Bishop Salvatore Cordileone, who will be installed on Thursday as the
leader of the San Francisco Archdiocese, led the fight against same-sex
marriage in California.
Cigna representatives greet the company’s 50 billionth fucked-over customer at his front door.
CANTON, OH—Overjoyed Cigna executives celebrated the health
insurer’s 50 billionth fucking over of a customer Thursday, personally
surprising 56-year-old spinal trauma victim Clyde Gershon with
champagne, confetti, and hundreds of multicolored balloons as they
denied his most recent disability claim.
The wheelchair-bound Gershon, who has required an expensive regimen
of pills and physical therapy since a 2010 car crash, was greeted at his
front door by cheering, party-hat-wearing members of Cigna’s senior
management, who posed for pictures while presenting him with an
oversized cardboard “Claim Denied!” letter explaining that he was judged
fit to return to work and would lose all coverage at the end of the
month.
“We did it! We’ve completely and utterly fucked over a customer for
the 50 billionth time," exclaimed CEO David Cordani, drawing a vibrant
round of applause as Gershon, gaunt and dejected, stared blankly off
into the distance. “Ruining this many lives is an accomplishment no one
ever could have dreamed of back in 1982 when Cigna was founded. And
today, I can proudly say we have not only achieved it, but inflicted an
incalculable amount of mental anguish along the way.”
“So congratulations, Mr. Gershon, you poor son of a bitch,” he
continued, raising a flute of Dom Perigno. “On behalf of myself and the
rest of our 30,600 employees, I hope you find some other way to pay for
your medical care, because you are now royally fucked!”
According to sources, Cigna has been preparing to commemorate the
50-billion milestone since late April, when its “Big Board”—an
electronic ticker counting the number of customers the company has
savagely fucked over—passed 49,500,000,000 after the insurer postponed
coverage of an unemployed father’s kidney transplant for the fourth
time, forcing his family to accumulate mounds and mounds of debt to pay
for dialysis.
Excitement continued to grow throughout the summer as eager employees
began refusing claims for procedures the company had previously covered
by saying that they “hadn’t been coded right,” which accelerated its
march towards 50 billion by an additional 200,000 fucking-overs per day.
“In my 13 years helping this company prevent sick people from getting
the health care they need, there has never been a more exciting—or
lucrative—time to work here,” said Cigna’s executive vice president Mark
Boxer, celebrating at the office with the national accounts team, which
took turns swinging at a cancer-patient shaped piñata. “Under my watch,
we’ve fucked so many people over that I received a 25 percent raise
last year, putting my annual salary at close to $20 million dollars and
really motivating me to stick it to our customers like never before.”
By the 49,975,000,000 mark, a party atmosphere reportedly began to
engulf Cigna’s Bloomfield, CT headquarters. Claims processors would
reportedly fuck patients over first by waiting weeks to pay their
medical providers, and then by sending them the wrong amount. Gleeful
telephone operators fucked over customers by openly hanging up on the
ones who had called to protest being fucked over.
In the days leading up to 50,000,000,000, sources said, customers were getting a “full fucking over from every direction.”
"Once we got within striking distance of 50 [billion], we thought,
wouldn't it be cool if we made the big one an event? You know, really
fuck over some pitiful fuck in true theatrical fashion," CFO Ralph
Nicoletti said. “And since we keep such detailed records of exactly whom
we fuck over and how, it was easy to locate Mr. Gershon and really make
sure we devastated him in a way that was worthy of such a momentous
occasion.”
“He turned out to be the perfect choice, too, because it ends up
we’ve fucked him and his family over thousands of times before,” he
continued. “It’s always nice to fuck over our most loyal customers.”
Speaking to reporters on Gershon’s front yard, Nicoletti reiterated
that despite reaching the long sought-after goal of 50 billion, the
company was still as committed as ever to fucking more and more people
over.
“We’re not going to stop fucking people over any time soon,” said
Nicoletti, adding that he hoped to get to 75 billion by the holidays,
which he described as truly the most fun and fulfilling time to fuck
somebody over. “It just goes back to the promise we make to every one of
our customers: You turn to Cigna for protection in times of ill health,
and we’ll be there to totally fuck you over.”
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger in 1992, the year he
relinquished the position of publisher to his son, Arthur Ochs
Sulzberger Jr. The portrait in the background is of his grandfather,
Adolph S. Ochs, who bought The New York Times in 1896.
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger guided The Times and its parent company through a
period of expansion and change on a scale not seen since the
newspaper’s founding
The judge who sentenced Richard J. Lipsky, who had been secretly
assisting federal investigators, said Mr. Lipsky deserved “substantial
credit for his cooperation.”
Friday, September 28, 2012
Puerto Rican artist takes on colonialism & oppression in a new solo show at Longwood Art Gallery in Bronx
"Puerto Rico in its Labyrinth" runs through Dec. 8
The
exhibit PUERTO RICO IN ITS LABYRINTH Chronicles of a Country and a
World in Crisis features the works of José Buscaglia, including this
piece titled “Let Them Be Satisfied with the Leftovers.”
If nothing else, the new exhibit now open at Longwood Art Gallery at Hostos will get you talking.
“Puerto Rico in its Labyrinth: Chronicles of a Country and a World in
Crisis” showcases the works of José Buscaglia and tackles such weighty
topics as colonialism in Puerto Rico and oppression in the Caribbean,
the Americas and Africa.
The exhibit at the Mott Haven gallery features Buscaglia’s paintings, sculptures and writings.
“The colors are stunning, but then you start reading the narrative that
accompanies the works. They’re almost like essays, and it’s all so
impactful,” said Wallace Edgecombe, director of Hostos Center for the
Arts and Culture.
In the piece, “Let Them Be Satisfied with the Leftovers,” Buscaglia depicts politicians carving up and devouring Puerto Rico.
In another piece, the artist takes on Arizona’s controversial immigration law.
Also on view is “Plaza de la Identidad: Public Art Under House Arrest,”
an installation of a public art project commissioned by the Puerto
Rican legislature in 2003. The work was deemed too nationalistic for
display and until recently was kept in storage.
The Bronx gallery will show models of the piece which includes three
female forms representing Puerto Rico’s African, Spanish and Taino
heritage; a 53-foot relief depicting the history of Puerto Rico; and an omphalo stone, a repository that will house samples of soil and water from various parts of the island.
“Buscaglia is very nationalistic and it comes out in his work,”
Edgecombe said. “Even people who don’t agree with him should see the
show. He’s a voice to be heard.”
“Puerto Rico in its Labyrinth: Chronicles of a Country and a World in Crisis” will remain on display through Dec. 8.
An opening reception with Buscaglia is set for Oct. 3 at the gallery, 450 Grand Concourse. To learn more, visit bronxarts.org. n Beethoven in the Bronx
St. Luke’s Chamber Ensemble will perform a free concert at 3 p.m. Sunday at Pregones Theater, 575 Walton Ave.
The program will include Beethoven’s “Septet” and “John’s Book of Alleged Dances” by American composer John Adams.
The event will also feature a food drive to benefit City Harvest.
Attendees are encouraged to bring non-perishable food donations to the
performance.
To learn more, visit oslmusic.org/concerts. nPoetry in Nature
The Elisa Contemporary Art gallery presents a new exhibit, “Poetic
Landscapes,” featuring the artwork of Marie Danielle Leblanc and Sharon
Gordon.
Both artists take a colorful and abstract look at nature in a series of oil and acrylic paintings.
“Poetic Landscapes” opens Saturday and will run through Nov. 11 at the Gallery, 5622 Mosholu Ave. in Riverdale.
To learn more, visit ElisaContemporaryArt.com. tsamuels@nydailynews.com
Udi Ofer, Advocacy Director NYCL
union oversees policy Campaigns to advance and defend civil liberties
and Civil Rights. Speak at a rally at City Hall to call for an end to
discriminatory Stop-and-Frisk policing and NYPD reform.
Video by Rafael Martínez Alequín
September 27, 2012 — Several hundred New
Yorkers, elected officials – together with civil rights, community and
labor leaders – rallied at City Hall today in support of a legislative
package of police reforms, known as the Community Safety Act.
New Yorkers of all backgrounds, including people of color, immigrant,
LGBT, Muslim, and homeless New Yorkers, descended on City Hall to speak
out against discriminatory policing and advocate that the City Council
pass the pending bills.
“New Yorkers are tired of waiting for justice and reforms,” said
Yul-san Liem, a spokesperson for Communities United for Police Reform.
“Our communities are standing up to reject discriminatory policing like
stop-and-frisk abuses, surveillance of Muslim communities, and the lack
of police accountability that have continued for too long. The
Community Safety Act represents reforms our city’s police department
needs, and the City Council must pass these bills.”
The rally outside of City Hall was organized by Communities United
for Police Reform (CPR) and preceded meetings with council members where
New Yorkers illustrated the damage that discriminatory policing and
lack of police oversight has on their communities. Dozens of advocacy
and community organizations participated in the rally calling for an end
to discriminatory policing and more effective accountability and
oversight for the NYPD.
At the rally, CPR announced that all four bills of the Community
Safety Act had received sponsorship by a majority of members of the City
Council. The campaign also announced the endorsement of the Community
Safety Act legislative package by over 50 organizations from throughout
the city.
On Monday, the City Council announced that a hearing on the bills
would be held on October 10 at City Hall, followed by field hearings on
stop-and-frisk practices in Brooklyn and Queens later in the month.
The Community Safety Act consists of four bills:
Intro 799 that protects New Yorkers against unlawful searches that
those subjected to stop-and-frisk often experience. These illegal
searches have contributed significantly to the explosion of low-level
marijuana arrests, primarily among black and Latino youth, despite the
state’s 1977 decriminalization of private possession in small
quantities.
Intro 800 that creates a strong ban on profiling by the NYPD and
expands protections against profiling based on age, sex, gender identity
or expression, sexual orientation, immigration status, housing status,
language and disability, in addition to race, religion or ethnicity.
Intro 801 that requires NYPD officers to identify themselves and explain their actions.
Intro 881 that establishes an Inspector General for the NYPD to provide independent oversight.
“Even when I have tried to exercise the rights I knew I had, there
was no way of ensuring they were respected in reality – during one stop,
the cop’s only response was to call me a ‘faggot’ while conducting a
search over my objection.” said Mitchell Mora, a 23 year old Latino
youth leader, “know your rights” educator, and researcher with
Streetwise and Safe. “The Community Safety Act is critical to counteract
the many ways in which LGBTQ youth of color are policed -- whether we
are being told, like I was, to empty our pockets, open up a bag or
purse, or submit to a ‘gender check’ without any legal basis.”
“This practice of stopping, frisking and intimidating kids really
angers me,” said Brooklyn resident Justin Rosado, 17, a student and
member of Make the Road New York. “I am a kid who follows the rules,
goes to school every day, and spends my free time trying to make my
community a better place. But none of that matters because I am young
and Latino.”
“I’m rallying for police reform with CPR on September 27 to make the
NYPD accountable for their negative actions, and to stop the harassment
of the homeless by the NYPD,” said Raul Rodriguez, a member of Picture
the Homeless.
“We believe the NYPD’s discriminatory practices are an attack on
people of African descent,” said Tsedey Betru, a member of the New York
chapter of the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement. “We stand in solidarity
with all New Yorkers affected by these practices to pass the Community
Safety Act, so that our communities are safe from crime and immoral
policing.”
“The Community Safety Act, which is backed by an ever-growing
coalition of broad-based support, is an important series of reforms that
will help lead to better policing and safer streets for all,” stated
Council Member Jumaane D. Williams (D-Brooklyn). “I am proud to be a
prime sponsor of this legislation and even prouder to join my colleagues
today in calling for greater NYPD accountability and the passage of
these bills. I firmly believe that we can achieve better policing and
safer streets in our city simultaneously.”
The NYPD’s stop-and-frisk abuses are just one example of systemic
discriminatory policing that targets certain New Yorkers, based on their
race, ethnicity, religion, immigration status, housing status, gender
identity or expression, and sexual orientation.
Organizers and supporters of the day of advocacy and campaign to pass
the Community Safety Act pointed to the fact that the Bloomberg
administration’s use of stop-and-frisk and other discriminatory policing
practices constitute a widespread violation of the civil and human
rights of New Yorkers, and fail to keep communities safe from violence.
They also highlighted other legally dubious practices and patterns by
the NYPD that have occurred under the Bloomberg administration without
accountability and resolution.
During the Bloomberg administration, the NYPD has made more than 4
million stops of New Yorkers, with nearly 90 percent of stops resulting
in no summons or arrest. Black and Latino New Yorkers make up
approximately 85 percent of the stops. Stops often result in unlawful
searches, unwarranted arrests and charges, and abusive, humiliating
treatment of those New Yorkers subjected to them.
LGBT New Yorkers, the homeless, Muslims, public housing residents and
many others have also been subjected to similar profiling and abuses at
the hands of the police department.
Meanwhile, a lack of effective oversight but also other systemic
practices – like quota systems and the manipulation of crime statistics –
have allowed these abuses to continue. The perpetuation of these
harmful policies and practices contribute to a police department that is
less and less accountable to the taxpayers of New York City that it is
responsible for serving and protecting.
None of these practices have helped protect New Yorkers, as gun
violence remains at nearly the same levels as when Mayor Bloomberg first
entered office.
The rally served as a rejection of illegal, discriminatory policing,
and put forth an affirmative vision of police reforms that would help
make our city safer, promote civil rights and justice, and improve the
NYPD by restoring integrity and trust in the police department.
“Stop and frisk makes youth of color feel like we’re criminals and
not welcome in our own city,” said Alfredo Carrasquillo of VOCAL-NY. “It
also drives the number one arrest in this city, which is possession of
small amounts of marijuana, and fuels the school to prison pipeline as a
result.”
“I’ve been a victim of these racist ‘stop and frisk’ tactics since
before there was a name for it,” said Steve Kohut, a Justice Committee
organizer. “Now it breaks my heart to know that I’m going to have to sit
my son down and tell him that, like myself, chances are he will be
searched, groped, stripped, and maybe even beaten by the cops, just
because he’s Latino.”
“The Community Safety Act will bring much needed reforms to the
NYPD’s stop-and-frisk and related practices,” said New York Civil
Liberties Union Executive Director Donna Lieberman. “Collectively, these
bills would ensure that the NYPD is held accountable when it abuses its
power. This, in turn, will improve police-community relations and lead
to a better NYPD for all.”
“Young people in many neighborhoods have come to expect that they
will be stopped and searched on their way to school, when hanging out
with their friends, and even inside their own apartment buildings,” said
Center for Constitutional Rights Executive Director Vincent Warren.
“The transparency, oversight, and accountability provided by the
Community Safety Act will be a critical step towards preventing these
kinds of abuses.”
“Stop-and-frisk is the biggest racial profiling program in the
country. It must be stopped,” stated NAACP President and CEO Benjamin
Todd Jealous. “Stop-and-frisk is illegal, unethical, ineffective, and
gives license for officers to harass and intimidate innocent black and
brown youth. Our children should not have to fear both the robbers and
the cops.”
“This past summer, tens of thousands of New Yorkers from all walks of
life marched in silence and solidarity for justice in our communities,”
said George Gresham, President, 1199 SEIU United Healthcare Workers
East. “The package of legislation before the New York City Council,
known as the Community Safety Act, would enact reforms needed to improve
public accountability and trust with the NYPD. We applaud City Council
Speaker Christine Quinn for calling public hearings on the legislation
and we urge swift passage of these important reforms.”
“National Action Network support efforts to pass legislation that
will enforce police accountability and community relations and we are
proud to stand with Communities United for Police Reform in support of
the passage of the Community Safety Act,” said Tamika D. Mallory,
Executive Director of National Action Network.
“The police department must not ignore the concerns of the community
about racial profiling and unlawful searches and real legislation must
be passed to ensure a safer New York for everyone,” said Kyle Bragg,
Vice President of 32BJ. “New Yorkers should be able to walk down the
street without fear of being stopped, frisked and arrested. Police
tactics that indiscriminately target people who are young, Latino, Black
or appear to be immigrants strike fear into the heart of immigrant
communities and working-class neighborhoods, undermining the community
trust essential to effective policing. We demand an end to these
systematic violations of our rights.”
“Everyday at The Bronx Defenders, we meet clients and Bronx community
members who have been unfairly stopped, illegally searched, and
mistreated by the police,” said Robin Steinberg, Executive Director of
The Bronx Defenders. “In the West Bronx, police use force during stops
at the highest rate in the city. We are fighting for the Community
Safety Act to increase NYPD accountability and make New York City safer
for all of us.”
“For too long, ‘stop and frisk’ and other discriminatory police
tactics have made too many New Yorkers feel unsafe in our own
neighborhoods,” said Brittny Saunders, Senior Staff Attorney for
Immigrant and Civil Rights, The Center for Popular Democracy. “Today, we
gather to demand safety and respect for all New Yorkers. The Council
has a powerful opportunity to show how local leaders can work with
communities to find to solve a problem that’s critically important to
the future of this city and so many across the country.”
“Many people are unaware that they can refuse to consent to a search
by the NYPD; this lack of knowledge results in thousands of unlawful
marijuana arrests every year,” said Kassandra Frederique, policy
coordinator at the Drug Policy Alliance. “The Community Safety Act
creates more transparent police practices that will reduce thousands of
unlawful arrests, creating safer and healthier communities.”
“The job of the NYPD is to protect our communities not to target
them,” said Marie Pierre Chair of NYCC Board, Chair Brownsville Chapter.
“Every New Yorker wants to be safe in their neighborhood but when young
people of color don't have the freedom to walk the streets without
harassment—that’s not safety. The NYPD needs to find effective policies
that don't rely on racial profiling to protect our communities.”
A
reporter, Rafael Martinez Alequin, 66, whose self-published newspaper
The Free Press is often critical of Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, said that
Deputy Mayor Joseph J. Lhota hit him in the chest outside City Hall
yesterday and referred to him with an ethnic slur. Mr. Lhota
acknowledged shoving him but denied using a remark derogatory to
Latinos. He said the incident had begun as he talked to a colleague
yesterday outside City Hall and Mr. Alequin insisted on speaking to him.
The unidentified colleague walked away just before the altercation
began.''He interrupted me and shoved me and I shoved him back,'' Mr.
Lhota said.
By MATT FLEGENHEIMER
The comments by the chairman, Joseph J. Lhota, to Charles G. Moerdler
came during a discussion over a proposal to change the Metropolitan
Transportation Authority’s meeting calendar.
The NAACP alleges schools like Stuyvesant High School have
discriminatory admission practices. Only 1 percent of students at Stuy
High are African American.
The NAACP has filed a bombshell complaint with the U.S. Department of
Education, alleging discriminatory admission practices at the city’s
elite high schools.
In a blistering document delivered to the feds Thursday morning, the
NAACP accused the city of barring black and Latino students from eight
of its “best public schools,” including Stuyvesant High School in
Manhattan, where only 1% of students are black. “Black and Latino
students don’t see opportunity at places like Stuyvesant because of the
admissions process,” said NAACP attorney Rachel Kleinman. “It’s not fair
and it’s bad policy.”
The city’s Specialized High Schools Admissions Test is the only method
that is used to judge students for admission to the eight elite high
schools.
The NAACP believes the grueling exam is unfair to black and Latino
students because they are denied admission “at rates far higher than
other racial groups.” Nearly 31% of white students and 35% of Asian
students who take the test are offered seats at the top schools,
compared with just 5% of black students and 6.7% of Latinos.
The NAACP doesn’t specify how the test discriminates against blacks and
Latinos, but Kleinman said those students may lack tutoring and other
resources. Education officials hit back against the NAACP’s complaint,
arguing the test is color-blind.
“We want all of our students to have opportunities to prepare for the test,” said agency spokeswoman Deidrea Miller.
For years, black and Latino students have struggled to gain admission
to the city’s top institutions, including Brooklyn Technical High School
and the Bronx High School of Science. Just 7% of students in the
specialized high schools are black, although black students account for
28% of overall enrollment in city schools.
Asian and white students, who account for about 31% of the city’s
overall student body, occupy more than 85% of the seats in the elite
high schools.
The U.S. Department of Education will review the complaint and, if
needed, work with the city to change policies — a process that may
require new state legislation.
Assemblywoman Grace Meng is favored to win a Congressional seat in a
heavily Democratic Queens district, but the corruption case against her
father has cast a shadow over her campaign.
With the revelation that Richard J. Lipsky, convicted of bribery, was
assisting federal authorities, officials in Albany and New York City
wondered what new scandal might emerge.
‘Mexican Mitt’ Romney can’t shake the fake in face-off with Latino TV
Despite stacked crowd and ‘tan‘ his campaign stumbling in pursuit of Hispanic votes
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Published: Tuesday, September 25, 2012, 4:00 AM
Updated: Tuesday, September 25, 2012, 1:21 PM
Charles Dharapak/ASSOCIATED PRESS
“Fake tan. Fake fans. Really sad.”
That’s how a Facebook friend described Mitt Romney’s (“I wish I were Latino”) latest Hispanic misadventures.
The posting was referring to last week’s Univision interview with an
unnaturally tanned Republican candidate, which led many to believe that
Romney was wearing dark makeup to “identify” with Latinos. After all, as
everybody knows, all Latinos have a swarthy complexion.
Univision has denied this really happened, but looking at “before” and
“after” photos of a Mitt eager to ingratiate himself with Hispanic
voters — who overwhelmingly favor Obama — the suspicion remains.
The interview, a two-part series titled “Conozca a los candidatos”
(Meet the candidates), took place at the University of Miami. It aired
on Wednesday and on Thursday it was President Obama’s turn to submit to
probing questions from Univision anchors María Elena Salinas and Jorge
Ramos.
But Romney’s campaign stumbled against an unexpected obstacle. By all
accounts, even after pleading with every conservative group on campus,
the Republican hopeful couldn’t find enough sympathetic students to fill
the auditorium, as had been agreed between the network and the
candidates.
This may come as a surprise to the TV audience who were treated to a
room brimming with boisterous Romney supporters who cheered his every
word and booed practically every question from Salinas and Ramos. Such a
rousing response was, to say the least, a rather rare spectacle, since
the GOP standard bearer usually generates as much fervor in his
audiences as a dentist’s drill.
So when Salinas declared after the interviews that Romney’s campaign
had threatened to “reschedule” if it wasn’t allowed to bus in activists
and supporters to fill the many empty chairs at the auditorium, the
audience’s enthusiasm was revealed to be as much of a fake as Romney’s
strange orange glow.
“We were a little bit thrown because it was supposed to be a TV show,
it wasn’t a rally…It was a little bit of disrespect for us,” Salinas
said in an interview with BuzzFeed.
More than a little bit, I would say, and it didn’t end there. Actually
“Mexican Mitt” himself threatened to walk out minutes before the
interview was to begin.
The reason? Ramos had said at the opening of the program that the GOP
candidate had given Univision only 35 minutes, while the President had
agreed to a full hour the next night. A testy Romney did not appreciate
this fact being made public and demanded the introduction be re-taped or
he would not go on stage.
“It was a very awkward moment, believe me,” Salinas told BuzzFeed in what could have been the understatement of the year.
“Last week’s forum was the perfect example of Romney’s Latino outreach
strategy: ‘cherry-pick Latino supporters, have them cheer loud enough to
drown out Romney’s vacuous responses, and declare victory after the
fact,” said Frank Sharry, America’s Voice executive director.
A strategy that hasn’t helped him one bit with Hispanics. They have not
forgotten Romney’s extreme anti-immigration stance during the
primaries, his anti-labor agenda and his intention to gut Medicare in
the name of balancing the budget while vowing to preserve tax cuts and
all kinds of privileges for those who, like him, possess insane oodles
of money.
According to the latest impreMedia/Latino Decisions tracking poll,
Obama now leads Romney 69%-24% and enthusiasm for going to the polls is
growing among Latino voters. Not good news for Republicans and one more
proof that, contrary to what the Romney campaign seems to believe,
Latino voters are not stupid.
“Fake tan. Fake fans. Really sad.”
aruiz@nydailynews.com/
Mayor Bloomberg poured $75,000 into a political action committee
created by Senate Democrats Jeff Klein, Diane Savino, David Valesky and
David Carlucci.
ALBANY — Sensing a potential shift in the state Senate power structure, Mayor Bloomberg pumped $75,000 into a political action committee created by four dissident Democrats who formed their own independent caucus.
But Bloomberg hasn’t given up his longstanding support of the Senate
Republicans. He donated a whopping $1 million to the Senate Republican
Campaign Committee — the single largest contribution ever made to the
Senate GOP. That brings Hizzoner’s total contributions to the Senate
Republicans to $3.3 million since 2000.
Both donations are bad news for cash-strapped Senate Democrats as they try to reclaim the majority this fall.
While the hefty donation to the Senate GOP was surprising only in its
size, the contribution to the four-member Independent Democratic Caucus
is perhaps most telling, insiders say.
A Bloomberg source said the mayor decided to bankroll the renegade
faction both because its members support legislation important to the
mayor and because he sees the foursome as rising political force in
Albany.
The source said the mayor thinks the four — Sens. Jeff Klein (D-Bronx),
Diane Savino (D-Staten Island), David Valesky (D-Syracuse) and David
Carlucci (D-Rockland) — could act as kingmakers by swinging control of
the Senate.
Republicans, who have a 33-29 edge in the Senate, have worked closely
with the four for the past two years. But if Democrats pick up the three
votes they need to regain the majority, the four could swing the power
back to the GOP if their needs aren’t met. klovett@nydailynews.com
On the following three videos elected officials along with community leaders call for reforms to curb discriminatory Stop-and-Frisk Policing.
Coalition of Latina/o elected officials and Community and labor leaders
today (Sept. 24) announced its support for a legislative package of
police reforms— known as the Community Safety Act— and called for all
New Yorkers to stand up against discriminatory policing by participating
in a major advocacy day on the afternoon Thursday, (Sept. 27) hundred of
New Yorkers will participate in a rally outside of New York City Hall
Pedro Espada Jr. is free — for now.
A Brooklyn
federal judge yesterday declined to lock up the disgraced ex-state
senator, saying more time is needed to decide whether Espada violated
his bail when he got a massive payout from the same Bronx nonprofit he
robbed blind.
Judge Frederic Block told prosecutors and Espada’s
lawyer that he wants to see more evidence, in writing, from both sides
before making a ruling. He set an Oct. 5 deadline.
Prosecutors had
demanded that Block revoke Espada’s bail and toss him in the slammer,
claiming he violated Block’s order not to be “directly involved” in the
affairs of Soundview Healthcare Network, Espada’s now-defunct nonprofit.
Paul Martinka
‘BILK’ MONEY: Pedro Espada Jr. and wife Connie arrive
at Brooklyn federal court yesterday, where a judge allowed him to remain
free on bail — for now.
Espada is awaiting sentencing after being convicted in May for bilking nearly half a million dollars from Soundview.
Prosecutors alleged that, since late June, Espada and son Pedro Gautier Espada again
looted Soundview — siphoning $600,000 from the sale of assets and
keeping more than $300,000 of it for themselves. Nearly half went to
papa Espada.
“The government . . . has to convince me there has been a violation of this [bail] language,” Block said yesterday.
Espada
Jr.’s lawyer argued in court that the judge did not make it a condition
of the shamed pol’s $750,000 bail that he couldn’t receive payments
from Soundview.
“Nor was there any prohibition on Mr. Espada’s
family members continuing to operate or be involved with Soundview,”
lawyer Susan Necheles contended.
She said the payouts were approved by Soundview’s board, noting, “The board chose to pay these creditors above other creditors.”
Prosecutors
noted that the board is run by Espada’s son Alejandro — who cut the
controversial checks — and said there is “very strong circumstantial
evidence” that Espada Jr. continued to be involved in Soundview’s
affairs.
When the judge suggested that the board’s actions may
have been “legitimate,” Assistant US Attorney Carolyn Pokorny blasted,
“It makes no sense for the board to give out $144,000 to the man
convicted of stealing [from the nonprofit].”
She called Espada
Jr.’s argument “bizarre and illogical” and noted that Soundview owes
piles of cash — estimated at more than $3 million — to creditors and the
IRS.
“Almost no one would rather pay the IRS. Most anyone would want to give the check to Espada,” Necheles shot back.
Espada
Jr., accompanied by his wife and Pedro Gautier — but without his usual
entourage of bodyguards and supporters — was defiant outside court.
“We
regard this as a win,” he said. “They came to court with a bag of lies.
And thanks to Justice Block, we’re going home with a victory today.”
He declined to answer questions about the Soundview payout.
Pedro Gautier faces an upcoming trial on embezzlement and tax charges. His brother Alejandro is also under investigation. mmaddux@nypost.com
The US Attorney's Office in Brooklyn is asking a federal judge to revoke bail and lock up Espada, who was convicted earlier this year of using his Soundview Health Care Center as his personal slush fund. Judge Frederick Block told the prosecutors and Espada's lawyer that he wants to see more evidence, in writing, from both sides before making a ruling. He added "I agreed with you that this have an odor". He ordered the defense and prosecutors to present their evidence by next Friday, September 28.
Video by Rafael Martínez Alequín (Sept.21-2012)
Likely candidates for the 2013 Democratic primary are vying for
attention and to demonstrate how much they differ with Mayor Michael R.
Bloomberg, by suing him.
It takes quite a lot to be Albany’s most appallingly shameless crook.
But former state Sen. Pedro Espada has just clinched the title.
Espada
was convicted last May of stealing at least $480,000 from his Bronx
health clinic. Federal prosecutors yesterday disclosed that he then
looted its remaining assets and pocketed the dough.
All while he awaits sentencing for his conviction and two other criminal trials.
Oh, and he wants a publicly paid lawyer.
The feds have asked that Espada’s $750,000 bail be revoked — now.
Sounds about right.
Espada was convicted of using his Soundview Healthcare Network as a bank; he’ll likely do time, and he must make restitution.
AP
Pedro Espada, Jr.
But after his conviction — when the judge forbade Espada from having
any involvement in Soundview as a condition of remaining free — the
one-time Senate majority leader simply stole more money.
Just
weeks after the guilty verdict, Espada’s son Alejandro — who’d succeeded
him as Soundview’s CEO — sold the facility’s assets for $600,000.
Alejandro then doled out more than $350,000 — to himself, his brother
(who’s also facing trial), his father and others.
All this despite owing private creditors $2 million and the IRS $1 million.
In
short, said prosecutors, Espada is continuing what he was convicted of
in the first place: “taking Soundview’s money for his and his family’s
benefit.”
If that isn’t enough to earn Pedro Espada a stint in the Crossbar Hotel, what is?
Mitt Romney jokes about unskilled Latinos welcomed to 'stay for the rest of your lives' not amusing to Hispanic voters
How
dare you! say hardworking immigrants, after GOP candidate's tape
slamming the 'dependent' 47% of Americans who don't pay federal income
taxes
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Thursday, September 20, 2012, 10:08 PM
NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images
Mitt Romney's numbers among Latino voters were already low before he
made what one immigrant citizen called 'disgusting' remarks about
Hispanics in recently revealed tape.
Mitt Romney
went on the Univision Spanish-language network Wednesday, hoping to
improve his dismal polling numbers among Hispanics — the fastest-growing
segment of the country’s electorate.
He did so only days after his now notorious “47%” tape was revealed.
The tape where Romney told wealthy donor friends he’s already written
off half of Americans — “those people,” he said, who pay no federal
taxes and “believe they are entitled to health care, to food, to
housing, to you name it.”
In that tape, Romney also disparaged low-income immigrants and joked it
would be easier to capture the White House if his grandparents had been
Mexican.
Juana Velez, who came to this country from the Dominican Republic 25
years ago, didn’t catch Romney on Univision. She was too busy doing her
own clean up. Busy doing what she’s done for the past 10 years —
cleaning rooms at the Westin Hotel in midtown Manhattan.
But Velez has heard all about the Romney tape.
“He’s disgusting,” she said. “I’ve always worked for a living. Never
been on welfare. My husband served in Iraq. I’m a U.S. citizen. We own
our own home and we’ve raised four children here. How dare he talk about
us like that?”
Which is why the latest Pew Center poll on the presidential contest should come as no surprise.
President Obama’s already huge edge over Romney among Hispanics just
keeps getting bigger, according to Pew. Among registered Latinos, it now
stands at 69% to 24%. It’s even wider among “likely voters,” at 72% to
22%.
To put that in perspective, George W. Bush garnered a healthy 46% of
the Latino vote when he won re election in 2004. Even John McCain
managed 31% of vote in his losing bid against Obama in 2008.
Romney’s paltry share becomes even more ominous when you consider that
just 9.7 million Latinos voted in 2008. Most experts are predicting
around 12.5 million Hispanics will cast ballots this election.
Romney devoted a lot of time during all those primary debates earlier
this year convincing the Republican Party’s right wing that he would be
the toughest guy on immigration. Did he think Latinos weren’t paying
attention?
In Wednesday’s Univision forum, news anchors Maria Elena Salinas and
Jorge Ramos asked Romney about his statements back then favoring
“self-deportation” for undocumented immigrants. They repeatedly asked if
he would revoke President Obama’s policy of granting temporary legal
status to 1.7 million young Latinos brought to the country illegally by
their parents.
Romney dodged those questions, only promising a “permanent solution” to
the immigration problem, without any specifics, except to concede that,
“if a student does so well that he gets an advanced degree, I’d staple a
green card to their diplomas.”
Amazingly, in a portion of the notorious Florida tape that has gotten
little attention, Romney used similar language to urge an immigration
policy skewed to highly educated foreigners, while at the same time
mocking poor immigrants.
“I’d like to staple a green card to every Ph.D. in the world and say,
“Come to America, we want you here,” Romney said. “Instead, we make it
hard for people who get educated here or elsewhere to make this their
home. Unless, of course, you have no skill or experience, in which case
you’re welcome to cross the border and stay here for the rest of your
life.”
The wealthy donors, who paid $50,000 a plate to hear Romney that night, can be heard laughing.
Well, hotel worker Juana Velez doesn’t have a doctorate, but she’ll be
voting in November. Like millions of other Latinos, Velez has heard
enough from Romney already, and she’s not in a laughing mood. jgonzalez@nydailynews.com
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg announced the expansion of the NYCitizenship program to the New York City public school system.
video by Rafael Martínez Alequín (Sept. 20-2012)
Jimmy
Carter's grandson, James Carter 4th, is man who unearthed Mitt Romney's
'47 percent of Americans dependent upon government' video
Freelance researcher trolled internet and found clip that has damaged Romney campaign
Freelance researcher James Carter 4th, former President Jimmy Carter's
grandson, is the one who unearthed video of Mitt Romney claiming that 47
percent of Americans are dependent on the government.
Carolyn Kaster/AP
Former President Jimmy Carter.
Jimmy Carter's grandson was tired of hearing the ex-President used as GOP punchline — and his act of revenge has hobbled Mitt Romney’s campaign.
In an odd twist of fate and history, it was James Carter
4th who unearthed the secret video of Romney at a Florida fund-raiser
in which the Republican nominee demeaned the “47%” of Americans who are
“dependent upon the government, who believe that they are victims.” RELATED: ROMNEY GETTING HEAT FROM REPUBLICANS
Carter, a freelance researcher, had been trolling the Internet for
damaging videos and quickly realized the fund-raiser clip was his chance
to get even with Romney for assaults on his family.
“I’ve gotten a lot of Twitter messages from people supporting me and
saying that it’s poetic justice that it was a Carter that uncovered
this,” the younger Carter told The Associated Press. “I agree with that
sentiment wholeheartedly.” RELATED: ROMNEY DEFENDS '47 PERCENT' COMMENTS
Jimmy Carter reveled in the discovery. “James: This is extraordinary,”
the former President emailed his grandson. “Congratulations! Papa.”
The younger Carter, a 35-year-old left-leaning political researcher who
lives in Atlanta, said he did not receive any payment from the Obama
campaign or any political organization for his Internet sleuthing.
The self-proclaimed “partisan Democrat” said he was doing a standard
sweep of YouTube — searching terms like ‘Republicans’ and ‘Romney’ —
when he discovered the clip on a YouTube channel called “Anne Onymous.”
He realized that there might be more than just the brief snippet that
was posted online.
Mother Jones Video/AP
Scene from the now-infamous video of Republican presidential candidate
Mitt Romney speaking at a May fund-raiser. James Carter discovered a
clip on YouTube and brought the video to nationwide attention.
“I’ve been searching for clips on Republicans for a long time, almost
every day,” Carter told reporters. “I just do it for fun.”
Carter used Twitter to contact the person who posted the video and
began a negotiation with the group that made the secret recording.
Eventually, he persuaded the owner to anonymously hand over the video
to Mother Jones magazine, which posted the entire film — and rocked the
presidential campaign.
His Twitter profile lists him as unemployed — but that should soon change.
He has received several job offers this week, including from the online
news site The Huffington Post and the Ohio Democratic Party, according
to reports.
jlemire@nydailynews.com
Ex-Sen. Espada Jr. helped himself to one last payday by taking money from sale of Bx. clinic: court papers
By MITCHEL MADDUX
Last Updated:
1:57 PM, September 19, 2012
Posted:
11:49 AM, September 19, 2012
Disgraced former State Sen. Pedro Espada helped himself to one
more big payday, selling off tattered remains of his Bronx health clinic
and pocketing the dough, prosecutors said in court papers unsealed
today.
The US Attorney’s Office in Brooklyn is asking a federal
judge to revoke bail and lock up Espada, who was convicted earlier this
year of using his Soundview Health Center as his personal slush fund.
Brooklyn federal judge Frederic Block ordered everyone to court for a hearing on Friday.
Following
Espada’s May 14 conviction, state and federal authorities moved in and
prevented the disgraced pol and his family from operating the clinic,
which served poor patients in the south Bronx.
Chad Rachman/New York Post
Former New York Sen. Pedro Espada
Espada’s family then secretly sold medical equipment, other assets
and rights to Soundview’s lease on White Plains Road to a new operator,
the Institute for Family Health, for $600,000, prosecutors said.
That’s
when pol’s son Alejandro Espada took out more than $350,000 and doled
it out to to himself, his dad, brother Pedro Gautier Espada and other
accounts close to the family, according to federal prosecutors.
"The
defendant has demonstrated that he cannot be trusted to follow the
court’s rulings, and, as a result, the Court should revoke the
defendant’s bail and remand him into custody,” wrote Assistant US
Attorney Todd Kaminsky.
A defense lawyer for Espada could not be immediately reached for comment.
The allegedly looted dough was intricately spread through several accounts, feds said:
--Soundview
Management Enterprises, Sen. Espada’s janitorial company that cleaned
the clinic, allegedly received $104,000 on June 29 -- even though the
cleaning firm hasn’t worked at the Bronx clinic for the past two years.
Less
than a week later, Sen. Espada allegedly took out $50,000 cash from
Soundview Management Enterprises and made out a $45,000 cashier’s check
to his wife. Espada’s wife then deposited that draft into her own bank
account and withdrew the same amount of cash
--Sen. Pedro Espada, sons Pedro Gautier and Alejandro got $40,000, $42,045 and $38,000, respectively, from the big sale.
--Soundview
Health Group, a shell company under family control, got $81,500. Judge
Block issued an order yesterday, freezing all funds that came from
Soundview Health Group.
--Sen. Espada’s former defense lawyer, Susan Necheles, also allegedly got $50,000 from the big, final sale.
“These transactions appear designed to hide the defendant’s assets from the court,” Kaminsky wrote.
Feds
said they still haven’t accounted for all $600,000 and believe the
family has pocket the loot though several accounts: "At present, records
show that the defendant has no more than a few thousand dollars
maintained in any single bank account."
Feds claim the shady money transaction violates terms of Pedro Espana’s bail, which bar him from any involvement with Soundview.
Espada
is on the hook for court-ordered restitution expected to be set at
$500,000, $2 million to judgement creditors and $1 million to the IRS in
unpaid payroll taxes. No funds from this allegedly crooked sale went to
pay those debts, prosecutors said.
Espada is free on bail,
pending his appeal on the May 14 convictions. He’s awaiting retrial on
federal charges that hung in front of Brooklyn jurors in May.
Pedro
Espada and son Pedro Gautier Espada are both fighting tax fraud charges
in another matter that’s set for trial in Manhattan federal court. Additional reporting by David K. Li