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Tag: nycha

  • 6 injured, 4 critically, after being pinned by vehicle at park on Lower East Side: police sources

    6 injured, 4 critically, after being pinned by vehicle at park on Lower East Side: police sources

    LOWER EAST SIDE, Manhattan (WABC) — Six people were injured, including four critically, after being pinned by a vehicle at a park in Manhattan, according to police sources.

    FDNY officials say the incident happened just before 9 p.m. at 645 Water Street on the Lower East Side.

    Officers responded to the scene, where multiple people had to be rescued, according to police sources.

    FDNY officials say there were a total of six victims, including four people who were critically injured and taken to New York Presbyterian.

    One other person suffered serious non-life-threatening injuries and was taken to Bellevue Hospital. A sixth person suffered a minor injury and was also taken to Bellevue.

    Officials say auto extrication was required to rescue at least some of the victims.

    Police sources say a person is in custody for a suspected DWI.

    No further details have been provided.

    This is breaking news. This story will be updated as more information becomes available.

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  • Residents without power, heat and hot water at Stapleton Houses on Staten Island

    Residents without power, heat and hot water at Stapleton Houses on Staten Island

    STATEN ISLAND, New York (WABC) — No power, no heat, no hot water and no elevators.

    That’s what thousands of residents at the Stapleton Houses on Staten Island have been facing since Tuesday afternoon.

    To make matters worse, the loss in services continues on a night when temperatures are expected to hover around the 30-degree mark overnight.

    Because of that, there were cries for help echoing through the complex.

    Saniyah Pearson has been clutching extra clothes like no 8-year-old should have to.

    You can hear it in her voice. She just wants to cry it out, but she’s hanging in there.

    “It’s really dark right now and I’m cold and my nose is just like getting stuffy right now, and I’m not really feeling good,” Pearson said.

    “I need power. I haven’t had my phone charged,” resident Jakima Baldwin said. “It’s ridiculous. We’ve been going through this for years.”

    The only lights that can be seen are flashlights from NYCHA workers trying to navigate the pitch-black dark, and temporary massive flood lights at the end of the complex.

    NYCHA says electricians are on site and will be working through the night Wednesday to restore services.

    In the meantime, they are deploying mobile generators as a temporary measure.

    NYCHA says MTA buses will be on site and available to residents to keep them warm throughout the night.

    A resident Eyewitness News reporter CeFaan Kim spoke to lives on the seventh floor.

    Her daughter is in a wheelchair and has been trapped in her own home for more than a day and a half now.

    It’s not clear yet how much longer residents will have to wait to have their services restored.

    ———-

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  • Feds make dozens of bribery arrests related to New York City public housing contracts

    Feds make dozens of bribery arrests related to New York City public housing contracts


    Dozens of NYCHA employees arrested in massive bribery investigation


    Dozens of NYCHA employees arrested in massive bribery investigation

    03:19

    NEW YORK – Dozens of New York City Housing Authority workers are accused of corruption for allegedly taking millions of dollars in exchange for work contracts. 

    Seventy current or former NYCHA employees are now facing extortion and bribery charges, and potentially decades in prison.

    NYCHA — the largest public housing authority in the nation — receives more than $1.5 billion a year from the federal government. One in 17 New Yorkers lives in a NYCHA building. There are 335 developments.

    The bribes — more than $2 million in total — allegedly took place at nearly a third of all NYCHA buildings across all five boroughs of New York City. 


    Feds announce dozens of arrests on bribery charges at NYCHA

    27:33

    Sixty-six of those facing charges were arrested Tuesday morning in several locations, including New York City, New Jersey, Connecticut and North Carolina. They were arraigned in federal court, and all were released on $50,000 bond, with travel restrictions. 

    Prosecutors say superintendents or assistant superintendents demanded bribes from contractors for repairs or construction work on NYCHA properties, and if they didn’t pay up, they’d award the work to someone else.

    “As we allege, the 70 defendants charged today allegedly demanded over $2 million in bribe money from contractors in exchange for giving out over $13 million of work on NYCHA buildings. And if the contractors didn’t pay up, the defendants wouldn’t give them the work. That’s classic pay-to-play, and this culture of corruption at NYCHA ends today,” said U.S. Attorney Damian Williams. “The corruption we’ve alleged infected every corner of the city. As the charges show, superintendents accepting and extorting bribes from contractors had become business as usual, occurring at almost 100 NYCHA buildings across all five boroughs. That’s nearly a third of all NYCHA buildings.” 

    Williams said this is the largest single day bribery takedown in the history of the U.S. Justice Department.

    “The bribery and extortion charged here allegedly exploited the no-bid process for goods and services under $10,000, commonly referred to as micro-purchases,” Department of Investigation Commissioner Jocelyn Strauber said. 

    Williams said the contracts, under $10,000 each, involved essential work like plumbing and window repairs. They were no-bid contracts, where superintendents and assistant superintendents could hire the workers directly. They then wouldn’t sign off on payment to the contractors without a kickback, the feds said. 

    “It’s very sad that that’s happened in the city,” NYCHA resident Valerie Charles said.

    “I feel like that’s part of me being ripped off. I’m in NYCHA, can’t we have honest people working for us?” one resident said. 

    At a news conference, the city’s Department of Investigation laid out 14 recommendations for NYCHA, which we’re told NYCHA has agreed to. Some of them are already in the process of being implemented.

    “They focus on reform of the micro-purchase process to protect it from abuse while maintaining efficient service for NYCHA residents,” Strauber said.

    “NYCHA has ZERO tolerance for wrongful and illegal activity,” said NYCHA Chief Executive Officer Lisa Bova-Hiatt. “The individuals allegedly involved in these acts put their greed first and violated the trust of our residents, their fellow NYCHA colleagues and all New Yorkers. These actions are counter to everything we stand for as public servants and will not be tolerated in any form. In the past five years, NYCHA has achieved many significant milestones, while remaining vigilant to ensure integrity in every area of our work. We have already made transformative changes to our business practices and will continue to do so. We will not allow bad actors to disrupt or undermine our achievements.”   

    Watch Jennifer Bisram’s report


    Dozens of NYCHA employees arrested in massive bribery investigation

    03:19

    “Time and time again the defendants allegedly enriched themselves at the expense of NYCHA residents and contractors who were pursuing the real American dream by lining their own pockets by these illegal back door deals,” Homeland Security Investigations New York Special Agent in Charge Ivan J. Arvelo said. 

    Officials credited multiple agencies for the historic takedown, including the HSI NY document and benefit and fraud task forces.

    The first investigation started back in 2013, and now 50 current and 20 former NYCHA employees are facing federal charges.

    “It really expanded from 2021 until now as investigators uncovered more evidence and information about the investigation, one subject led to another subject,” HSI NY Deputy Special Agent in Charge Darren McCormack said. 

    It’s important to note that officials said all repair work and construction were completed at the buildings, so NYCHA residents weren’t affected in that way, but officials say they believe there is more illegal conduct going on at NYCHA buildings.

    “These victims may have been cheated out of better services and programs meant to improve their lives because the superintendents were allegedly more interested in a secret payoff than finding the best value for NYCHA,” Arvelo said.

    Cheyanne Nazario, in the Lower East Side’s Vladeck Houses, says repairs are slow to come. The indictment alleges her assistant superintendent told a no-bid contractor “You need to take care of me” before being paid $1,000 in cash by the contractor.

    “They’re not very speedy with doing anything, so it doesn’t surprise me that they take bribes from people or they just don’t do anything,” Nazario said.

    If you know anything you’re urged to report it. 

    All of the charged NYCHA employees are being suspended, effective immediately, and the roles will be filled so residents don’t feel the disruption, Williams said.



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  • Man shot in head outside East Harlem housing complex

    Man shot in head outside East Harlem housing complex

    A black-clad gunman shot a man twice in the head outside an East Harlem housing complex before zooming off in a scooter Wednesday, in what cops are calling an execution-style hit.

    “It looks like an execution,” an officer at the scene told the Daily News.

    The victim was standing across the street from the Thomas Jefferson Houses on E. 115th St. between First and Second Aves. at 7:39 p.m. when the gunman fired two shots, which both struck his target in the head, according to law enforcement sources.

    After making the hit, the gunman hopped on a scooter and fled the scene, sources say.

    Medics rushed the victim to NY Health and Hospital Harlem, where he remained in critical condition Wednesday night, according to police.

    Police secure the scene on East 115 street where a 36 year old male was shot twice to his head, on Wednesday, May 31, 2023. The victim was removed to Harlem Hospital having sustained life threatening injuries.

    The victim was identified as 38-year-old Damien Calderon by his brother Alfred Bernard, 45. Calderon had just finished serving a prison sentence and was looking forward to life as a free man, according to his older sibling.

    “He just recently came home from prison,” Bernard told The News. “He was in a program cleaning the streets, he was getting his life together.”

    Calderon has two daughters, ages 6 and 7, who he loved and worked hard to provide for, according to another relative.

    “He was a good man and a good father out here trying to take care of his kids,” said the relative, who declined to give his name.

    Colin Mixson, Kerry Burke

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