehan, an athlete, went to Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Conn., and now works at a kindergarten in Brooklyn as an aid to a class with autistic children.

>His 25-year-old sister, Jennifer Joyce, also testified Thursday and echoed her brother's testimony of abuse and countless instances of her father hitting her mother. Joyce, recently married, now lives in San Diego and works as a nurse.

>"He would go into these periods where he would have a blank stare," she said of her father. "He was totally out of control."

>The shooting occurred Feb. 18, 2008, touched off by an argument over whether Barbara Sheehan would go on a Florida vacation with her husband. She testified Wednesday that she was terrified, because he had threatened her with his loaded Glock and told her he was going to kill her if she didn't come.

>She got his .38-caliber revolver from the bedroom while he was in the bathroom, and fired. Prosecutors say she also picked up the Glock, which her husband had on him at the time, and fired that weapon as well.

Cops Seek Suspect in Attempted Subway Rape, Robbery

Cops Seek Suspect in Attempted Subway Rape, Robbery

Police are seeking the public's help in identifying a suspect wanted in connection with a robbery and attempted rape on the F train in Brooklyn early Wednesday morning.

At 2:25 a.m., the assailant approached a woman riding a southbound F train at the Fort Hamilton Parkway station in Windsor Terrace, put his hand around her throat, brandished a knife and demanded her possessions, police said. 

The man took the woman's pocketbook, which contained money and her iPhone, and demanded that she remove her underwear, police said.

There was no sexual assault committed, police said.  The attacker fled the train and was caught on video crossing the northbound platform of the same station. Police released a surveillance video, seen left,  and a sketch, seen above,  in the hopes the public might recognize the suspect. 

Anyone with information is asked to call Crime stoppers at 800-577-8477.

Cuomo Launches Citizen Town Hall Website

Cuomo Launches Citizen Town Hall Website

Gov. Andrew Cuomo has released a new website to solicit comments from New Yorkers, promote his agenda, and announce some meetings and travel destinations.

The state-paid website will also allow what Cuomo says will be live online town halls. He'll hold the first internet chat Saturday morning and aides will do more in following weeks.

Cuomo has said he wants to promote his initiatives directly to the public.

Cuomo's press office has been aggressive when faced with opposing views in news stories. His administration has also been criticized for blacking out material in state records sought by reporters under the state Freedom of Information Law.

Criminal Charges Considered in Bullied NY Teen's Suicide

Criminal Charges Considered in Bullied NY Teen's Suicide

Police are investigating whether criminal charges should be filed after the suicide of a 14-year-old New York boy who had complained in an online video about being bullied over his sexuality and who often alluded on his blog to killing himself.

Officials in the Williamsville school district near Buffalo said they are cooperating with the investigation into the death of 14-year-old Jamey Rodemeyer, who had started his freshman year of high school less than two weeks before he died.

New York state doesn't have an anti-bullying law, but bullies could be charged with harassment or aggravated harassment, Amherst Police Capt. Michael Camilleri said Thursday. The use of a telephone or computer would escalate the charge.

"We're going to have to look at the stuff that's out there and determine if any of the things out there are a violation of the law," he said.

The boy had frequent meetings with school officials in the previous two years, when he was in middle school, and the school's social worker said he was always available, his mother said. School officials spoke with the bullies, but the taunts continued, she said.

Students in the district are encouraged to report bullying, and every report is investigated, Superintendent Scott Martzloff said.

In his video posted four months ago, Jamey Rodemeyer described being taunted in hallways and receiving hateful messages online, "telling me that gay people go to hell." The video, in which he said he was bisexual, was part of the "It Gets Better Project," meant to give hope to gay teens.

After he hanged himself Sunday outside his home in the Amherst town village of Williamsville, Jamey's parents said that their son had been bullied for years, even pushed to the brink of suicide, but that he seemed to be doing better since starting at his new school.

"We outright asked him, 'Is anybody bullying you this year?'" Jamey's mother, Tracy Rodemeyer said, "and it was, 'No, no, no.'"

>The boy kept a blog on which he referred to himself as gay and made frequent references to suicide and to his idol, pop singer Lady Gaga, who often sings about acceptance of gays and lesbians.

>On Sept. 9, he posted an image of a swinging noose and wrote: "I always say how bullied I am, but no one listens, what do I have to do so people will listen to me?" The same day, he wrote: "Stop bullying people. Maybe they won't commit suicide" and "Ugh today makes me wanna kill myself."

>On Sept. 12, he wrote: "I don't want to meet Gaga, I NEED to meet her."

>His final blog and Twitter posts the day he died thanked Gaga. He also wrote: "I pray the fame won't take my life," possibly a reference to her song and album "The Fame."

>On Wednesday, the performer posted three related messages on Twitter.

>"The past days I've spent reflecting, crying and yelling," read one of her tweets. "I have so much anger. It is hard to feel love when cruelty takes someone's life."

>The suicide comes a year after 18-year-old Tyler Clementi jumped off the George Washington Bridge into the Hudson River after his roommate at Rutgers University allegedly used a webcam to spy on his same-sex liaison.

>Clementi's death followed a string of suicides by teens nationwide believed to have been bullied for their perceived sexual orientation and quickly became a cause celebre. Among those speaking out were talk show host Ellen DeGeneres and President Barack Obama. Sex columnist Dan Savage's "It Gets Better" movement gained traction.

>Criminal charges against Clementi's roommate are pending. In another high-profile case, five classmates this year accepted plea deals after being charged following the suicide of bullied Massachusetts teen Phoebe Prince.

>Experts have noted that some suicides can inspire others to follow in an attempt at martyrdom or solidarity, a phenomenon known as contagion. Police in Jamey's hometown said it's too early in their investigation to characterize his death as a possible example.

>Funeral services are scheduled for Saturday.

2nd Suspect Surrenders in AC Casino Carjacking Slay

2nd Suspect Surrenders in AC Casino Carjacking Slay

A second suspect in the fatal carjacking of a Middlesex County man from an Atlantic City casino parking garage has surrendered to police.

The Atlantic County Prosecutor's office says 20-year-old Eric Darden of Camden turned himself in on Thursday.

Another suspect, 20-year-old Phillip Byrd of Camden, was arrested at his home Tuesday evening.

A third suspect, Raheem Simmons of Camden, is still being sought.

They are charged with murder, carjacking and other offenses in Sunday's fatal shooting of 28-year-old Sunil Rattu of Old Bridge.

His companion, 24-year-old Radha Ghetia of Sayreville, also was shot but is recovering from her wounds.

Delta Flight Lands at JFK After Bird Strike

Delta Flight Lands at JFK After Bird Strike

A Delta flight that took off from LaGuardia Airport Thursday morning suffered a bird strike and had to land at John F. Kennedy airport.

The flight was headed to Boston and took off just before noon.

There were no injuries.

Bird strikes have been an ongoing issue at New York-area airports, most famously causing the double engine failure on US Airways Flight 1549 in January 2009, which landed safely in the Hudson River.

Protesters Rally Against Iranian Leader Outside UN

As hundreds of people protested the appearance of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at the United Nations General Assembly on Thursday, former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton said the Obama administration is doing "almost nothing" to protect Iranians from the violence of their own regime.

At the entrance to Dag Hammarskjold Plaza across from the U.N., a same-sex "wedding" was staged mocking the alliance of Syria and Iran. A protester posing as ousted Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi presided over the ceremony, with yellow cake served to onlookers, representing the uranium used to make nuclear weapons.

The pavement of the plaza was covered with huge banners, one of which read: "Down With the Islamic Republic of Iran." Children stomped on a poster of Ahmadinejad.

As Ahmadinejad was about to address the General Assembly, Bolton told The Associated Press that the United States had failed to stop Iran from torturing and killing its own people.

"We expect that our commitment to the people of Iran is going to be upheld," he said. "Right now, the Obama administration is doing almost nothing."

Bolton added that the recent release of two American hikers held for years by Iran was what he called "just Broadway theater."

Some protesters were draped in the Iranian flag, while others hoisted yellow flags representing Iran's political opposition led by Maryam Rajavi, head of the Paris-based main opposition group, National Council of Resistance of Iran.

Protesters say tens of thousands of the opposition group's supporters in Iran have been executed by the regime.

Speaking live from Paris via satellite on a giant television screen, Rajavi told protesters that Ahmadinejad does not represent the Iranian people.

>She urged the U.N. and the U.S. to stand with the Iranian people and their organized opposition, including more than 3,000 U.N.-defined refugees in Camp Ashraf in Iraq, which was attacked twice, with 47 killed and about 1,000 wounded.

>"There is no doubt today that the United States has clearly abandoned its international obligations toward Camp Ashraf," Rajavi said.

>One group of protesters was busy assembling industrial cardboard rolls into a "cage" resembling the one that held former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak at his trial. Inside the cage was a protester wearing a mask resembling Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

>"We hope that Khameini will be in a cage like this soon, to be tried for crimes against humanity," said Farid Ashkan, 55, an Iranian-born New York dentist.

Supermarket Locked in Workers at Night: Feds

Supermarket Locked in Workers at Night: Feds

A Brooklyn supermarket locked its workers inside at night and none of its five exits could be opened without a manager's permission, creating an "imminent danger situation," federal inspectors charged Thursday.

The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration cited Mermaid Meat Co., operating as Fine Fare Supermarket, with $62,300 in potential fines.

OSHA rules require that employees be able to open an exit from inside at all times, without keys. The company was fined $49,000 for the locked exits, and racked up another four violations with $13,300 in fines for obstructed exit routes and other hazards.

Dr. David Michaels, assistant secretary of labor for occupational safety and health, said the violations at Fine Fare on Mermaid Avenue in Coney Island evoked "conditions from 1911."

That year, 146 garment workers died in the famed Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, many of whom could not escape because of locked exits and stairwells.

"A century later, we still find employers locking in their employees or otherwise obstructing emergency exit access," Michaels said. "These are imminent danger situations, potential catastrophes in the making."

Mermaid Meat Co. has 15 days to comply with OSHA.

The company did not immediately comment.

Scholarships held up by Kinde Durkee investigation

Politicians are not the only people who may suffer because of actions by accountant Kinde Durkee, who faces federal charges of siphoning off campaign funds from several candidates.

The investigation into Durkee has also hurt 51 college students who are seeing scholarships held up because a trust fund she handled has been frozen.

There is no evidence that Durkee took any money from the fund administered by the Legislative Black Caucus Policy Institute, but the freeze has blocked $51,000 in scholarships issued to minority students by the institute, for which Durkee handled the books, according to state Sen. Curren Price Jr. (D-Los Angeles), chairman of the caucus.

"The banks have frozen all accounts, including ours, as a result of the federal investigation into the Kinde Durkee case," Price said. The senator said he is trying to raise new money to cover the scholarships promised by his group.

"This is shameful situation that is impacting these students, many of whom will have great difficulty paying their college costs without these scholarships," Price said.

Endorsements rolling in for Assembly, congressional candidates

Los Angeles City Councilman Paul Koretz likes not one but two of the candidates for a new San Fernando Valley seat in the state Assembly. On Wednesday, he endorsed Democratic businesswoman Laurette Healey for the 46th District not long after giving his backing to attorney Andrew Lachman, another Democrat.  Also running in the June primary is charter schools executive Brian Johnson.

Over on the Westside, in the new 50th Assembly District, Assemblywoman Betsy Butler (D-Marina del Rey) picked up the endorsement of the Peace Officers Research Assn. of California. Joining the race recently was Santa Monica Mayor Richard Bloom, who announced he's set up his campaign website this week at richardbloom.com. Activist Torie Osborn got an early start and has sewn up the backing of many prominent Democrats, including that of her former boss, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.

The Los Angeles County Lincoln Clubs, a group of Republican organizations, broke its 32-year-old tradition of not endorsing in primaries and announced its backing of Rep. Ed Royce (R-Fullerton) for the 39th Congressional District and Nathan Mintz of Redondo Beach for the new 66th Assembly District. Royce may face a challenge from fellow Rep. Gary Miller (R-Diamond Bar). 

Mintz ran against Butler last year in a special election in which he carried the southern half of the since redrawn 53rd Assembly District. He's running inthe new 66th Assembly District. Democrats are hoping to field a strong candidate for this seat, which is nearly evenly divided between Republicans and Democrats.

-- Jean Merl

 

 

Republicans file legal challenge to redistricting plan

Republican leaders filed a lawsuit Thursday in the state Supreme Court seeking to repeal new legislative district boundaries drawn by a citizens panel for the state Senate.

The plaintiff in the lawsuit is an Orange County businesswoman but it was prepared by attorneys for the group Fairness and Accountability in Redistricting (FAIR) , which is backed by the California Republican Party and Senate Republican Caucus.

â€Å“We think there are serious constitutional flaws in the Senate plan related to what the commission was required to do and what they ended up doing,’’ said Dave Gilliard, the political consultant behind the group.  â€Å“There were numerous examples of cities and counties being split between districts irrationally and without explanation.’’

The group is asking the court to throw out maps drawn by the California Citizens Redistricting Commission and have the court draw new maps, Gilliard said. The legal challenge is being pursued simultaneously with a referendum drive aimed at getting voters to repeal the maps, he said.

--Patrick McGreevy

FBI, IRS search offices, including one associated with ex-Sen. James Brulte

FBI and IRS agents Thursday morning executed nine federal search warrants that appeared to be related to an ongoing public corruption investigation of a Rancho Cucamonga development and its handling by the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors.

Among the offices searched were those of Jeffrey Burum, a managing partner at Colonies Partners of Rancho Cucamonga, and O'Reilly Public Relations in RiversideOne of the properties is associated with GOP operative and former state Sen. James L. Brulte.

The full story is on ow.

Jerry Brown vetoes plan to tinker with 'trigger' cuts

Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a measure Friday that would have required his administration to consult with top lawmakers before enacting midyear budget cuts.

"That's not a good idea," Brown chided Democratic lawmakers in a curt veto message.

The Democrats wanted to require Brown's office to consult with them before enacting the "trigger" cuts that will go into effect automatically if the state's tax revenues fall short. Brown and lawmakers bridged the final $4 billion of what began as a $25-billion state deficit by presuming a growing economy would produce more in revenues.

If those taxes don't materialize, up to $2.5 billion in cuts would occur automatically, including the option for local schools to reduce the academic year by up to a week.

"Why would we undermine the plan that has earned widespread respect and helped stabilize California’s finances?" Brown asked in his veto message. He added In a statement accompanying the veto that the bill, SB 6 X1, "would have undermined investor confidence in California."

Brown on Friday signed two other budget-related measures, SB 335 and AB 21 X1. They are expected to lower California's share of hospital and children's healthcare costs by hundreds of millions of dollars by drawing additional federal money into the state. 

-- Shane Goldmacher in Sacramento

$15.50 minimum cab fare from Bob Hope Airport approved

Passengers leaving Bob Hope Airport in a taxi soon will have to pay a $15.50 minimum fare, even if they̢۪re going just a few blocks.

Under a plan approved by city traffic commissioners, the minimum fare takes effect Friday and affects only those who catch a taxi at the airport.

The Burbank Transportation Commission approved the fare in response to taxi drivers who said they were fed up with losing money on short hops to and from the airfield. Many passengers, they say, park in nearby retail parking lots or on city streets and then take a short taxi trip to the airport.

The short trips become a financial burden for taxi drivers, who say they often wait for hours in a queue, only to get a small fare, according to s Community News

Grass fire burning near Mint Canyon in Santa Clarita

A fast-moving fire fueled by dry grass and brush has spread to about 600 acres in an uninhabited area near Mint Canyon in Santa Clarita, fire officials said. 

The blaze, dubbed the Mint Fire, began around 8 a.m. Saturday and quickly spread upslope, rapidly consuming the light vegetation near Sierra Highway and Highway 14, said fire information officer Nathan Judy of the National Forest Service. As of midafternoon, more than 300 firefighters had the fire 20% contained. 

No structures were threatened, and there were no injuries reported. Twenty-six aircraft, including seven air tankers and two super scoopers, were aiding in the effort in the difficult-to-access terrain, Judy said. 

He said that although the fire had slowed during the afternoon, officials were concerned the winds could shift in the evening, sending the flames southwest. The area has been on high fire alert since Labor Day weekend because of dry vegetation and other factors, he said.

The cause of the fire was under investigation.

-- Victoria Kim

Makeover of Pasadena Civic Center almost complete

Makeover of Pasadena Civic Center almost complete

ved streets, new sidewalks with brick inlays, additional parking and new landscaping will improve Garfield Avenue and other thoroughfares near City Hall, according to the dena Sun.

Enough of the work will be done by next week for the city to host â€Å“Music Under the Stars” on Sept. 24, a free Pasadena Symphony and Pops concert at Centennial Square.

Search team looking for missing nursing student finds body

arch team looking for a missing nursing student discovered a body Saturday near a secluded dirt trail in the Bay Area community of Sunol, east of Hayward, authorities said.

Crime scene investigators were inspecting the badly decomposed body, which was found in a brushy area near Pleasanton Sunol Road at Verona Road, said Sgt. J.D. Nelson of the Alameda County Sheriff's Department.

The body was discovered about 10:30 a.m. by member of a search party made up of family members and volunteers looking for 26-year-old Michelle Le, who went missing in May.

Investigators said it could not immediately be determined whether the body was that of Le. Because of the condition of the remains, not even the gender could be discerned, according to a news release by the Hayward Police Department. Police said the Alameda County coroner's office will make a determination on the identity.

Firefighters gaining on Santa Clarita blaze

A fire that had burned through about 600 acres in an uninhabited area near Mint Canyon in Santa Clarita was expected to be contained by Sunday evening, fire officials said.

The Mint fire started about 8 a.m. Saturday and spread rapidly, but was 50% contained by Saturday evening. More than 300 firefighters were working on building a fire line after the blaze's progress slowed, with the exception of a few hot spots.

Officials said one firefighter suffered a minor injury to his shoulder -- a sprain or strain, said fire information officer Nathan Judy of the U.S. Forest Service. No structures were damaged. 

Judy said calm winds and humidity around 40% were aiding the firefight.

Twenty-six aircraft assisted in the effort to fight the blaze in rolling hills with very limited access near Sierra Highway and California Highway 14, officials said.

Fatal Ferrari crash closes PCH

Fatal Ferrari crash closes PCH

Part of Pacific Coast Highway was closed for several hours after a Ferrari crashed into a power pole just north of Sunset Boulevard, killing one occupant of the car and injuring another.

The two men were ejected from the vehicle and fell about 30 feet to the beach below, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department.

One man died at the scene and the other was taken to UCLA Medical Center in critical condition, according the LAPD West Traffic Division, which is handling the accident investigation.

The victims' names haven't been released. A cause hasn't been determined.

The crash, which was reported at 1:27 a.m., brought down power lines, prompting the closure of a stretch of PCH in both directions.

Birthday party shooting leaves one man dead

Police are questioning two people in the fatal shooting of a man at a birthday party in Watts.

The shooting took place at about 11:30 p.m. Saturday on the 9900 block of Anzac Avenue after an argument broke out at the 18th birthday party of a girl who may have been the victim's daughter, said Sgt. Duane Kelliher with the LAPD's Southeast Station.

Police are interviewing two people in connection with the shooting, Kelliher said Sunday morning. Kelliher said the two may be gang members. City News Service reported that the victim confronted two people at the party after he saw them flashing gang signs.

The name of the 51-year-old victim hasn't been released.

-- Abby Sewell

Cops Getting Tips in Long Island Serial Killer Probe

Police say they've seen an increase in calls after releasing new information in the Long Island serial killer investigation.      

The remains of 10 people were found strewn along a remote beach parkway and elsewhere across Long Island.      

A Suffolk County police spokeswoman says 22 tips have been received since Tuesday. That's when detectives released sketches of two of the unidentified victims.      

Police have identified only five of the 10 victims. Those five were all women working as escorts.      

Among the unidentified victims are a toddler and a woman believed to be her mother. Their remains were found seven miles apart.      

Body parts have been found in four separate locations. The oldest remains are linked to a case 15 years ago.

No suspects have been identified. There's a $25,000 reward.     

51% in California still oppose legalizing marijuana, poll finds

Legalizing marijuana remains a tough sell in California, according to a new poll.

The Public Policy Institute of California, in a new statewide survey ased Thursday, showed that 51% of voters oppose legalizing marijuana while 46% favor it.

Voters rejected marijuana legalization last year, but there has been talk of another ballot measure.

According to the PPIC, the finding was similar to a poll conducted last September.

In the most recent survey, the San Francisco area was the only part of California that favored legalization. Most respondents in Southern California opposed it.

Transit Alert: Power Outage Causes Amtrak Delays

Transit Alert: Power Outage Causes Amtrak Delays

Amtrak passengers are being warned to expect delays because of a power outage in a tunnel between New York City and Newark.

The problem is in a tunnel just outside of New York's Penn Station.

Amtrak says it is using diesel engine equipment to take trains from the tunnel into Penn Station.

The agency says it is working to restore power and cannot estimate when it will be back.

Riders with paid tickets on canceled trains are asked to contact Amtrak for refunds or rebookings. Passengers who have not yet printed their tickets can get refunds or rebookings on Amtrak.com or through Amtrak's iPhone app.

Study finds less crime near closed pot dispensaries

Study finds less crime near closed pot dispensaries

y found a 59% increase in crime within three-tenths of a mile of a closed dispensary compared with an open one and a 24% increase within six-tenths of a mile.

The city attorney's office, which has argued in court proceedings that the number of dispensaries needs to be reduced to deal with "well-documented crime," called the report's conclusions "highly suspect and unreliable" and     based on "faulty assumptions, conjecture, irrelevant data, untested measurements and incomplete results."

Jerry Brown concedes defeat on tax deal

Jerry Brown concedes defeat on tax deal

y Brown's tax deal may go nowhere

 

-Nicholas Riccardi in Sacramento

 Photo: Gov. Jerry Brown Credit: Justin Sullivan, Getty Images

Legislature extends Hollywood tax credit

Legislature extends Hollywood tax credit

Legislators early Saturday extended a $100-million film tax credit hotly sought by Hollywood that some decried as a waste of scarce state dollars.

The film and television industry sought a five-year extension, with a $500-million price tag, arguing the rebate would fight the flight of production to other states that have more aggressive incentives. Critics contended that as the state lays off teachers and hacks social services, it should not give business additional money.

The criticism scaled the break down to a one-year extension, which passed on a bipartisan vote well after midnight. It was poised to expire in July 2012; now it will run until 2013.

In a brief, exhausted discussion, legislators argued the credit will create jobs. "This is not a giveaway," said State Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Pacoima).


RELATED:

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-Nicholas Riccardi

Jerry Brown rallies unions in Las Vegas, slams GOP

Jerry Brown rallies unions in Las Vegas, slams GOP

n, Assembly reach tax deal

-- Michael J. Mishak in Las Vegas

Photo: Gov. Jerry Brown speaks in Long Beach earlier this year. Photo Credit: Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times

Scholarships held up by Kinde Durkee investigation

Scholarships held up by Kinde Durkee investigation

Politicians are not the only people who may suffer because of actions by accountant Kinde Durkee, who faces federal charges of siphoning off campaign funds from several candidates.

The investigation into Durkee has also hurt 51 college students who are seeing scholarships held up because a trust fund she handled has been frozen.

There is no evidence that Durkee took any money from the fund administered by the Legislative Black Caucus Policy Institute, but the freeze has blocked $51,000 in scholarships issued to minority students by the institute, for which Durkee handled the books, according to state Sen. Curren Price Jr. (D-Los Angeles), chairman of the caucus.

"The banks have frozen all accounts, including ours, as a result of the federal investigation into the Kinde Durkee case," Price said. The senator said he is trying to raise new money to cover the scholarships promised by his group.

"This is shameful situation that is impacting these students, many of whom will have great difficulty paying their college costs without these scholarships," Price said.

Endorsements rolling in for Assembly, congressional candidates

Endorsements rolling in for Assembly, congressional candidates

Los Angeles City Councilman Paul Koretz likes not one but two of the candidates for a new San Fernando Valley seat in the state Assembly. On Wednesday, he endorsed Democratic businesswoman Laurette Healey for the 46th District not long after giving his backing to attorney Andrew Lachman, another Democrat.  Also running in the June primary is charter schools executive Brian Johnson.

Over on the Westside, in the new 50th Assembly District, Assemblywoman Betsy Butler (D-Marina del Rey) picked up the endorsement of the Peace Officers Research Assn. of California. Joining the race recently was Santa Monica Mayor Richard Bloom, who announced he's set up his campaign website this week at richardbloom.com. Activist Torie Osborn got an early start and has sewn up the backing of many prominent Democrats, including that of her former boss, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.

The Los Angeles County Lincoln Clubs, a group of Republican organizations, broke its 32-year-old tradition of not endorsing in primaries and announced its backing of Rep. Ed Royce (R-Fullerton) for the 39th Congressional District and Nathan Mintz of Redondo Beach for the new 66th Assembly District. Royce may face a challenge from fellow Rep. Gary Miller (R-Diamond Bar). 

Mintz ran against Butler last year in a special election in which he carried the southern half of the since redrawn 53rd Assembly District. He's running inthe new 66th Assembly District. Democrats are hoping to field a strong candidate for this seat, which is nearly evenly divided between Republicans and Democrats.

-- Jean Merl

 

 

Republicans file legal challenge to redistricting plan

Republicans file legal challenge to redistricting plan

Republican leaders filed a lawsuit Thursday in the state Supreme Court seeking to repeal new legislative district boundaries drawn by a citizens panel for the state Senate.

The plaintiff in the lawsuit is an Orange County businesswoman but it was prepared by attorneys for the group Fairness and Accountability in Redistricting (FAIR) , which is backed by the California Republican Party and Senate Republican Caucus.

â€Å“We think there are serious constitutional flaws in the Senate plan related to what the commission was required to do and what they ended up doing,’’ said Dave Gilliard, the political consultant behind the group.  â€Å“There were numerous examples of cities and counties being split between districts irrationally and without explanation.’’

The group is asking the court to throw out maps drawn by the California Citizens Redistricting Commission and have the court draw new maps, Gilliard said. The legal challenge is being pursued simultaneously with a referendum drive aimed at getting voters to repeal the maps, he said.

--Patrick McGreevy

FBI, IRS search offices, including one associated with ex-Sen. James Brulte

FBI, IRS search offices, including one associated with ex-Sen. James Brulte

FBI and IRS agents Thursday morning executed nine federal search warrants that appeared to be related to an ongoing public corruption investigation of a Rancho Cucamonga development and its handling by the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors.

Among the offices searched were those of Jeffrey Burum, a managing partner at Colonies Partners of Rancho Cucamonga, and O'Reilly Public Relations in RiversideOne of the properties is associated with GOP operative and former state Sen. James L. Brulte.

The full story is on ow.

Jerry Brown vetoes plan to tinker with 'trigger' cuts

Jerry Brown vetoes plan to tinker with 'trigger' cuts

Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a measure Friday that would have required his administration to consult with top lawmakers before enacting midyear budget cuts.

"That's not a good idea," Brown chided Democratic lawmakers in a curt veto message.

The Democrats wanted to require Brown's office to consult with them before enacting the "trigger" cuts that will go into effect automatically if the state's tax revenues fall short. Brown and lawmakers bridged the final $4 billion of what began as a $25-billion state deficit by presuming a growing economy would produce more in revenues.

If those taxes don't materialize, up to $2.5 billion in cuts would occur automatically, including the option for local schools to reduce the academic year by up to a week.

"Why would we undermine the plan that has earned widespread respect and helped stabilize California’s finances?" Brown asked in his veto message. He added In a statement accompanying the veto that the bill, SB 6 X1, "would have undermined investor confidence in California."

Brown on Friday signed two other budget-related measures, SB 335 and AB 21 X1. They are expected to lower California's share of hospital and children's healthcare costs by hundreds of millions of dollars by drawing additional federal money into the state. 

-- Shane Goldmacher in Sacramento

Bobcat spotted in Brand Park in Glendale

Bobcat spotted in Brand Park in Glendale

A bobcat was spotted Friday in an open grass area of Brand Park in north Glendale, said city spokesman Tom Lorenz.

The cat, which weighed approximately 20 to 30 pounds, was spotted about 12:30 p.m. before it jumped over a wall into the southeast area of the park. A few seconds later, it hopped back over the wall, returning to the hillside, Lorenz said in an email.

Animal control officers were called to the park, but Lorenz said officials did not consider the bobcat to be dangerous.

"They are regulars all over the hillsides of Glendale," Lorenz told the s Community News

Photo: Animal control and Glendale police officers respond to a bobcat sighting at Brand Park in Glendale Friday. Credit: Roger Wilson / Times Community News

Truck at San Diego strip club hits motorcycle; two hurt

Truck at San Diego strip club hits motorcycle; two hurt

A truck full of men on their way to a strip club hit a motorcycle around midnight, injuring the rider and his passenger, San Diego police said Saturday.

Witnesses said a red truck with four to five men hit the motorcycle as the truck was pulling into the parking lot of the Pacers strip club in the Midway district.

The motorcycle rider suffered an open fracture to his leg, and his female passenger suffered abrasions, police said. Both were taken to the hospital.

The truck, described as a late-model Chevrolet, fled the strip club parking lot, with damage to its left front fender, police said.

-- Tony Perry in San Diego

$15.50 minimum cab fare from Bob Hope Airport approved

$15.50 minimum cab fare from Bob Hope Airport approved

Passengers leaving Bob Hope Airport in a taxi soon will have to pay a $15.50 minimum fare, even if they̢۪re going just a few blocks.

Under a plan approved by city traffic commissioners, the minimum fare takes effect Friday and affects only those who catch a taxi at the airport.

The Burbank Transportation Commission approved the fare in response to taxi drivers who said they were fed up with losing money on short hops to and from the airfield. Many passengers, they say, park in nearby retail parking lots or on city streets and then take a short taxi trip to the airport.

The short trips become a financial burden for taxi drivers, who say they often wait for hours in a queue, only to get a small fare, according to s Community News

Grass fire burning near Mint Canyon in Santa Clarita

Grass fire burning near Mint Canyon in Santa Clarita

A fast-moving fire fueled by dry grass and brush has spread to about 600 acres in an uninhabited area near Mint Canyon in Santa Clarita, fire officials said. 

The blaze, dubbed the Mint Fire, began around 8 a.m. Saturday and quickly spread upslope, rapidly consuming the light vegetation near Sierra Highway and Highway 14, said fire information officer Nathan Judy of the National Forest Service. As of midafternoon, more than 300 firefighters had the fire 20% contained. 

No structures were threatened, and there were no injuries reported. Twenty-six aircraft, including seven air tankers and two super scoopers, were aiding in the effort in the difficult-to-access terrain, Judy said. 

He said that although the fire had slowed during the afternoon, officials were concerned the winds could shift in the evening, sending the flames southwest. The area has been on high fire alert since Labor Day weekend because of dry vegetation and other factors, he said.

The cause of the fire was under investigation.

-- Victoria Kim

Makeover of Pasadena Civic Center almost complete

Makeover of Pasadena Civic Center almost complete

ved streets, new sidewalks with brick inlays, additional parking and new landscaping will improve Garfield Avenue and other thoroughfares near City Hall, according to the dena Sun.

Enough of the work will be done by next week for the city to host â€Å“Music Under the Stars” on Sept. 24, a free Pasadena Symphony and Pops concert at Centennial Square.

Search team looking for missing nursing student finds body

arch team looking for a missing nursing student discovered a body Saturday near a secluded dirt trail in the Bay Area community of Sunol, east of Hayward, authorities said.

Crime scene investigators were inspecting the badly decomposed body, which was found in a brushy area near Pleasanton Sunol Road at Verona Road, said Sgt. J.D. Nelson of the Alameda County Sheriff's Department.

The body was discovered about 10:30 a.m. by member of a search party made up of family members and volunteers looking for 26-year-old Michelle Le, who went missing in May.

Investigators said it could not immediately be determined whether the body was that of Le. Because of the condition of the remains, not even the gender could be discerned, according to a news release by the Hayward Police Department. Police said the Alameda County coroner's office will make a determination on the identity.

Firefighters gaining on Santa Clarita blaze

A fire that had burned through about 600 acres in an uninhabited area near Mint Canyon in Santa Clarita was expected to be contained by Sunday evening, fire officials said.

The Mint fire started about 8 a.m. Saturday and spread rapidly, but was 50% contained by Saturday evening. More than 300 firefighters were working on building a fire line after the blaze's progress slowed, with the exception of a few hot spots.

Officials said one firefighter suffered a minor injury to his shoulder -- a sprain or strain, said fire information officer Nathan Judy of the U.S. Forest Service. No structures were damaged. 

Judy said calm winds and humidity around 40% were aiding the firefight.

Twenty-six aircraft assisted in the effort to fight the blaze in rolling hills with very limited access near Sierra Highway and California Highway 14, officials said.

Police investigate after body found in Pasadena

Pasadena police are investigating the death of a man whose body was found lying on the ground early Wednesday morning.

Officers responded to a call about 12:45 a.m. regarding a body behind businesses in the ssed-out armored car guard allegedly fires gun on 210 Freeway

-- Abby Sewell

French President to Visit Statue of Liberty

French President to Visit Statue of Liberty

The president of France is visiting the Statue of Liberty.      

President Nicolas Sarkozy and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg are paying their respects to Lady Liberty on Thursday.     

It's an early celebration of the statue's 125th anniversary, on Oct. 28.     

The statue was a gift to the United States from France.

 

NY's Top Court Backs Port Authority in '93 WTC Bombing Case

New York's top court has found the World Trade Center managers immune from negligence claims for failing to deter the 1993 parking garage bombing that killed six people and injured about 1,000.     

In a ruling Thursday, the Court of Appeals was divided 4-3 in reversing lower courts.     

The majority conclude that the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs area airports and owns the trade center site, is entitled to government immunity for its security measures at the building.     

A jury found the agency failed as a mainly commercial landlord to maintain reasonably safe premises and was 68 percent at fault, blaming terrorists for the other 32 percent.    

A midlevel court upheld that ruling.     

About 200 claims in the case were filed. Most have been privately settled.           

 

Amber Dubois' mother found remains of nursing student Michelle Le [Updated]

n remains that have been positively identified as those of missing nursing student Michelle Le were discovered by the mother of murdered Escondido teenager Amber Dubois.

Carrie McGonigle was one of about two dozen people participating in a search organized by the Le family for the missing 26-year-old.

McGonigle said her 1-year-old yellow Labrador, named Amber in memory of her daughter, led her to the remains Saturday near an Alameda County park. McGonigle's 14-year-old daughter was killed in 2009.

Le, 26, was working at a hospital in Hayward, Calif., on May 27 when she went to her car to retrieve something. She was never seen alive again.

Security cameras in the hospital garage revealed that Giselle Esteban, 27, who went to high school with Le in San Diego, was in the garage about the time Le disappeared, Hayward police said. Esteban was arrested this month in connection with Le's disappearance.

Traces of Le's DNA were found on one of Esteban's shoes, and cellphone records show that Esteban's phone and Le's were in the same area after Le disappeared, police said.

Kelly Thomas: D.A. to discuss possible charges against officers

ge County Dist. Atty. Attorney Tony Rackauckas plans to hold a news conference Wednesday morning to announce whether he will file criminal charges against the six officers involved in the death of homeless Fullerton man Kelly Thomas.

Officials from the district attorney's office have said they were awaiting toxicology and other test results from the coroner before making a decision on the case. That report was handed over to the district attorney's office Tuesday, but the findings were not made public.

Thomas, a 37-year-old homeless man with schizophrenia who was a regular presence in downtown Fullerton, was injured July 5 during a confrontation with the officers, who witnesses said beat him until he was unconscious.

He died five days later, after being removed from life support.

Woman Who Slashed 2 in Face on Subway Sought by Cops

Police are searching for a woman accused of slashing two subway passengers in the face two separate times.

The incidents both happened on the 4 train in the Bronx, and the victims in both cases were young women.

Police said they did not know why the woman attacked the subway riders. The lack of an apparent motive was enough to set off concern among other young female passengers on the 4 train Wednesday.

"That's unbelievable, now everyone has to worry about riding the train," said Lauren Gunn. "That shouldn't be. Everyone should feel safe on the train."

The first slashing incident happened at about 4:20 p.m. last Tuesday, Sept. 6, on the northbound 4 train near East 170th Street, according to police.

The alleged slasher approached a 19-year-old woman sitting on the train and cut her in the face with an unknown object, causing serious physical injury.

The other incident happened at about 3:55 p.m. Monday, Sept. 12, on the southbound 4 train near Mount Eden Avenue. Police said the attacker approached an 18-year-old woman sitting on the train and slashed her in the face with an unknown object, again causing serious injury.

The alleged slasher was last seen wearing a black hooded sweatshirt, clear plastic gloves and a thick green bracelet on her wrist, police said.

Anyone with information is asked to contact Crime Stoppers at 800-577-TIPS or at usa-local-news.blogspot.com.

Chicken Coop to be Built in Bronx With Grant Money

Chicken Coop to be Built in Bronx With Grant Money

New York City's green spaces are getting a boost.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced private grants to 19 community groups to fund gardening, composting and stewardship of the city's community gardens and other green spaces.

The grants range from $500 to $1,000 each. One will be used to build a chicken coop in Brook Park in the Bronx. The mayor says "chicken deputies" from local schools will be appointed to monitor chicken and egg production.

The groups applied through a new city-run website, nyc.changeby.us, designed to foster collaboration between community groups.

The funds, totaling $15,000, come from the Campaign for New York's Future and the Rockefeller Foundation, with support from the Mayor's Fund to Advance New York City. They'll be administered by the Citizens Committee for New York City.

The groups and projects receiving grants are:

  • Brook Park Chickens: will engage volunteers to build the first chicken coop in Brook Park, providing residents with access to humanely raised chickens and eggs. “Chicken Deputies” will be appointed from local schools to monitor chicken and egg production. ($700)
  • Bushwick City Farms: will transform a vacant lot located at the NYCHA developments on Stagg Street in Bushwick into a community farm that will serve neighborhood residents, providing a open green space and free organic food. ($900) 
  • Butterfly Project NYC: will educate and engage local 8th graders at Emolior Academy to renovate and maintain a pollinator garden area in Drew Gardens, on the Bronx River. ($800)
  • CURES & Glendale Civic Association: will bring together a coalition of those interested in  transforming a neglected property along the railroad corridor at Edsall Avenue into a new community garden. ($1,000)
  • DeWitt Clinton HS Compost: will turn school cafeteria waste into compost for use in the school garden, by having students volunteer to help cafeteria staff to sort food waste and teaching the students how to build a three-bin composting system. ($850)
  • East New York 4 Gardens: will provide materials and tools to support the capacity of four local gardens to work together:  Gregory’s Garden, Floral Vineyard, Elton St. Block Association, and Cypress Hills Community Garden (NYCHA).  ($600)
  • Friends of Westerleigh Park: will expand local park stewardship program to include composting by providing students of P.S. 30 with hands-on experience in Westerleigh Park. ($600)
  • Friends of Wingate Park: will engage youth and community members to clean up Wingate Park and to plant flowers. ($500)
  • Mama Dee’s Community Garden: will expand their compost drop off site and increase the amount and quality collected by creating educational signs to explain the process of composting and what can be put in the compost bins. ($600)
  • Olive Street Community Garden: will expand by having its current community gardeners teach students from an after-school program how to build three new beds. ($1,000)
  • Pelham Organics: will expand an existing garden program with the help of local residents to and distribute free produce in the Pelham Parkway Houses. ($900) 
  • PLG Neighborhood Association: will create two composting fellowships for young adults in the neighborhood, teaching them everything from outreach to collection to construction and providing them valuable green jobs skills. ($1,000)
  • Powell Street Community Garden: engage public housing and local residents to interact and revitalize the garden to increase its growing potential and provide fresh produce to the community. ($600) 
  • Prospect Heights Street Tree Task Force: will support hands-on efforts to clean, compost, and mulch in Prospect Heights, working collaboration with the Park Slope Tree Pit Enlargement Project to help neighborhood residents expand and protect their tree pits. ($550)
  • Rockaway Resource Recovery: will create a composting facility in a community garden on Beach 97th Street, in partnership with Rockaway Taco, Veggie Island, and Rockaway Beach Club LLC. ($750)
  • Roots of Peace Community Garden: will expand the options for North Shore residents to get involved with the Roots of Peace Community Garden's, including increased composting, guest lectures, and volunteer opportunities. ($800)
  • Sprout Rooftop Farms: will work with eight to 10 interns from the Green School in Williamsburg to design and build a composting box, as part of a year-long collaboration to develop vegetable gardens on the school grounds. ($1,000)
  • Sustainable Flatbush: will form a compost coalition to collect and process food waste at the Cortelyou Greenmarket to be transported for use at three local community gardens.  In partnership with GrowNYC, Compost for Brooklyn, and the Flatbush CommUNITY Garden. ($1,000)    
  • 300 West Street Block Association: will engage community in street tree care, leaf collection, composting, and spring bulb planting, including a post-Halloween pumpkin collection to be composted into mulch for street tree beds. ($900)

Ex-Cop's Wife: I Shot Him in Self-Defense

Ex-Cop's Wife: I Shot Him in Self-Defense

A woman accused of killing her husband, a retired NYPD officer, fell apart on the witness stand Wednesday — weeping, clutching her chest, gagging and gasping for air — when asked to pick up a gun prosecutors say she used to shoot him in their home.

"I'm afraid I'm going to get sick," Barbara Sheehan said, barely able to glance at the .38-caliber revolver that lay on the witness stand next to her. "I don't want to do it."

The 50-year-old woman from the Howard Beach section of Queens has been charged with murdering Raymond Sheehan, a former police sergeant. Barbara Sheehan said he was an abusive, reckless, terrifying man.

Prosecutors say she shot her husband 11 times using two handguns that he kept loaded. She has pleaded not guilty and says the shooting, which has drawn the attention of domestic violence activists, was self-defense.

Assistant District Attorney Debra Pomodore hammered Sheehan with questions about her husband's life insurance policies and the moments leading to the shooting during the third day of cross-examination. The trial started two weeks ago, and it was Sheehan's third day on the witness stand.

Sheehan was often contradictory and claimed to not remember signing checks her two children had written to her — proceeds from their father's life insurance policies. She said that they helped her pay the bills, but that she did not specifically benefit from the money.

Her two children, Jennifer, 25, and Raymond, 21, have both said that their father abused them and their mother, and that they lived in fear of him. They are expected to testify at the trial, and both wept with their mother as she composed herself in a courtroom pew after she was asked to hold the revolver.

Jennifer Sheehan and her mother wore purple to show support for victims of domestic violence. Many other women in the courtroom wore the color, as well.

Prosecutors sought to show that on the day of the shooting, Sheehan was not fearful for her life. She proofed her son's school paper, drank coffee and made travel arrangements for a trip to Florida.

>Barbara Sheehan testified that she didn't want to go with her husband on vacation but was pretending to out of fear because he had said he'd kill her if she didn't come. The fight touched off the fatal argument.

>He dragged her out of bed the morning of the shooting and threw her out of the house in her pajamas, saying she couldn't come back until she agreed to go with him, she testified. She stood outside nearly an hour in the winter cold before agreeing to come.

>The retired officer kept loaded his loaded service weapon, a Glock handgun, and an off-duty gun, the revolver. Often he kept one holstered to his side, the other on his ankle.

>"Living with the man I lived with, I tried to survive the best I could," she testified.

>Pomodore asked repeatedly whether Sheehan ever called 911 or a domestic violence hotline in the hours leading to the shooting. The answer was always no.

>After her husband got into the shower, she left to go to a friend's house, where she was frantic.

>"I didn't know what to do," she said.

>She went back home to get the $1,700 in cash she had stashed in her drawer and said she planned to tell her husband she was going to get dog food but never come back. She saw the revolver in the bedroom, took it and walked to the hall. Raymond Sheehan, 49, was in the bathroom, recently showered, the Glock by his side on the vanity.

>That's when the encounter occurred.

>During testimony, Barbara Sheehan was barely understandable through tears, her head down, her face in her hands, shielding her eyes from Pomodore, as she said he pointed the gun at her and she fired.

>"I don't know what I was thinking then; I was so scared," she said. "I thought he'd come after me and kill me."

>Prosecutors sought to suggest he did not point the gun at her, and noted he never fired.

>"I could see his face, and his eyes, and his hand and the gun," she said, her voice rising with every word. "I knew he was going to kill me."

>But Sheehan would not answer specific questions, such as where she was standing when the shooting happened, how she ended up with both guns, and whether she later told her mother that Raymond Sheehan had been laughing at her with the gun, and that was why she shot him.

>"Was he naked?" Pomodore asked.

>"I don't know," Sheehan wept.

>"Was he shaving?" Pomodore asked.

>"I don't know."

>"What was he wearing?"

>"I don't know."

>On several occasions, Pomodore asked Sheehan to show the jury how she held the gun at her husband, and each time she said she was physically unable to do it. The revolver sat on the witness stand, and Sheehan cowered from it.

>"Does this have to be there?" she asked.

>"It's part of evidence," answered acting Queens State Supreme Court Justice Barry Kron.

Nassau County Reports 1st West Nile Death

Nassau County Reports 1st West Nile Death

The Nassau County Department of Health is reporting its first death from West Nile virus this year.

The victim is identified only as an adult older than 70 who lived in the town of Oyster Bay. A statement from the health department did not say when the person died.

As of Sept. 13, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported seven people had died from the disease across the country in 2011.

This year in Nassau County, 9 humans and 29 mosquito pools have tested positive for West Nile virus.

The county employs spraying and has deployed 42 trap sites to capture mosquitoes blamed for carrying the disease.

Court Refuses to Block Troy Davis Execution

Court Refuses to Block Troy Davis Execution

The Supreme Court has rejected an eleventh-hour appeal from Troy Davis to prevent Georgia authorities from executing him for the murder of an off-duty police officer.

The court did not comment on its order late Wednesday, four hours after receiving the last-ditch request.

The filing by Davis' lawyers came after state officials refused to grant Davis a reprieve in the face of calls for clemency from former President Jimmy Carter, Pope Benedict XVI and others.

The high court previously granted Davis a stay of execution in 2008 and ordered a court hearing the following year to give Davis a chance to establish his innocence. A federal judge said Davis failed to do so, and the justices refused to review that finding.

New Yorkers Rallied for Stay of Execution

As the Supreme Court considered the appeal, New Yorkers rallied throughout the city in support of Davis, who was scheduled to be executed at 7 p.m.

At 125th Street in Harlem, Davis supporters gathered in a rally with signs and chants like "We are all Troy Davis" and "Stop the legal lynching of Troy Davis"

Dozens of marchers walked down 125th Street, at times blocking traffic.

"We're here because the execution of Troy Davis has to be stopped," said Tony Murphy of the International Action Center. "Anyone who knows anything about this case knows that he didn't do it. The fact that they're continuing forward with this exposes the racist character of the death penalty."

>The Rev. Herbert Daughtry also led a 6 p.m. prayer service and vigil at the House of the Lord Church on Atlantic Avenue, featuring Lumumba Bandele of the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, Kevin Powell of BK Nation, and others.

>Surging Rally Wednesday Against Execution

>Davis' supporters had been trying increasingly frenzied measures, urging prison workers to stay home and even posting a judge's phone number online, hoping people will press him to put a stop to the 7 p.m. lethal injection.

>He was convicted in 1991 of killing MacPhail, who was working as a security guard at the time. MacPhail rushed to the aid of a homeless man who prosecutors said Davis was bashing with a handgun after asking him for a beer. Prosecutors said Davis had a smirk on his face as he shot the officer to death in a Burger King parking lot in Savannah.

>No gun was ever found, but prosecutors say shell casings were linked to an earlier shooting for which Davis was convicted.

>Witnesses placed Davis at the crime scene and identified him as the shooter, but several of them have recanted their accounts and some jurors have said they've changed their minds about his guilt. Others have claimed a man who was with Davis that night has told people he actually shot the officer.

>Davis' execution has been stopped three times since 2007, but on Wednesday the 42-year-old appeared to be out of legal options.

>As his last hours ticked away, an upbeat and prayerful Davis turned down an offer for a special last meal as he met with friends, family and supporters.

>Amnesty International says nearly 1 million people have signed a petition on Davis' behalf. His supporters include former President Jimmy Carter, Pope Benedict XVI, a former FBI director, the NAACP, along with artists Questlove and Big Boi.

>"I'm trying to bring the word to the young people: There is too much doubt," Big Boi said at a church near the prison.

>Follow us on Twitter @NBCNewYork and Facebook/NBCNewYork.

NYC Stock Trader "Octopussy" Gets Decade in Prison

NYC Stock Trader

A stock trader dubbed the Octopussy because he reached for so much inside information was sentenced Wednesday to 10 years in prison by a judge who said a harsh punishment was necessary because insider trading is so difficult to detect.

Zvi Goffer was convicted with two others in June in a conspiracy to pay bribes to coax confidential information out of two shady lawyers at a Manhattan firm.

"Insider trading is very, very hard to detect," U.S. District Judge Richard Sullivan said as he also ordered Goffer to pay more than $10 million in restitution. "Because of that, it has to be dealt with harshly."

He added: "These crimes are not going to be tolerated, certainly not in my courtroom."

The 34-year-old Goffer told the judge in a pre-sentencing letter that he now realizes he had warped perceptions of "survival of the fittest." He said "everyone is doing it" is not a good excuse for doing wrong. Goffer was among more than two dozen people convicted in what prosecutors called the biggest hedge fund insider trading case in history.

Given a chance to speak, Goffer apologized first to investors in the stocks in which he had an unfair advantage, saying: "They didn't have the information I had."

He began crying when he apologized to his brother, Emanuel, who was convicted at trial along with him and is awaiting sentencing. A third defendant, Michael Kimelman, also awaits sentencing.

"He knows I love him," he said of his brother. Zvi Goffer said he didn't always understand the seriousness of the crime but had awakened to its tragic consequences.

"Now today I have to face it and I am terrified," he said.

>The sentence, one of the longest ever given to someone convicted of insider trading, caused Goffer's wife to break down in sobs.

>"What am I going to do?" she called out in court at one point. "It's not fair!" A woman beside her then shouted a profanity, causing Sullivan to rise from the bench and threaten to bring in U.S. marshals to make arrests.

>"This is a courtroom, not a street corner," he said.

>Goffer was convicted by a jury that viewed evidence that he had arranged to pay two attorneys nearly $100,000 in 2007 and 2008 for inside tips on mergers and acquisitions.

>During the two-week trial, prosecutors introduced evidence that Goffer gave conspirators prepaid cellular telephones in an effort to reduce detection by law enforcement.

>The judge said the message of the prosecution to Wall Street has to be more than a warning that prepaid telephones are not the best way to dodge prosecution. He said Goffer had repeatedly demonstrated that he knew he was breaking the law and didn't care.

>"It's a game that you and others seem to find exciting," he said.

>Before starting his own firm, Goffer worked for nine months for Raj Rajaratnam, a one-time billionaire who was convicted earlier this year of charges at his own insider trading trial and faces sentencing next week.

>Rajaratnam and Goffer were among more than two dozen people convicted in a case that utilized an unprecedented number of wiretaps for a white-collar case. U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara has said the government was responding to the increased use of techniques more commonly used by drug dealers and mobsters to cover up their crimes.

>Investigators eventually expanded the insider trading probe to target employees of so-called research networking firms that connect hedge fund managers with employees of public companies. Authorities said they brought charges after discovering that some of the relationships enabled inside information rather than legitimate research to be discussed.

>Winifred Jiau, of Fremont, Calif., was among 13 people arrested last year on charges that she conspired to accept cash and gifts to feed inside information to hedge funds. Most of the other defendants have pleaded guilty. Jiau was scheduled to be sentenced later Wednesday.

>Jiau, a U.S. citizen born in Taiwan who has remained imprisoned since her arrest, worked for two years as a consultant for Primary Global Research, a Mountain View, Calif.-based company.

>Prosecutors said she earned more than $200,000 by selling "tomorrow's news today" about earnings and performance of publicly traded companies. The information, they say, was communicated in code with her co-defendants, sometimes using "cooks" to refer to tipsters, "recipe" for the inside information and "sugar" for what she was paid for it.

$1M Bail for Suspect in Deadly AC Carjacking

$1M Bail for Suspect in Deadly AC Carjacking

Authorities credited multiple tips from the public with helping them locate and arrest suspect in a deadly carjacking at an Atlantic City casino parking lot.

Phillip Byrd, 20, was arrested Tuesday evening at his home in Camden. At a brief state Superior Court appearance Wednesday in Mays Landing, he was ordered held on $1 million bail on murder and other charges.

Atlantic County Prosecutor Theodore Housel said multiple law enforcement agencies including his office took Byrd into custody without incident.

"The public stepped up on this one from all over," he said. "It made all the difference in the world."

Housel said a stolen car that was connected to Byrd and two other suspects was found abandoned in another part of Camden.

Authorities claim Byrd, Eric Darden and Raheem Simmons stalked potential victims at two casinos — Bally-s and ACH, formerly known as the Atlantic City Hilton — before targeting 28-year-old Sunil Rattu and 24-year-old Radha Ghetia at the Trump Taj Mahal Casino Resort garage on Sunday morning.

Rattu died from two gunshot wounds to the head. Ghetia is recovering from a gunshot wound.

The other suspects remain at large.

In addition to murder, Byrd is charged with felony murder (a killing that takes place during the commission of another felony); possession of a weapon; carjacking; kidnapping; theft; and robbery.

>Byrd, who was not represented by a lawyer during the three-minute hearing, spoke only three words during it. He answered "yeah" three times when asked if he had been given a copy of the charges against him, whether he wanted a lawyer and whether he can afford to pay for one.

>Authorities said the three suspects accosted the couple in the casino garage, robbed them of a small amount of cash, forced them into their vehicle at gunpoint and drove to an alleyway nearby where both were shot.

Park51 Islamic Center Near Ground Zero Opens Its Doors

Park51 Islamic Center Near Ground Zero Opens Its Doors

The developer of an Islamic cultural center that opened Wednesday evening near the site of the terrorist attacks that leveled the World Trade Center says the biggest error on the project was not involving the families of 9/11 victims from the start.

People crowded into the center, where a small orchestra played traditional Middle Eastern instruments and a photo exhibit of New York children of different ethnicities lined the walls. The enthusiasm at the opening belied its troubled beginnings.

"We made incredible mistakes," Sharif El-Gamal told The Associated Press in an earlier interview at his Manhattan office.

The building at 51 Park Place, two blocks from the World Trade Center site, includes a mosque that has been open for two years. El-Gamal said the overall center is modeled after the Jewish Community Center on Manhattan's Upper West Side, where he lives.

"I wanted my daughter to learn how to swim, so I took her to the JCC," said the Brooklyn-born Muslim. "And when I walked in, I said, 'Wow. This is great.'"

The project has drawn criticism from opponents who say they don't want a Muslim prayer space near the site of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

The center is open to all faiths and will include a 9/11 memorial, El-Gamal said. He called opposition to the center — which prompted one of the most virulent national discussions about Islam and freedom of speech and religion since Sept. 11 — part of a "campaign against Muslims."

Last year, street clashes in view of the trade center site pitted supporters against opponents of the center.

When the center was first envisioned, several years ago, activist Daisy Khan and her husband, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, played a major, vocal role. But they soon left the project because of differences with the developer.

>El-Gamal, 38, confirmed Wednesday that they parted ways because "we had a different vision." He declined to elaborate.

>The couple said they had discussed plans for Park51, as the center is known, with relatives of 9/11 victims, first responders and others, including the possibility it could become a multi-faith center focusing on religious conflict. But El-Gamal wishes victims' families had been involved earlier — before the center became a point of contention.

>"The biggest mistake we made was not to include 9/11 families," El-Gamal said, noting that the center's advisory board now includes at least one 9/11 family member.

>At first, "we didn't understand that we had a responsibility to discuss our private project with family members that lost loved ones," he said, and they did not "really connect" with community leaders and activists.

>But today, "we're very committed to having them involved in our project. ... We're really listening."

>Pointing to the inclusivity of a center that critics feared would be polarizing, El-Gamal noted that the featured photographer in the "NYChildren" exhibit is Danny Goldfield, who is Jewish.

>The Brooklyn photographer was inspired to create the exhibit by the story of Rana Sodhi, a Sikh who immigrated from India and settled in Arizona. His brother was killed in a retaliatory hate crime four days after Sept. 11.

>Goldfield said he had photographed children with roots in 169 countries since 2004. He hopes to find subjects representing 24 other countries to complete the project. Some of the photographs had been exhibited elsewhere, but the opening marked the first time all were shown together.

>He said there was a synergy between the themes and spirit of his project and those of the center, particularly with regard to community participation and inclusiveness.

>"They want to build a center for everyone that's represented on the walls here," he said.

>Recalling the controversy over the center, he said he didn't want to pass judgment on its opponents. But he said he'd like them to see the show "more than anyone."

>El-Gamal told the AP that fundraising is under way to complete the 15-story building that also is to include an auditorium, educational programs, a pool, a restaurant and culinary school, child care services, a sports facility, a wellness center, and artist studios.

>The mosque is especially needed in lower Manhattan, he said, because thousands of Muslims either work or live in the neighborhood, "and in our religion, we must pray five times a day."