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Thursday, April 11, 2013

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): News Censored Here!

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): News Censored Here!: DA Opens Case on Violation of First Amendment Management Accused of Dumping Newspapers because They don’t Like Being Criticized By Mic...

News Censored Here!


DA Opens Case on Violation of First Amendment
Management Accused of Dumping Newspapers because They don’t Like Being Criticized
By Michael Horowitz

BRONX, NEW YORK, April 11- District Attorney Robert Johnson, after being called by Co-op City News, has opened up an investigation into allegations that management officials have, over the last two weeks, directed Co-op City's porters to throw away copies of the community's independent weekly newspaper because they do not like the publication's stories and commentaries.
Christopher Hagedorn, publisher of City News, (the print edition of Co-op City News) said he called Johnson's office to report a seeming violation of state law, punishable by fines of up to $1,000, after a second informed source told the independent newspaper, this week, that management officials had conspired to throw away copies of the newspaper.
Hagedorn, stressed, this week, “The survival of our newspaper is at stake. We are convinced that the people at Riverbay have broken a state law that aims to safeguard our right to publish --- a right that is guaranteed in the First Amendment of the U. S. Constitution. We won't be cowed into submission by a management that has no regard for Co-op City or its shareholders.”
The case against the Riverbay Corporation and Luis Salazar, Co-op City's director of janitorial services has been assigned to Bronx Assistant District Attorney Robert Carney.
Two informed sources, who wished to remain unidentified, have told the News, over the last two weeks, that Salazar gave the order for Co-op City's porter to throw away copies of the independent weekly because he did not like the newspaper's contents.
Salazar, contacted over the phone last week, denied the charge that he had ordered porters to discard copies of City News even though two Co-op City employees, one of whom works as a porter in Section 5, pointed to the director of janitorial services as the man who directed that the newspapers be thrown away.
The Section 5 porter said, last week, that he and a number of other porters refused to discard copies of City News because they considered Salazar's order to do so to be “illegal.”
A second Co-op City employee, who refused to disclose the department in which he worked, said, this week, that he knew that the order had been given for porters to throw away copies of this week's City News.
Contacted late last week, Riverbay board member Al Shapiro, saying that he strongly opposed many of the positions that City News has taken in recent issues, stressed that he, nevertheless, opposed efforts to censor the independent weekly newspaper.
“I will make some calls to try to get to the bottom of this,” Shapiro stressed, in a telephone interview last Friday.
Interestingly, newspapers that were thrown away in a number of buildings last Friday reappeared in the vicinity of elevators in a number of buildings the next day, last Saturday, a number of shareholders told City News this week.
“This whole situation is clearly suspicious,” said Hagedorn, in comments this week. “The long and the short of it is, from our perspective, is that management officials don't like what we've been saying about their incompetence and their clear waste of Co-op City's corporate assets. We plan to do what we have to do to assure our unfettered right to publish our newspaper in Co-op City and disseminate copies of it throughout the community.”
Hagedorn emphasized, “The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution is a key cornerstone of our nation's democracy. We are committed to the notion that Co-op City needs the no-holds-barred presentation of the news that shareholders, in phone calls to us this week, have told us that they like most about our newspaper. The long and the short of it is that everyone, especially the power that be at the Riverbay Corporation, needs to be scrutinized in an open marketplace of ideas.”

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Pol Indicted on Perjury

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Pol Indicted on Perjury: Latest to Fall in Scandals Plaguing Boro BRONX, NEW YORK, April 10- District Attorney Robert T. Johnson announced the unsealing of an...

Pol Indicted on Perjury


Latest to Fall in Scandals Plaguing Boro

BRONX, NEW YORK, April 10- District Attorney Robert T. Johnson announced the unsealing of an indictment in which former New York State Assemblyman Nelson Castro has been charged with multiple counts of perjury.

The grand jury charged Castro with three counts of perjury in the first degree stemming from the defendant’s sworn testimony on August 7, 2008 at a hearing before the New York City Board of Elections, in Bronx County Supreme Court, Civil Division.  Perjury in the first degree is a Class D felony offense punishable by a maximum sentence of up to 2 1/3 to 7 year’s imprisonment.

The grand jury alleges that Castro had lied under oath in his response to three separate questions during a civil proceeding concerning his eligibility for placement on the ballot in a primary election for the 86th Assembly District. In such civil proceeding he was asked whether or not he knew two individuals, and he answered “No,” when in fact he did know these individuals and they were assisting him in his campaign.  In an additional question, he was asked whether or not an individual was a member of the Bronx Committee to Fill Vacancies and he answered that he did not know, when in fact he had personal knowledge that that individual was on said committee. 

Castro, whose resignation as a state lawmaker was effective on Monday, April 8, 2013, was arraigned before Acting State Supreme Court Justice Steven Barrett who released the defendant on his own recognizance.

The case, which is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Elizabeth Brandler of the Rackets Bureau, was adjourned to September 18, 2013 in Part H60.

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Five Injured as Car Jumps Curb in the Hub

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Five Injured as Car Jumps Curb in the Hub: By David Greene BRONX, NEW YORK, April 10- What began as a beautiful spring day quickly turned into confusion and mayhem-- as an out-of...

Five Injured as Car Jumps Curb in the Hub



By David Greene

BRONX, NEW YORK, April 10- What began as a beautiful spring day quickly turned into confusion and mayhem-- as an out-of-control auto plowed into the bustling crowd along E. 149 Street and knocked-down a half dozen people, like bowling pins.

Rescue crews were dispatched to Bergen Avenue and E. 149 Street in the Hub, at 12:50 p.m., when police say an unidentified 85-year-old man lost control of a Toyota Camry as he traveled eastbound on Bergen Avenue.

Traveling at a high rate of speed, the vehicle jumped the curb striking a Con Edison truck and then hit the side entrance to Cee & Cee Department Store, before striking the pedestrians in the crosswalk.

EMS transported five injured to Lincoln Hospital, where two were reported as serious and two more as critical. At press time the two critical had been downgraded to serious. A sixth person reportedly refused medical attention.

With the jeans of her pants sliced up the seem, revealing an ace bandage, accident victim Francis Wright, 46, recalled the horror, "He was an 85-year-old man. He hit a car first, then he hit a wall and then he ran over us."

Wright believed the driver, "panicked," before swerving and hitting the wall.

Still shaken after suffering a gash in her leg that would require five-stitches, Wright revealed, "My husband pushed me out of the way, my husband was injured, he has a broken leg."

Wright then thanked one of the paramedics who tended to her and her husband, whom she was now waiting to be released.

Despite the near-death experience, Wright is now more concerned about the driver's insurance and who will pay their medical bills.

At least one published or televised report had witness statements that claimed the driver inadvertently hit the gas instead of the break, another hinted that the driver seemed intoxicated.

However, police say no criminality was involved and no charges or citations were issued against the driver, as the crash was deemed an accident.

The incident was eerily similar to another crash that took place on Thursday, April 21, 2011, when an out-of-control taxi plowed into a Cee & Cee Department Store on E. Fordham Road, killing Carmen Ahmed, 61. Coincidentally, no charges were filed against the driver in that crash. 

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Move Over Cake Boss

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Move Over Cake Boss: Bronx Bakery Has Sweet Designs BRONX, NEW YORK, April 10- Zeppieri and Son’s Italian Bakery, a local neighborhood favorite for breads an...