Friday, June 5, 2026

This Weeks Talking Politics

 

https://www.youtube.com/live/jYsDM3tF1Vo?si=Fs0KOr3mYggW-0VC

This week Police Crime Stats up to May 31st, what Commissioner Tisch tells you and what she doesn't tell you, what's in and left out of the state budget, Iran, and our guest is Ms. Shery Olivo candidate for the 86th Assembly District, and lots more live at 12 pm, or anytime on YouTube at the link above 

Talking Politics

Housing Lottery Launches for 3060 3rd Avenue in Melrose, The Bronx

 


The affordable housing lottery has launched for 3060 3rd Avenue, an eight-story residential building in Melrose, The Bronx. Designed by Nikolai Katz Architect and developed by Lipa Engel, the structure yields 25 residences. Available on NYC Housing Connect are five units for residents at 80 percent of the area median income (AMI), ranging in eligible income from $75,703 to $146,560.

Amenities include bike room and a shared laundry room. Tenants are responsible for electricity, including stove and heat.

At 80 percent of the AMI, there are three studios with a monthly rent of $2,040 for incomes ranging from $75,703 to $108,560; one one-bedroom with a monthly rent of $2,173 for incomes ranging from $81,086 to $122,160; and two two-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $2,583 for incomes ranging from $97,406 to $146,560.

Prospective renters must meet income and household size requirements to apply for these apartments. Applications must be postmarked or submitted online no later than June 26, 2026.

Mayor Mamdani Announces Justine Olderman as Criminal Justice Coordinator

 

NYU Law professor and former Executive Director of The Bronx Defenders will advance administration’s criminal justice agenda  

Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani announced today that Justine Olderman will serve as Criminal Justice Coordinator. Olderman currently teaches at New York University School of Law as a Distinguished Scholar in Residence and spent 23 years at The Bronx Defenders, including six years as Executive Director. She will report to the First Deputy Mayor.

  

Olderman will help advance the Mamdani administration’s criminal justice agenda and oversee day-to-day operations of the Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice. She will work closely with district attorneys, public defenders, courts, public safety agencies and the Department of Correction to reduce incarceration, strengthen community safety and improve fairness.      

 

“Justine Olderman has spent her career standing alongside New Yorkers as they navigate a criminal legal system that too often falls short of the fairness and dignity every person deserves,” said Mayor Mamdani. “Her commitment to justice and accountability reflects the values our administration is fighting for every day. We’re proud to welcome Justine to our team, where she will help build a city in which justice is accessible to every New Yorker.”  

  

“We are excited to have Justine Olderman join our administration as Criminal Justice Coordinator. She has fought tirelessly to make our city’s criminal justice system fairer and more equitable throughout her entire career – uniquely qualifying her to oversee this critical work for the administration,” said First Deputy Mayor Dean Fuleihan 

  

“It is an honor to be joining Mayor Mamdani’s administration to oversee criminal justice efforts,” said Justine Olderman. “From the moment he stepped on the campaign trail, the Mayor has advocated for a more just version of New York City. A criminal legal system that is just and fair does more than respond to harm after the fact — it helps advance community safety. Delivering on that vision means bringing defenders, prosecutors, courts, city agencies and the communities most impacted to the table to align around shared goals. I have spent over 20 years working to improve our criminal legal system and am eager to bring that experience toward implementing the Mayor's agenda.”  

  

Olderman will advise the First Deputy Mayor on criminal justice policy and strategy. She will develop initiatives to reduce incarceration, improve outcomes for New Yorkers moving through the criminal justice system and evaluate policies and practices related to case processing and systems operations in partnership with stakeholders across the city.   

  

About Justine Olderman  

  

For more than two decades, Justine Olderman has worked to improve the criminal justice system and strengthen community safety. During her 23 years at The Bronx Defenders, she expanded access to legal services for more than 13,000 clients annually. In her final six years as Executive Director, she led a staff of 425 and managed a $65 million budget.   

  

At the time of her appointment, Olderman served as a Distinguished Scholar in Residence at NYU School of Law, where she directs the Pretrial Freedom Lab, an initiative focused on reducing unnecessary pretrial detention. She previously worked as a Senior Research Scholar at NYU’s Marron Institute of Urban Management, helping develop best practices for alternatives to incarceration.  

  

Olderman graduated magna cum laude and Order of the Coif from New York University School of Law, where she received the George P. Faulk Memorial Award for Distinguished Scholarship. She clerked for the Honorable Robert J. Ward of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. She earned a bachelor’s degree with highest honors from the University of Michigan, where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa.  

  

“Justine has dedicated her career to advancing fairness, strengthening communities, and improving outcomes for New Yorkers,” said Mayor's Office of Criminal Justice Director Deanna Logan. “I personally had the benefit of working with her and know she is a collaborative leader who understands the power of government and community partnering to solve complex challenges and build lasting public safety. I look forward to working with her to continue advancing a safer, more just New York City for all.”  

  

“Justine Olderman brings to this role something that cannot be taught — a career defined by a deep commitment to the people most impacted by the criminal legal system and an unwavering belief that public safety is built from the ground up through community, trust, and human dignity,” said Tina Luongo, Chief Attorney of the Criminal Defense Practice at The Legal Aid Society. “Throughout Justine's career as a dedicated public defender, she has been a thoughtful and effective leader, advancing bold ideas while bringing people from differing viewpoints together to tackle some of the most difficult challenges facing our criminal legal system. Her values, vision, and creativity make her exceptionally well-suited for this role and for the work ahead. New Yorkers will be well served by her leadership, and I look forward to working with her in this critical role.”   

  

“I have had the pleasure of working with Justine Olderman for many years on criminal justice issues. Justine is extremely knowledgeable and talented, with an unswerving commitment to the pursuit of justice. I have every confidence that she will make an outstanding Criminal Justice Coordinator for the City of New York,” said Honorable Jonathan Lippman, former Chief Judge of New York and Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals 

   

American Citizen Pleads Guilty to Working as an Agent for the People's Republic of China

 

Thomas Weir Pauken II, 50, an American citizen who lived and worked in the People’s Republic of China (PRC), pleaded guilty to acting as an agent of a foreign government within the United States.

“Pauken admitted to being part of a conspiracy to obtain sensitive information from the U.S. government for the PRC,” said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A. Eisenberg. “His actions are a betrayal of this Nation and pose an unacceptable risk to our national security. NSD remains committed to safeguarding information essential to our national security, including through appropriate prosecution.”

“By his own admission, not only did Thomas Pauken attempt to infiltrate U.S. political circles at the direction of China’s Ministry of State Security, but he gathered intelligence on his American targets and reported it back to his Chinese intelligence handlers,” said Assistant Director Roman Rozhavsky of the FBI’s Counterintelligence and Espionage Division. “This case illustrates the lengths to which the Chinese Communist Party will go to undermine our democratic institutions and degrade our political freedoms, but it also demonstrates the FBI’s resolve to defend the homeland from threats to our national security. Let this plea serve as a clear warning: If you attempt to help a foreign adversary as an unregistered agent in the U.S., the FBI will find you and bring you to justice.”

According to court documents, from at least 2019 until February 2026, Pauken worked at the direction and control of people he knew worked for the PRC, including a person he met in 2017 identified as “Cathy.” Cathy provided Pauken with taskings, including meeting with potential intelligence assets, providing them with devices such as a laptop and cellphone to communicate with Cathy, providing taskings for the assets on what information was required, and providing Cathy with reports from the assets.

Pauken received at least $100,000 for his work with Cathy. Cathy also paid for Pauken to travel several times between 2019 through 2025 from China to meet with individuals in the United States who could provide Pauken, and ultimately Cathy and the Chinese Ministry of State Security (MSS), with information.

Pauken worked for two other people in China whom he met in 2017 and knew as “Richard” and “William.” They told Pauken that reports he wrote for them went to Japan, but Pauken believed they worked for the PRC government.

Pauken also sold reports to a group of Chinese individuals from Wuhan who sought information about technology and the U.S. Department of Justice. The Wuhan clients wanted Pauken to find an expert to help them engage in cyber espionage.

Pauken is scheduled to be sentenced on Sept. 1 and faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

The FBI Philadelphia Field Office investigated this case with assistance from the FBI’s Washington Field Office.

VCJC News & Notes 6/5/2026

 

Van Cortlandt Jewish Center
News and Notes

Here's this week's edition of the VCJC News and Notes email. We hope you enjoy it and find it useful!

Things to see below


The survey of your preferences for our events - please fill in (#4)

The links to our new social media accounts - please follow us (#7)

Our request for a Google review (#8)

Other happenings in the area (#9, #11)


Reminders

  1. Shabbos schedule

    Shabbos information is, as always, available on our website, both in the information sidebar and the events calendar.
    Here are the times you need:  
    Shabbos Candles Friday 6/5/26 @ 8:05 pm
    Shabbos/Shavuos Ends Saturday 6/6/26 @ 9:09 pm

    If you require an aliyah or would like to lead services, read from the torah or haftorah please speak to one of the gabbaim.


    This week’s kiddush is sponsored by Nochum and Misha Kaplan in honor of his 60th birthday. Come join us for services and stay to enjoy the kiddush and the company.

  2. Yizkor donations

    It is customary to make a charitable donation in conjunction with Yizkor.  If you wish to donate to VCJC as part of your Yizkor observance this past Shavuot, it can be done in person at the office, by check, or online through our website


  3. About our new kiddushim
    Reminder that kiddush now takes place in the ballroom. There is a greater variety of food, which can be enjoyed while seated at covered tables. Our aim is to offer a more enjoyable and meaningful experience, and to encourage conversation and interaction among attendees. This is an evolving effort. It has received very positive reviews so far; we’d love to have your opinion as well. Please join us for services and kiddush, and let us know what you think!


  4. What works for you?
    Please Help Us Plan for Events
    We have created a survey, Van Cortlandt Jewish Center Community Event Planning Survey, to help us set the direction for our activities.  We’d really appreciate your taking a few minutes to fill it in. Here’s the link: SURVEY

  5. The VCJC Chavurah
    The VCJC Chavurah will be meeting every Tuesday Night at 7:30PM.  All are welcome to join us as we continue to learn Tractate Berachot together.

    No cost to attend and no prior experience is needed.

    If you are interested in learning torah with a group of fellow members of your community, but want more details, contact the VCJC office at 718-884-6105 or info@vcjewishcenter.org, or speak to Stuart Harris or Matthew Hartstein after davening on Shabbat morning.

  6. Shabbos parsha



































    Parashat Beha’alotcha 5786 / פָּרָשַׁת בְּהַעֲלֹתְךָ

    6 June 2026 / 21 Sivan 5786 (Diaspora)

    Parashat Beha’alotcha is the 36th weekly Torah portion in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading.

    This page displays the Diaspora Torah reading for Beha’alotcha 5786. The Israel schedule is used by Jews living in modern Israel.

    Torah Portion: Numbers 8:1-12:16

    Beha’alotekha (“When You Raise”) opens with God instructing Moses to inaugurate the Levites for service in the Mishkan (Tabernacle). It also recounts the stories of people who request a second chance to offer the Passover sacrifice, complaints of the Israelites and their punishments, and a disease that affects Miriam. [1]


  7. VCJC is now active on social media - follow us!
    We have launched both a Facebook page and an Instagram page.  Both have a nice amount of content already and we are planning both regular posts and a greater variety going forward.  Please take a look and follow us!


  8. You can do it! Give VCJC a boost!  Leave a (positive) review for us on Google
    -->You can do this!  We know you can! YES, YOU!

    The VCJC is working to build and grow for its next century in Van Cortlandt Village.  If you have had a good experience with us or recognize our value to the community, please consider telling the world about it.  Go to our Google Business Profile and leave a review.  Thanks!  

  9. Westchester SC Jewish Heritage Night, June 10, 7PM

    See their poster below.

  10. VCJC Annual General Membership Meeting
    The meeting has been scheduled for Sunday, June 28 at 10AM in Boyarsky Hall.  A light breakfast will be available at 9:30.  You must be a current member to attend. Elections for the Board of Trustees will be held. Proxies are not permitted for the election.

  11. The Leffell School is considering a Sunday basketball program
    They would like your input regarding your level of interest. They are located in White Plains. Here’s their blurb:


    We’re excited to introduce a brand-new opportunity this fall for fourth- and fifth-grade boys: Leffell Lion Cubs Sunday Basketball. This program is open to both Leffell School students and students who attend other schools. This six-session program is a new Sunday basketball clinic designed to build skills, confidence, and a love for the game in a fun and supportive Jewish environment. The Leffell School is currently gauging interest as we finalize details. Please complete the short survey <https://www.leffellschool.org/basketball-clinic> to indicate your children’s interest in participating this fall.

    Please feel free to contact us with any questions. We appreciate your help in sharing this exciting program with your members as we look to create something special for the larger Westchester/Rockland/Fairfield community.


Please help with information about buildings

As part of rebuilding the membership and congregation, the Board of Trustees would like your help. There are a lot of either new or renovated buildings being put up in our catchment area. We would like to seek the cooperation of the owners / developers of those properties in publicizing these opportunities to live near an orthodox synagogue.  If you are aware of any of these buildings, please provide what information you can about them.  This could include the address, any contact information that might be posted, and any information about the building itself (size, type, etc.). Additionally, if you are aware of vacancies in existing buildings or of houses for sale, please let us know about that as well.


Our mailing address is:
Van Cortlandt Jewish Center
3880 Sedgwick Ave
Bronx, NY 10463