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Tag: Queens

  • Queens man shot by NYPD during mental health crisis indicted on assault charge | amNewYork

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    A 22-year-old Queens man who was shot multiple times by police during what authorities described as a mental health crisis has been indicted on attempted assault and weapon charges — prompting criticism from his family, defense attorneys, and Mayor Zohran Mamdani.

    A grand jury indicted Jabez Chakraborty, of Briarwood, on charges of first-degree attempted assault and fourth-degree criminal possession of a weapon, Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz announced on Friday. 

    Chakraborty — who had been on a ventilator, at one point, while hospitalized after the shooting — was arraigned before Queens Supreme Court Justice Jessica Earle-Gargan, who ordered him to return to court on March 11. He faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted.

    District Attorney Katz said that, according to the charges and investigation, on Jan. 26 at approximately 10:25 a.m., a 911 call was placed by one of Chakraborty’s relatives reporting that he was throwing glass inside the family home.

    When two NYPD officers arrived and were let inside, they saw Chakraborty in the kitchen, according to prosecutors and body-cam footage released earlier this month. He then grabbed a large knife and started walking toward them.

    “The defendant allegedly advanced toward the officer and changed his grip on the knife to flip the blade upside down while winding his right arm back,” the district attorney’s office said.

    When an officer backed up and closed a door separating the home’s foyer from the living room, Chakraborty allegedly opened the foyer door and continued toward the officer, who fired four times at him. The officer instructed Chakraborty to put the knife down at least eight times before discharging his firearm, according to prosecutors.

    Chakraborty was transported to Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, where he has been receiving treatment since the incident.

    Jabez Chakraborty was shot at his Briarwood, Queens home on Jan. 26, after his family called 911 seeking an ambulance for their son, who they say was in emotional distress.Photo Provided by Chakraborty Family

    “As alleged, the defendant tried to attack a police officer while holding a large knife, ignored repeated commands to drop the weapon, and then forcibly pushed through a door the officer was using as a shield to protect himself,” Katz said in the release. 

    “The officer then discharged his weapon and hit Jabez Chakraborty four times. As prosecutors, we are duty-bound to follow the facts, evidence and circumstances where they lead us, including in cases that have a mental health component. These decisions, however, must be thoughtful, deliberative and based on the expertise of mental health professionals. Dispositions can take vastly different forms, and I will use the resources of my office to address the unique needs in this case while upholding my responsibility to keep this borough safe.”

    Advocates and family fume over indictment

    Julie Chakraborty, the mother of Jabez, described the charges as a “nightmare” and called for DA Katz to drop the charges. 

    “We didn’t need police, we just needed medical transport. When we called 911 for an ambulance, we never could have imagined that we would end up here today,” she said. “Jabez and our family were safe in our home until the NYPD arrived. Now Jabez is recovering from multiple surgeries, handcuffed to a hospital bed. He has a long, difficult recovery ahead. Now, DA Katz wants to put him in prison. Hasn’t he suffered enough? Locking him up will destroy his life. All we want is for him to be able to heal.”

    Chakraborty added that the ordeal has been “traumatizing” for the family, saying they had witnessed Jabez being shot “right in front of us.”

    “Then the NYPD interrogated us about our immigration status, took our phones, and kept us from seeing him. Now Jabez is being unjustly charged with a crime and we are being forced to pay bail to the system that keeps hurting him,” she said. “DA Katz must have no heart at all. Why does she want to torture a young man who has already suffered so much? Our family is demanding that she drop these charges against Jabez and that he be unshackled as he recovers.”

    The Legal Aid Society, which is representing Chakraborty, said he has no prior criminal convictions and was shot multiple times after his family requested medical help.

    “Jabez Chakraborty, who has no prior criminal convictions, was shot multiple times by NYPD officers and is now fighting to recover,” the organization said in a statement. “His family requested an ambulance, seeking trained medical responders.”

    The group said Chakraborty underwent multiple surgeries, was placed on a ventilator, and remains hospitalized. It added that he has been shackled to his bed and under constant police supervision while drifting in and out of consciousness.

    In their statements, the Legal Aid Society and the Chakraborty family also alleged that officers questioned family members about their immigration status, seized their phones and passwords, and held them at a precinct for hours without clear information about Chakraborty’s condition. Police officials have not publicly responded to those claims.

    “Full discovery from the District Attorney’s office is still pending and will be carefully reviewed. Like every New Yorker represented by our office, Mr. Chakraborty will receive a robust and vigorous defense,” Legal Aid said. 

    Gideon Oliver, Jabez’s civil attorney, said DA Katz’s “rushed, secret indictment of Jabez and request that the Court remand him are both unnecessary and unconscionable.” 

    “Jabez needs real help – not being locked up. We call on her to do the right thing and drop the charges,” Oliver said in a statement. 

    Prior to Friday’s arraignment, Mayor Mamdani said he had not spoken directly with the district attorney but expressed sympathy for the family and questioned the decision to prosecute.

    “No family should have to endure this kind of pain,” Mamdani said. “What they need right now is care, dignity, and support.”

    The mayor said Chakraborty “should not be prosecuted” and instead should be receiving mental health treatment.

    “His handcuffs should be removed, and he should be receiving the care that he needs,” Mamdani said. “Moments like this lay bare what so many New Yorkers already know — that our city must build a mental health response rooted in prevention, compassion and crisis care.”

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    Adam Daly

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  • 2-year-old boy dies after severely beaten by father in Queens: Law enforcement sources

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    A 2-year-old boy has died from his injuries a week after his father beat him severely inside the Queens hotel shelter where they had been living, according to law enforcement sources.

    Dayvon Morrison was drunk while alone with his son Maliek Williams Friday night at the Manhattan View Hotel in Long Island City, which has been operating as a homeless shelter, police sources said.

    Morrison said he does not remember assaulting a son, a criminal complaint states. He did admit to seeing multiple bruises on his son’s face, prosecutors said, though he did not seek medical attention.

    On Monday, while Morrison was dropping off his other son in East Harlem, relatives noticed the toddler’s injuries and called 911.

    “The baby was in [Morrison’s] custody for the last several months and when he brought the child to the aunt’s house…his condition was grave and they called the ambulance,” said Stephanie McGraw, the CEO of W.A.R.M, a Harlem-based nonprofit that provides support for domestic abuse victims.

    Maliek was taken to Weill Cornell Medical Center in critical condition with multiple injuries including a fractured pelvis and severe head trauma, prosecutors said. He died Wednesday night, his family confirmed to NBC New York.

    Morrison was arrested Tuesday night for attempted murder and two counts of assault, though the Queens district attorney’s office said the charges would be upgraded following the child’s death.

    Maliek’s mother, Cyndy Williams, said there was on-going custody battle for her son, and that her worst fear had become a reality.

    “I fought for my son. I warned ACS, the courts, NYPD, everybody. I warned everybody. But now you can hear me. Now you can hear me. It’s too late,” she told News 4. “Y’all saw the signs. My son cried every time he had to go with that man. It’s too late. I don’t know you want me to say.”

    The Administration for Children’s Services says it’s investigating with the NYPD.

    Morrison’s next court appearance was scheduled for Friday. Attorney information for the 30-year-old was not immediately available.

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    Tom Shea and Chris Jose

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  • Queens mother weeps for return of her teenage son taken by ICE – who threatened to deport her, too – amNewYork

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    Gina Vega wipes tears from her eyes and she pleads for the return of her beloved son detained by ICE.

    Photo by Dean Moses

    Gina Vega sat weeping in the living room of her basement apartment in Queens. It was eerily empty and quiet; the sound of her teenage son within its walls had vanished after he was detained by ICE last year, leaving her alone with her own despair.

    The Ecuadorian mother wiped away tears from her eyes as she thought of her 18-year-old boy, whom she has not seen in more than two months. Despite the overwhelming sense of anguish, she is fighting for his release from an immigration detention center in Virginia.

    Jorge David Delgado Videla was detained on Nov. 5 inside 26 Federal Plaza in Lower Manhattan, after arriving with his mother for what they believed to be a routine ICE check-in on the fifth floor.

    “They told me to take Jorge’s things and go,” Vega recalled. “I haven’t seen him since then. They said to be grateful they weren’t detaining me, too.”

    While homeland security officials continue to claim that ICE is apprehending “the worst of the worst,” meaning violent criminals, Videla has only one misdemeanor arrest to his name.

    Videla was arrested by the NYPD in August after he got into an argument with a man in the Flushing train station. According to Vega, the stranger began yelling at Videla, and they got into a verbal confrontation.

    Although the fight never got physical, the pair were arrested and charged with menacing, a misdemeanor offense. It was only months later when ICE sent a letter demanding that he appear at the fateful check-in.

    Detained Queens teen’s mom: ‘He is not meant to be locked up’

    Vega escorted Videla inside 26 Federal Plaza when an ICE agent suddenly pointed to the student and took him to another room, where they announced they would be taking fingerprints and photographs. It would be the last time she saw him.

    The female ICE agent then returned with Videla’s belt and headphones and said they would call her later. ICE agents then confiscated her passport as well, without explanation.

    Both Vega and her son had applied for asylum in the United States after escaping a threat from an Ecuadorian gang, “Los choneros or Aguilas,” that had unsuccessfully tried to recruit the teenager two years prior. Videla’s friends lost their lives to the same gang. He had been attending the Pan American International High School and had been scheduled to graduate in July 2026.

    Mother Queens ICE detainment son
    Gina Vega sat in the living room of her basement apartment in Queens. It was eerily empty and quiet; the sound of her teenage son within its walls had vanished after he was detained by ICE, leaving her alone with her own despair.Photo by Dean Moses

    That same afternoon of his detention, Vega received a call from her son confirming what she feared: that ICE was holding him against his will indefinitely. With a friend’s help, she later learned that her son had been transferred out of the Big Apple to another detention center in Virginia.

    Videla’s detainment on the fifth floor comes after amNewYork made a special report last year, outlining the rise of immigrant arrests in that particular area of 26 Federal Plaza. Access is restricted on the fifth floor, with all detainment activity taking place out of sight of the press and the public. 

    According to Vega, Videla is now being held in a cell with people much older than him, despite only being 18 years old. Detention officials allow him limited recreational time and access to a gym, but he refuses most meals and eats only instant noodles that the center’s staff provides.

    “He cries. He says he is not meant to be locked up; he is not a criminal. He asks why they keep him locked up,” Vega said, sharing what she has learned through the infrequent calls with her son.

    Mother Queens ICE detainment son
    Gina Vega shows a photograph of herself and her son Jorge David Delgado Videla.Photo by Dean Moses

    Since his detainment, ICE offered him a “voluntary departure” to Mexico even though he is of Ecuadorian descent and has no ties to Mexico. A court hearing is scheduled for Jan. 20, at which it will be determined whether he will face deportation.

    Other family members also spoke to amNewYork in defense of the young man.

    Jorge’s aunt, Yadira, describes her nephew as a calm, respectful person who always helps others. She also railed that the detention has been horrific for his mother since he is also the breadwinner for the family.

    “It’s very hard for his mother,” Yadira said. “She’s depressed because he is her only companion here. Every day we pray for strength – that he can stay here and start his life again.”

    Mother Queens ICE detainment son
    Gina Vega is pleading for the return of her son.Photo by Dean Moses

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    By Dean Moses and Florencia Arozarena

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  • Long Island firm expanding EV charging with five new sites | Long Island Business News

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    THE BLUEPRINT:

    • Five new fast planned across Long Island and

    • Locations include Elmont, Levittown, Commack, Glen Oaks and Whitestone

    • Stations feature eight dual-port chargers with NACS/CCS1 connectors

    • properties host chargers as a new amenity for shoppers

     

    Northport-based and Kempower are expanding power access for  with five new vehicle charging stations. 

    Three of the EV fast-charging stations will be soon available at in Elmont, Levittown and Commack. The companies just launched their first fast-charging station at the Glen Oaks Shopping Center in Queens and will soon open another in Whitestone. 

    The new stations, each with eight dual-port Kempower Satellite chargers with NACS/CCS1 connectors, are coming soon to the Home Depot Shopping Center at 1760 Hempstead Turnpike in Elmont; the Commack Shopping Center at 50 Veterans Memorial Highway in Commack; and the Nassau Mall shopping center at 3601 Hempstead Turnpike in Levittown. All of the properties are owned by the Feil Organization. 

    The dual-port Kempower Satellite EV chargers are coming to more Long Island shopping centers. / Courtesy of Get Charged Fast EV Charging

    The fast-charging stations feature free Wi-Fi, a few payment options, and don’t require new apps or memberships to access, according to a company statement. Get Charged rates start at $0.42 per kilowatt-hour, and ride share drivers, the high-volume, frequent flyers of EV charging, get juiced at a discounted rate.

    “Get Charged is committed to providing fast, safe, and dependable charging infrastructure,” said Marc Horowitz, Get Charged Fast EV Charging co-managing partner. “Kempower is the ideal partner for supplying innovative, world-class charging hardware to meet the fast-charging needs of the region and the industry.” 

    At each location, Get Charged Fast leases eight existing parking spots and an additional 400 square feet to house its chargers and associated equipment. Besides the rent, the property owners also get a small percentage of the charging revenue, and the EV chargers allow landlords to provide an additional amenity to their shoppers. 

    “Over the last five or six years, I’ve been approached many times by lots of different EV chargers, and we just kind of felt that the industry had matured enough at this point where we could make an intelligent decision for the benefit of the customers of our shopping centers, providing an amenity that wouldn’t necessarily be obsolete in a few years,” said Randall Briskin, vice president of retail leasing for Feil Organization. “And so we finally elected to take most of our shopping centers and allocate a few parking spaces for these EV chargers.” 

    Horowitz said his firm is actively seeking other malls and shopping centers as prospective charging station sites on Long Island.  

    “We offer the amenity to our landlords at zero cost to them and help them to draw in new shoppers, supporting the flow of traffic to their tenant businesses,” Horowitz told LIBN. “We take responsibility for everything needed, including design and engineering, construction, permitting and insuring, working with PSEG, maintenance, ownership and operation of the entire site. We install our own independent electric meter and use only top-of-the-line U.S. manufactured DC fast chargers.” 

    While the lack of EV chargers has exacerbated “range anxiety,” a top concern for people considering purchasing electric vehicles, the number of charging stations has steadily increased. Nassau and Suffolk counties currently have 1,561 EV charging ports: 579 DCFC ports and 982 Level 2 ports, an overall increase of more than 500 ports from 2024. Those stations serve an ever-increasing number of vehicles, as there are now 87,304 EVs registered on Long Island, according to Drive Electric Long Island. 

    “Drive Electric Long Island is very happy to hear of the expanding charging infrastructure on Long Island that will help support and complement charging on corridors here on Long Island,” Ronald Gulmi, chair of Drive Electric Long Island’s EV Infrastructure & Fleet Committee, told LIBN. “The new charging stations will complement charging done at workplaces, multi-unit dwellings and residences, helping to expand the range of electric vehicle travel.” 

    Based in Finland, Kempower has its U.S. headquarters in Durham, N.C. Listed on the Nasdaq Helsinki Stock Exchange, the company manufactures modular and scalable EV charging systems that are now in 66 countries. 

    “Globally, EV drivers increasingly prefer charging spots with access to a variety of services like the Get Charged retail-centered charging hubs,” Kempower North America President Monil Malhotra said in the statement. “We’re pleased to work with Get Charged to provide accessible and convenient solutions for EV drivers across New York.” 


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    David Winzelberg

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  • Man dies after 2 struck in Queens by hit-and-run driver: NYPD

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    A man is dead and a second hospitalized after a hit-and-run in Queens early on New Year’s Day.

    Police said two men were crossing 102nd Street in Corona when the driver of a white SUV struck them. It happened around 4 a.m.

    One of the men died at the scene, according to police.

    The second man, 24, was transported to Elmhurst Hospital in critical condition.

    Police did not provide a name or age of the deceased victim.

    The driver of the SUV did not remain on scene. The police investigation is ongoing.

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    NBC New York Staff

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  • Dramatic fire burns down beach cabana in Breezy Point

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    Fire destroyed a beach cabana in Queens’ Breezy Point overnight, creating a dramatic scene as the sun rose on Wednesday, but causing no reported injuries.

    The FDNY says it responded to a three-alarm fire at Beach 193rd Street around 4:30 a.m. At one point, units had to be pulled from the building because of concerns it could collapse. The fire took about three hours to control.

    Video posted to the Citizen app shows the large response.

    The cause of the fire is under investigation.

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    NBC New York Staff

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  • Big Apple Jackpot

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    Inside the fight to bring casinos to New York City.

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    Adam Iscoe

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  • Trump and Mamdani meet Friday in the Oval Office amid sharp exchanges

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    President Donald Trump has called New York City’s Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani a “100% Communist Lunatic” and a “total nut job.” Mamdani has called Trump’s administration “authoritarian” and described himself as “Donald Trump’s worst nightmare.”So their first-ever meeting, scheduled for Friday at 3 p.m. EST at the White House, could be a curious and combustible affair.Despite months of casting each other as prime adversaries, the Republican president and new Democratic star have also indicated an openness to finding areas of agreement that help the city they’ve both called home.Mamdani, a democratic socialist who takes office in January, said he sought the meeting with Trump to talk about ways to make New York City more affordable. Trump has said he may want to help him out — although he has also falsely labeled Mamdani as a “communist” and threatened to yank federal funds from his hometown.But for both men, the meeting offers opportunities beyond any areas of potential bipartisan agreement.The two men are convenient political foils for each other, and taking the other one on can galvanize their supporters.Trump loomed large over the mayoral race this year, and on the eve of the election, endorsed independent candidate and former Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo, predicting the city has “ZERO chance of success, or even survival” if Mamdani won. He also questioned the citizenship of Mamdani, who was born in Uganda and became a naturalized American citizen after graduating from college, and said he’d have him arrested if he followed through on threats not to cooperate with immigration agents in the city.Mamdani beat back a challenge from Cuomo, painting him as a “puppet” for the president, and said he would be “a mayor who can stand up to Donald Trump and actually deliver.” He declared during one primary debate, “I am Donald Trump’s worst nightmare, as a progressive Muslim immigrant who actually fights for the things that I believe in.”The president, who has long used political opponents to fire up his backers, predicted Mamdani “will prove to be one of the best things to ever happen to our great Republican Party.” As Mamdani upended the Democratic establishment by defeating Cuomo and his far-left progressive policies provoked infighting, Trump repeatedly has cast Mamdani as the face of Democratic Party.For Mamdani, a sit-down with the president of the United States offers the state lawmaker who until recently was relatively unknown the chance to go head-to-head with the most powerful person in the world.The meeting gives Trump a high-profile chance to talk about affordability at a time when he’s under increasing political pressure to show he’s addressing voter concerns about the cost of living.But that’s if the meeting doesn’t turn rocky.A chance for some Oval Office dramaIt was not immediately clear whether cameras will be allowed into the meeting. Trump’s daily schedule said it will be private, but the president often invites in a small “pool” of reporters at the last minute.The president has had some dramatic public Oval Office faceoffs this year, including an infamously heated exchange with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in March. In May, Trump dimmed the lights while meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and played a four-minute video making widely rejected claims that South Africa is violently persecuting the country’s white Afrikaner minority farmers.A senior Trump administration official who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe internal discussions said Trump had not put a lot of thought into planning the meeting with the incoming mayor — but said Trump’s threats to block federal dollars from flowing to New York remained on the table.Mamdani said Thursday that he was not concerned about the president potentially trying to use the meeting to publicly embarrass him and said he saw it as a chance to make his case, even while acknowledging “many disagreements with the president.”If the president does use the meeting as a public confrontation, Mamdani may be uniquely ready for it.He, like Trump, was a relative political outsider who rose to victory with a populist message that promised a break from the establishment, known for his savvy navigation of the spotlight and a distinctive use of social media.Mamdani, who lives in Queens — where Trump was raised — also has shown a cutthroat streak. During his campaign, he appeared to borrow from Trump’s playbook when he noted during a televised debate with Cuomo that one of the women who had accused the former governor of sexual harassment was in the audience. Cuomo has denied wrongdoing.The moment evoked Trump’s tactics before a debate with Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016, when he appeared with accusers of her husband, former President Bill Clinton, who denied the accusations against him.___Associated Press writers Aamer Madhani in Washington and Anthony Izaguirre in New York contributed to this report.

    President Donald Trump has called New York City’s Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani a “100% Communist Lunatic” and a “total nut job.” Mamdani has called Trump’s administration “authoritarian” and described himself as “Donald Trump’s worst nightmare.”

    So their first-ever meeting, scheduled for Friday at 3 p.m. EST at the White House, could be a curious and combustible affair.

    Despite months of casting each other as prime adversaries, the Republican president and new Democratic star have also indicated an openness to finding areas of agreement that help the city they’ve both called home.

    Mamdani, a democratic socialist who takes office in January, said he sought the meeting with Trump to talk about ways to make New York City more affordable. Trump has said he may want to help him out — although he has also falsely labeled Mamdani as a “communist” and threatened to yank federal funds from his hometown.

    But for both men, the meeting offers opportunities beyond any areas of potential bipartisan agreement.

    The two men are convenient political foils for each other, and taking the other one on can galvanize their supporters.

    Trump loomed large over the mayoral race this year, and on the eve of the election, endorsed independent candidate and former Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo, predicting the city has “ZERO chance of success, or even survival” if Mamdani won. He also questioned the citizenship of Mamdani, who was born in Uganda and became a naturalized American citizen after graduating from college, and said he’d have him arrested if he followed through on threats not to cooperate with immigration agents in the city.

    Mamdani beat back a challenge from Cuomo, painting him as a “puppet” for the president, and said he would be “a mayor who can stand up to Donald Trump and actually deliver.” He declared during one primary debate, “I am Donald Trump’s worst nightmare, as a progressive Muslim immigrant who actually fights for the things that I believe in.”

    The president, who has long used political opponents to fire up his backers, predicted Mamdani “will prove to be one of the best things to ever happen to our great Republican Party.” As Mamdani upended the Democratic establishment by defeating Cuomo and his far-left progressive policies provoked infighting, Trump repeatedly has cast Mamdani as the face of Democratic Party.

    For Mamdani, a sit-down with the president of the United States offers the state lawmaker who until recently was relatively unknown the chance to go head-to-head with the most powerful person in the world.

    The meeting gives Trump a high-profile chance to talk about affordability at a time when he’s under increasing political pressure to show he’s addressing voter concerns about the cost of living.

    But that’s if the meeting doesn’t turn rocky.

    A chance for some Oval Office drama

    It was not immediately clear whether cameras will be allowed into the meeting. Trump’s daily schedule said it will be private, but the president often invites in a small “pool” of reporters at the last minute.

    The president has had some dramatic public Oval Office faceoffs this year, including an infamously heated exchange with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in March. In May, Trump dimmed the lights while meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and played a four-minute video making widely rejected claims that South Africa is violently persecuting the country’s white Afrikaner minority farmers.

    A senior Trump administration official who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe internal discussions said Trump had not put a lot of thought into planning the meeting with the incoming mayor — but said Trump’s threats to block federal dollars from flowing to New York remained on the table.

    Mamdani said Thursday that he was not concerned about the president potentially trying to use the meeting to publicly embarrass him and said he saw it as a chance to make his case, even while acknowledging “many disagreements with the president.”

    If the president does use the meeting as a public confrontation, Mamdani may be uniquely ready for it.

    He, like Trump, was a relative political outsider who rose to victory with a populist message that promised a break from the establishment, known for his savvy navigation of the spotlight and a distinctive use of social media.

    Mamdani, who lives in Queens — where Trump was raised — also has shown a cutthroat streak. During his campaign, he appeared to borrow from Trump’s playbook when he noted during a televised debate with Cuomo that one of the women who had accused the former governor of sexual harassment was in the audience. Cuomo has denied wrongdoing.

    The moment evoked Trump’s tactics before a debate with Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016, when he appeared with accusers of her husband, former President Bill Clinton, who denied the accusations against him.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Aamer Madhani in Washington and Anthony Izaguirre in New York contributed to this report.

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  • ‘They terrorized her’: Video shows federal agents storm into NYC family’s apartment at gunpoint

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    A newly released video shows federal agents force their way into a Queens apartment, pulling a gun on her mother and her four kids in an encounter the family’s lawyer said wasn’t supposed to happen.

    Dramatic portions of footage of the East Elmhurst incident shared by The New York Immigration Coalition show a frantic mother in a bedroom, her children by her side — ages 2, 6, 10 and 13 — by her side.

    “I got my baby,” she screams, as a man who appears to be a federal agent yells, “Come out here!”

    “I got my baby. No!” she is heard yelling.

    Surveillance video shows a group in tactical gear force their way into the home. One man, noticing a camera, flips it around. The confrontation happened last week. A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson says the officers knocked on the door for 20 minutes before forcing it down.

    “ICE and U.S. Marshals Service attempted to serve a criminal arrest warrant for Raymundo Gabriel Huerra-Betancourt,” the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement. “His criminal history includes assault, reckless driving and illegal re-entry. The woman in this video was the target’s cousin.”

    Ron Kuby, a civil rights attorney representing the family, says his client’s cousin hasn’t lived there in years.

    “They break down the door with a battering ram. They hold the entire family at gunpoint,” Kuby said. “They terrorized her. They terrorized the children.”

    Kuby said his client, Jennifer, who preferred to use only her first name, has lawful status in the United States and that her children were born in America. He said her husband has been here for years.

    Kuby said Jennifer did have her cousin’s number and claimed she was forced to call him. He also alleges they showed no warrant, no display of authority and vowed to return.

    At some point, video also shows an NYPD patrol car arriving — after neighbors heard commotion and thought there was a robbery in progress, according to Kuby. The man believed to be a federal agent approached the officer’s window. After a brief conversation, the officer drove away. The NYPD is prohibited, by law, from engaging in civil immigration enforcement.

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    Chris Jose

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  • Parents grateful after NYPD officers save their choking infant son who stopped breathing: Exclusive

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    CORONA, Queens (WABC) — A 10-month-old baby is alive thanks to the help of two NYPD officers, who rescued the infant when he stopped breathing

    Asia Rodriguez and Brandon Laboy are first-time parents.

    Ten-month-old Makai is their greatest joy, and earlier this month, they almost lost him if not for two NYPD officers who saved his life.

    “Oh, I would thank them. I would hug them. I would not let them go,” Rodriguez said.

    Body-worn camera shows what happened when two of New York’s Finest answered the call of a baby in distress. Makai wasn’t breathing.

    He had been down for a nap. Rodriguez was glued to the baby monitor just in time to see him throw up and start to choke. She immediately ran to him and called 911.

    “He’s my life and I’m going to make sure every second counts and make sure I save him,” she said.

    When two officers from the 115 Precinct showed up, Makai wasn’t breathing.

    One of the officers took the baby, dressed in police pajamas, and patted his back, dislodging an obstruction.

    It wasn’t until they saw the video Tuesday night that Rodriguez and Laboy realized how close they came to tragedy.

    “It’s just incredible with the right training and what they’re doing, they saved his life,” Laboy said. “In those moments you can’t understate how good the training that they had is. So, it’s an awesome thing to see.”

    “If I could see them, if they could come to my house directly and I could shake their hand and hug them, I would hug them,” Rodriguez said. “Just God bless them. Whatever blessing they can be offered in life that they are offered them, because they absolutely did what they were supposed to do and my son’s here because of them.”

    All New York cops are required to be certified in first aid and CPR, and it sure paid off for the two officers. Both of them are rookies with less than two years on the job. Now they’re responsible for a save they will remember their whole careers.

    ———-

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    Josh Einiger

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  • IBX Stop by Stop: Proposed light rail brings New Yorkers into historic East New York at Sutter Avenue

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    History and railroad lovers will enjoy the IBX’s next stop on Sutter Avenue. This stop offers a glimpse into the vibrant history of East New York, the neighborhood’s charm and a practical connection to the L train. 

    As the MTA’s proposed 14-mile light rail line continues its north-south journey from Jackson Heights to the Brooklyn Army Terminal, there is a historic neighborhood along the tracks that is going through a revitalization. That area is industrial East New York, a neighborhood poised to get an IBX stop on Sutter Avenue. 

    The stop is one of three planned for the IBX, formerly known as the Interborough Express, in the East New York area. It is sandwiched between Atlantic Avenue to the north and Livonia Avenue to the south.

    Local residents who were at the Sutter Avenue station on a recent Thursday said they are looking forward to the new rail line coming to their borough. 

    “This is great for me,” one man said. “I work at the U.S. Open in the summer, and it’ll really cut down on time.”

    Another passerby was not familiar with the proposed train, but said it “sounds like a good idea.”

    The Sutter Avenue station, home to the L train.Photo by Barbara Russo-Lennon

    East New York is a close-knit community with a deep history. A look back to the 1890s — and later — reveals a vibrant and populous neighborhood that thrived when a train line was built. It was an epicenter of entertainment, theater and housing that lined two of its main thoroughfares, Pitkin and Sutter Avenues. Throngs of New Yorkers were attracted to the area, which rivaled Broadway, with theaters such as the Biltmore, Gotham and Loews.

    These establishments are long gone, but their echoes live on in the footprint of East New York. 

    The neighborhood established its own town hall in 1873. The “sturdy, two-story-plus-basement brick building housed town offices on the ground floor, and the fire department on the upper floor, in a large open room,” an article in Brownstoner, a sister publication of amNewYork, explained.  

    “In 1878, a new law required towns to house a police force, and the town hall was called into duty again,” the article continued. “Everyone was shuffled around and squeezed into the building. Downstairs became the town meeting room and clerk’s office, the fire headquarters office, and the police receiving desk and muster room.”

    When the five boroughs consolidated to form New York City in 1898, the building was no longer needed as a town hall. Since then, it has had many uses, including a police station, hospital and residence. 

    East New York today

    In recent years, East New York has undergone gradual changes, primarily through the addition of new housing. The city rezoned the neighborhood, especially in areas by the East New York train stations, to make it easier to build more homes, including high-density apartment buildings.

    “Historically known as a predominantly working-class and African-American community, East New York has experienced significant changes in recent years, including an influx of new residents and an increase in development,” writes the website, City Neighborhoods. “Despite these changes, East New York retains its unique character, with vibrant street life and numerous community events throughout the year.”

    construction zone during the day
    Residential construction in East New York. According to the sign, the project was scheduled for completion in 2023.Photo by Gerard Lennon

    However, civic leaders are concerned that the new housing may gentrify the community, leading to increased housing costs that would price out long-time residents. 

    Boris Santos, president of the East New York Community Land Trust, said he recognizes the value of a direct train link between the two boroughs, but does not want residents to be displaced if local housing becomes too expensive.

    “It gets the mission of transit equity and access, especially among working-class neighborhoods, but I would be remiss if I didn’t state the real estate concerns,” Santos explained. “Where there is public or private investment in infrastructure development or housing development, you tend to heat up the market.” 

    In other words, real estate prices go up. Santos’ organization, he explained, works to protect land and ensure it remains permanently affordable for families, especially at a time when many New Yorkers are leaving the city. 

    Some politicians and civic leaders have said rezoning and investments in public spaces can change a neighborhood’s character. Santos cited NYC Economic Development Corporation’s plans to build public plazas at Broadway Junction, along with zoning changes that occurred as far back as 2016 under former Mayor Bill de Blasio, as threats to East New York’s affordability. 

    “All of that brings fear of opening a Pandora’s box of gentrification and mass displacement,” Santos said. “You’re going to see an increase in property taxes because of real estate. And it trickles down to rent values, as well.”

    Gary Giordano, the district manager of Queens Community Board 5, shared similar thoughts with amNewYork last month about gentrification in Ridgewood and Glendale, two other neighborhoods where the IBX plans to stop. 

    He said the IBX will be a benefit for public transit users who need to get from one part of Queens or Brooklyn to another fast because it cuts down on time without having to go through Manhattan. But, it could also change a neighborhood, especially combined with other government developments, such as Mayor Eric Adams’ recent win with a historic zoning overhaul aimed at fixing the city’s housing crisis. 

    “From the standpoint of neighborhood charm, it could be made nice,” Giordano said. “But here’s the kicker. I think there is concern that with the City of Yes proposal for additional housing, that if you are in reasonable proximity to a train station, what is the risk of development that is out of character with the existing housing?”

    City of Yes, which some political experts have described as Adams’ signature accomplishment as mayor, amends the city zoning law to build more housing in neighborhoods that had previously restricted development. It is estimated to create about 82,000 new homes within 15 years. 

    Preserving employment

    No matter how much or how little East New York changes, its rich history will always live on. In addition to the theaters that thrived here, the neighborhood’s history is marked by commercial vitality. 

    In 1922, the iconic department store Fortunoff opened its doors on Livonia Avenue at the East New York/Brownsville border, quickly becoming one of New York’s most recognizable retailers. Its presence made the area a bustling commercial hub. The neighborhood also played host to significant industrial enterprises, such as Sunnydale Farms, which occupied an entire block on Stanley Avenue, providing jobs and contributing to the local economy.

    Today, various industrial businesses, including school bus parking lots, scrap yards and autobody shops, line the streets of East New York. Santos, of the land trust group, hopes that with the new rail line, the city will continue to prioritize job creation and employment stability within East New York. 

    “Another concern, beyond the real estate values going up, is the industrial business zone being protected,” he said. “The biggest source of commuting is people’s work. And an industrial business zone is a source of employment. It’s where industry is supposed to live.”

    Santos fears the IBX, along with other types of development, could spark a desire to change East New York’s industrial areas into housing. 

    “Don’t get me wrong, there’s a housing crisis. People need shelter, but also in East New York, where we’ve developed the most amount of affordable housing than any other community in the past decade, we want employment,” he said.

    To Santos, the IBX should be a balance between improved infrastructure and more transit while ensuring residents have employment and economic stability. 

    “Maintaining employment should be protected,” he said. 

    The next stop in our IBX: Stop by Stop series is Livonia Avenue. 

    Previous IBX Stop by Stop stories 

    Exploring the future light rail line’s northern hub of Jackson Heights, a melting pot of flavors and traditions

    Maspeth has small-town charm in America’s most crowded city

    The proposed light rail rolls through Middle Village near a ‘crown jewel’ of Queens parks

    NYC’s proposed light rail to roll under hallowed ground in Middle Village

    Light rail would bring New Yorkers into trendy Glendale and Ridgewood

    A ride through Bushwick, an oasis of art, quirky bars, community spaces and a hipster vibe

    East New York could be in for real estate boom when light rail line arrives at Atlantic Avenue

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    Barbara Russo-Lennon

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  • Suspect in killing of Queens couple also allegedly tried to drain their bank accounts

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    The New York City man charged with killing a senior Queens couple and then setting their house on fire during a horrific home invasion in September had also attempted to drain their bank accounts before using their credit cards to go on a shopping spree, prosecutors said Tuesday.

    Jamel McGriff, a serial robbery suspect on parole, pleaded not guilty Tuesday to multiple counts of murder, kidnapping and arson, according to Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz’s office.

    The 42-year-old Bronx resident is charged in the Sept. 8 killings of Frank Olton, 76, and Maureen Olton, 77, in their home in the New York City borough of Queens.

    Prosecutors say McGriff had been going door-to-door asking residents if he could come in to charge his cellphone. They say he spoke with Frank Olton, who had offered to help, before McGriff forced his way into the couple’s home, where he remained for nearly five hours.

    Firefighters responding to a report of a house fire found Frank Olton’s body in the basement tied to a pole and with multiple stab wounds to his neck and chest. Maureen Olton’s badly burned body was found in the living room.

    Prosecutors in court Tuesday said McGriff had set the house on fire in an attempt to destroy evidence of the killings, the Daily News reports. They said Maureen Olton appears to have been tied to a chair and strangled to death.

    Prosecutors said McGriff also unsuccessfully attempted to transfer more than $10,000 from the couple’s accounts to his own.

    He took the couple’s credit cards as well, spending nearly $800 on clothes at a Macy’s in midtown Manhattan just hours after the killings, they said. McGriff was caught the following day after going to a movie in Times Square, prosecutors said in court Tuesday, the Daily News reports.

    The convicted felon, who was on parole after serving 16 years in prison, was ordered held until his next court date on Nov. 12. If convicted, McGriff faces a maximum sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.

    The Legal Aid Society, which is representing McGriff, said in a statement Tuesday that it is in the early stages of investigating the case and urged the public “not to draw any conclusions until all the facts are known.”

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    The Associated Press

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  • Dolo’s Pizza is Underground Atlanta’s Hidden Gem of Pizza Reimagined

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    Dolo’s Pizza owners Yusef Walker and Alyson Williams (above) are reimagining NYC-style pizza in Atlanta. 
    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Underground Atlanta is experiencing a revitalization, and feeding that resurgence is Dolo’s Pizza, a hidden gem tucked away on the second floor of the historical landmark. Caribbean flavors meet NYC-style pizza in a dimly-lit pizzeria where creativity and experimentation flow freely. From ripe plantains and juicy jerk chicken topped on pizzas to charcoal pesto spread on dough and sprinkled with a bit of “magic,” co-founders Yusef Walker and Alyson Williams are creating a slice of pizza heaven.

    The concept of Dolo’s began to form during the COVID-19 pandemic. Walker had been strolling around his downtown neighborhood when he came across a vacant pizzeria. The Queens, New York, native was no stranger to the delights of pizza and was certainly not new to the restaurant business; along with his brother, Walker opened Negril ATL and Ms. Icey’s Kitchen and Bar. However, the uncertainty of the restaurant industry during the pandemic helped the restaurateur and chef realize that he wanted to venture out and start his own project.  

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    Walker knew he wanted to create a concept that was mainly takeout, and that vacant pizzeria sparked an idea within him. After receiving advice from his family, Walker didn’t have to search hard for a partner to tackle this new venture with. He instantly recognized Williams — who had been his neighbor, worked with Walker at Negril, and also had experience working in every part of a restaurant — as the best candidate.

    As an Atlanta native, Williams knew the city and its food scene in and out. Paired with what Walker called “unconventional ideas” when it came to a restaurant growth concept, the friends-turned-business partners began to do pop-ups around the city and metro area. When a vendor program for The Underground launched in 2022, offering six months of free rent, they decided to set up shop, which led to a permanent restaurant later that year. Nearly five years later, the friends-turned-business partners are slinging dough for all of Atlanta.  

    “Being from New York, pizzas were the thing that resonated, and I was inspired by the pizzerias there,” Walker said. “We didn’t necessarily know what we were doing, but we had an idea of what we wanted to do. We just shook hands and said we’re going to figure this out together. We’ve been figuring out how since then.”

    Dolo’s Pizza (above) infuses Caribbean flavors into its recipes, creating unique pies. 
    Photo by Tabius McCoy The Atlanta Voice

    Williams added that although there was a learning curve in starting a business, the journey has been a fun experience. 

    “Pizza is such a fun dish. Everybody loves pizza. You can get as creative as you want with it. I think that’s good for someone creative like Yusef, and you can expand on it. It’s yours; you can do whatever you want with it. We can decide to make taco pizzas tomorrow, so that’s the beauty of it,” Williams said. “It feels super accomplishing to see something come to fruition that started out of nothing. It’s super exciting.”

    During the early stages of menu curation, Williams was the main taste tester of the recipes they’d cook up; Walker was a strict vegetarian. The first set of pizzas included a Chorizo creation, a garlic crema pizza with goat cheese and balsamic drizzle called Blanco, and the OG — a simple pie with marinara and mozzarella. Initially, Walker had no intention of infusing his Caribbean culture into the food. But paying homage to his parents’ Jamaican roots was something that came naturally to him, and it quickly shone through with pizzas such as the Matey with jerk chicken and honey; the Hot & Sweet topped with plantains and jalapenos; and the Black Pizza, a black pesto creation which has a recipe breakdown printed on a t-shirt hanging from the ceiling. Through it all, customers are served a pizza dough that’s light, crispy, and the perfect carriage for their inspired recipes. 

    The pizzeria began as a pop-up that bloomed into a storefront at Underground Atlanta. 
    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    “I never really intended to put a Caribbean spin on it. I just think I can’t help it. But really, I wanted to recreate the New York essence of pizza. So in anything we make, we try to keep it pizza at its core,” Walker said. “I think some people try to do too much. I did want it to be structurally sound. I like technical things, so we have a very technical dough. That feeds that part of my soul where I get to interact with puzzles and figure things out and that.”

    Everything about the way the pizzeria is set up is intentional, from the size of the pizzas and the limited seating to the fact that they don’t sell slices. They wanted to be able to continue doing popups and also make sure they had a business plan that was “pandemic-proof;” if anything significant were to happen in the world today, they wanted to know they would still be able to sell takeout pizza.  

    Photo by Tabius McCoy/The Atlanta Voice

    “We don’t have huge ovens. As a traveling pizzeria, it’s extremely hard to travel with a huge oven. So, everything had to be personal. Everything about this pizza, and when people get it, is very personal. Everyone’s name goes on their box. I ask everyone how to spell their name, because this is a very personal pizza to you. It’s what you asked for. That’s very important to me, and I appreciate the personality and personal touch of the pizza. So, that has a lot to do with shaping the size and the menu,” Williams shared. 

    The duo said that, in the future, they hope to add a few more things to the menu and also expand above-ground into a larger and more exposed space that will give them greater visibility to customers. Walker and Williams have created a formula that’s unique to them, and despite the name of the restaurant, they’re doing it together. With every pie, they’re melding Caribbean, New York, and Atlanta culture into one. 

    “Dolo’s is special because of the creativity, the uniqueness, and its consistency. This pizza tastes like this every single day. It looks like this. I don’t know of any other places in Atlanta that are doing this with pizza,” Williams said. “It’s a New York-style pizza, but I like to say it’s like a New York, Atlanta-style pizza.”

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    Laura Nwogu

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  • ‘Unfathomable cruelty:’ Man indicted for dragging service dog into street, setting it on fire

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    A man wanted in a horrific case of animal abuse that saw a relative’s service dog dragged down a Queens street and set on fire this past July has been indicted on a series of criminal charges, prosecutors said Tuesday.

    Isaiah Gurley, 29, was arrested several days after authorities alleged he killed a pit bull and burned the body on a public street on South Ozone Park. The dog, Square K, was a family member’s service dog left in his care, prosecutors say.

    Surveillance video from July 24 allegedly shows Gurley, of Jamaica, dragging a motionless Square K through the street by its leash before dousing the pup with accelerant and setting it on fire.

    A police officer happened upon the charred remains.

    A post-mortem examination found the dog was already dead, of blunt force trauma, before it was set on fire. It had been beaten in the head, according to prosecutors.

    “As alleged, the defendant was supposed to be caring for a family member’s dog and instead subjected it to unfathomable cruelty as he killed the pit bull and then set it on fire,” Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz said in a statement. “This dog suffered needlessly, and we have no tolerance for animal abuse in Queens County.”

    Gurley faces up to seven years in prison if convicted on the charges, which include aggravated animal cruelty, arson and harming a service animal. Attorney information for him wasn’t immediately available Tuesday.

    It wasn’t clear what prompted the alleged dog killing, nor to whom the dog belonged.

    He is represented by attorneys with The Legal Aid Society, which typically doesn’t comment on active cases.

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    NBC New York Staff

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  • Hunt is on for two pythons on the loose in Queens’ Forest Park

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    The hunt is on for two of three pythons that were seen slithering through Forest Park in Queens. 

    On Thursday, parkgoers were in for quite a surprise when they came across one of the pythons sitting in the roadway near Myrtle Avenue and Woodhaven Boulevard. 

    Catherine Laboy was on her way home from Puppy Kitty NYCity, the animal shelter where she works, when she saw a group of people trying to move something out of the road with a large tree branch. She didn’t know what the group was trying to move, but she figured it was animal of some kind. So, she decided to stop and help out. 

    “At first I was in like panic mode,” Laboy said. “I took out a shopping bag and we put the snake in there.” 

    The python, which was named Kevin by its rescuers, didn’t want to stay wrangled. Laboy said it was trying its best to work its way out of the shopping bag so, she went to her car and grabbed a box she had inside. 

    “I ripped it open and we managed to put the snake in there and secured it like that,” she explained. 

    Kevin the python did not like being in a shopping bag, so an animal shelter worker got a box from her car and moved the reptile into that instead.

    Two other ball pythons that were seen in area managed to get away, slithering back into the park. That raised the eyebrows of many people who were in the park on Friday working on the track and walking the trails. That includes Brian Rodriguez who said he was enjoying a walk in the park, not expecting to hear about pythons being on the loose. 

    “It makes me think something’s going on,” he said. “It’s crazy to think about pythons in New York City.” 

    It wasn’t a crazy thought for Patti Alvino, who told NBC New York she thought she encountered one of the snakes just a couple of days prior while she out on a walk in the park. 

    “I happen to look down and I saw this black and yellow thing rotating, moving, slithering,” Alvino said. “So I said ‘What the heck is that?’ I said ‘That’s a snake’ and it was huge. So I kind of leaped over it and took off.” 

    Experts said it’s likely that someone dumped the pythons in the park. They are illegal to have as pets in New York City and could be a danger to small animals. 

    We reached out to the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, which said if New Yorkers see an abandoned animal they should leave it where it is and call 311 or find an urban park ranger in the park.

    “Parks are not suitable homes for animals not indigenous to those parks-domesticated or otherwise. In addition to the potential danger to park goers this could have caused, releasing non-indigenous animals or unwanted pets can lead to the elimination of native species and cause additional ecological stress,” the Parks Department added in a statement.

    Laboy said she and others notified the NYPD which helped search for the two pythons that remained on the loose. 

    As for the one that was captured, Laboy and her boss took it to Animal Care Centers of New York City so it could find a proper home out of state.  Her main concern now is finding the remaining pythons and getting them to a more suitable environment. 

    “They are conducting a search, but it’s no guarantee they’re going to find them,” Laboy said. “Hopefully, somebody does bump into [one] and makes a call.” 

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    Charles Watson

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  • Human remains found in Queens park belonged to unknown woman missing arms, legs: NYPD | amNewYork

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    FILE – Medical examiner’s team removing a body in Queens

    Photo by Dean Moses

    Police officials said Thursday that the human remains found by a sanitation crew in Queens earlier this week belonged to an unidentified woman whose extremities had been hacked away.

    Only the victim’s torso was discovered about 100 feet south of the intersection of 149th Avenue and Brookville Boulevard, near Idlewild Park, on Sept. 22. New York City sanitation workers performing a roadside cleanup around 8 a.m. that morning when they noticed a foul smell and made the grisly find.

    “It had several unique and identifiable tattoos which were not visible and not decomposed,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said of the torso. “The autopsy was done, and the doctor basically tells us, at this point, the torso itself does not have any wounds or injuries that would indicate any cause of death. The forensic anthropologist is still walking through it.”

    Victim’s tattoos may offer clues

    While authorities say they have yet to determine how the woman lost her life, they say the torso had a broken rib that most likely stemmed from the remains being dropped.

    Several tattoos depicted a flower and three names, Chief Kenny said, adding that police are working through missing person reports in an attempt to match up the names.

    “The doctor further states that he believes that straight edge instruments, such as a knife, were used to cut through the soft tissue, and some sort of saw was used to cut through the bone,” Chief Kenny said.

    Police say the victim is believed to be of Guyanese descent, but her age has not yet been established.

    No arrests have been made, and the investigation remains ongoing.

    Anyone with information regarding these remains can call Crime Stoppers at 800-577-TIPS (for Spanish, dial 888-57-PISTA). You can also submit tips online at crimestoppers.nypdonline.org, or on X (formerly Twitter) @NYPDTips. All calls and messages are kept confidential.

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    Dean Moses

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  • Driver arrested after 16-year-old girl struck, killed by vehicle in Queens

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    QUEENS, New York (WABC) — Police have arrested a driver they say struck and a killed a 16-year-old girl with his vehicle in Queens on Saturday.

    It happened just after 4 a.m. along Benham Street and Roosevelt Avenue.

    Investigators say the teen was with a group of people at the location when she got into an argument with a 38-year-old man, the driver of a Chevy Suburban.

    Police say he allegedly got into his SUV, jumped the sidewalk and intentionally struck the victim.

    The driver then turned down Benham Street and crashed into a parked vehicle.

    The victim was pronounced dead at the scene.

    The driver was arrested, and charges are pending.

    ———-

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  • Suspect charged after allegedly torturing, killing NYC couple before torching their home

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    What to Know

    • Authorities say a paroled sex offender and career criminal killed a Queens couple, then set their home on fire and robbed them
    • Jamel McGriff faces a slew of charges including murder, robbery, burglary, arson, and kidnapping, according to police
    • Neighbors reported seeing the suspect around the neighborhood recently, and police said McGriff had approached at least two homes, saying he was having cellphone issues and needed help.
    • The 42-year-old parolee allegedly tortured and killed 76-year-old Frank Olton and his 77-year-old wife, Maureen, then torched their Bellerose home. Frank Olton was found tied to a pole in the basement, while his wife was found with severe burns on the first floor

    The man accused of robbing, torturing and killing a Queens couple inside their home before setting it on fire was set to face a judge for the first time in the case after being charged.

    Jamel McGriff faces a slew of charges including murder, robbery, burglary, arson, and kidnapping, according to police. He was walked to a waiting police car with his hands cuffed Thursday evening on his way to court.

    According to police, officers were on patrol at West 44th Street and Eighth Avenue Wednesday evening when they spotted McGriff on the street. The NYPD said his movements and credit card transactions were being tracked and had been sent out to all police, which helped the officers identify him and make the arrest following the days-long manhunt.

    The 42-year-old parolee allegedly tortured and killed 76-year-old Frank Olton and his 77-year-old wife, Maureen, then torched their Bellerose home on Monday after conning his way inside. Neighbors reported seeing the suspect around the neighborhood recently, and police said McGriff had approached at least two homes, saying he was having cellphone issues and needed help.

    “The suspect claimed that he needed assistance, that his phone battery was dead and he was asking if he could enter the house to charge his phone,” said NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch. “At the first house, the suspect is denied entry. He then proceeds to a second incident location.”

    The Oltons apparently bought his story and let him into their backyard. Video shows McGriff going in the back door of the home, and soon after, a man’s voice yells out “get the [expletive] out.”

    Police said McGriff was inside for about five hours, according to detectives, before a camera captured him leaving with two bags. Police believe he may have set the fire to try to cover up the killings.

    Frank Olton was found stabbed and tied to a pole in the basement, while his wife was found with severe burns on the first floor of the scorched 254th Street residence they had lived in for decades, according to law enforcement sources.

    Sources said McGriff had been known to detectives, but is believed to have been a stranger to the couple.

    It is believed that both victims were killed before their home was torched. Fire marshals determined the cause of the fire to be incendiary, but no further details were released regarding how it was started.

    Before his arrest, McGriff was seen early Tuesday trying to pawn two cellphones at a shop on Fordham Road in the Bronx. Attorney information for McGriff was not available.

    Police said McGriff was out on parole after spending 16 years behind bars for first-degree robbery and has a lengthy criminal history dating back 30 years that includes several robberies.

    The NYPD added that he failed to register as a sex offender in Nov. 2024 and is wanted for two recent robberies in Manhattan. McGriff allegedly robbed a Game Stop store in July and then tried to rob a Verizon store near Union Square on Aug. 31 until an employee realized McGiff had a fake gun and fought him off.

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    Erica Byfield and Ida Siegal

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  • BREAKING: Prime suspect in heinous Queens murder of senior couple caught in Midtown, cops say | amNewYork

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    NYPD Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, in announcing the arrest, said the suspect — identified as Jamel McGriff — had been apprehended in Midtown Manhattan after being spotted by officers in the area.

    NYPD

    The man allegedly responsible for brutally murdering a senior couple in Queens and setting them ablaze on Monday has been arrested, the city’s top cop said Wednesday evening.

    NYPD Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, in announcing the arrest, said the suspect — identified as Jamel McGriff — had been apprehended in Midtown Manhattan after being spotted by officers in the area.

    “Jamel McGriff was taken into custody a short time ago by the NYPD. He was spotted in Midtown Manhattan by eagle-eyed cops who didn’t hesitate before jumping into action,” Tisch wrote.

    Police sources say cops were able to track his movement using a department app known as the domain awareness system after it pinged that he had used the victims’ credit cards. He was arrested in Times Square around 5:40 p.m. on 44th Street and Seventh Avenue. 

    A citywide manhunt had been underway for McGriff since Tuesday, a day after he allegedly knocked on the door to the Bellerose, Queens home of Frank and Maureen Olton on 254th Street at around 3:20 p.m. on Sept. 8 and asked to charge his phone.

    house in Queens where arsonist set fire and killed two seniors in murder mystery
    According to authorities, the inferno engulfed a home located at 87-86 254th St. in Bellerose around 3:20 p.m. on Sept. 8. When firefighters arrived, they put out the blaze but found two seniors dead.Photo via Google Maps

    Police believe he spent the next five hours torturing 77-year-old Frank Olton and 78-year-old Maureen Olton before he set fires to their bodies.

    Frank Olton was later found tied to a support beam in the basement with a bungee cord, while his wife was discovered severely burned on the first floor.

    Police tied McGriff to the killing after obtaining surveillance camera footage from the scene; his parole officer had made the positive identification, sources familiar with the case said.

    On Tuesday, Tisch noted that McGriff had been out on parole for a first-degree robbery conviction dating back to 2006. 

    “After serving more than 16 years on that conviction, he then failed to register as a sex offender in November of 2024, which should have violated his parole,” the commissioner added. “He is also wanted by the NYPD for two other recent robberies committed in Manhattan.”

    Sources close to the investigation said McGriff had visited a nearby home in Bellerose asking to charge his phone, but was turned away. Then he visited the Olton residence.

    Police believe the horrendous crime was motivated by robbery. He was caught on surveillance video on Monday pawning two cellphones in the Bronx.

    This is a breaking news story; check with amNewYork for updates.

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    Dean Moses

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  • First human cases of West Nile virus reported in New York City this season

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    NEW YORK CITY (WABC) — The New York City Health Department is reporting the first human cases of West Nile virus this year.

    The department says two residents in Queens have been infected, one was hospitalized briefly and discharged while the other remains hospitalization with encephalitis, an infection of the brain.

    In addition, the virus was detected in blood donations from two individuals, one a resident of Brooklyn the other of Staten Island.

    The virus has been found in mosquito pools across all five boroughs in the city since July.

    Health officials spray regularly in neighborhoods to reduce the risk of mosquito activity.

    They say mosquitoes infected with West Nile virus are typically present in New York City from May through October, with peak activity during August and September.

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