Monday, January 17, 2022

Governor Hochul Updates New Yorkers on State's Progress Combating COVID-19 - JANUARY 17, 2022

 coronavirus cell

7-Day Average Positive Cases Declining in All Regions

Statewide COVID-19 Hospitalizations Net Declining Over Past Week

7-Day Average for New COVID-19 Hospital Admissions Down 10.7% Over Past Week

152 COVID-19 Deaths Statewide Yesterday

 

 Governor Kathy Hochul today updated New Yorkers on the state's progress combating COVID-19. 

"I'm proud of the work New Yorkers have been putting in to keep the numbers down and protect our vulnerable loved ones," Governor Hochul said. "While we are continuing to see promising trends, we are not through the winter surge yet and it is critical that we continue to use the tools that will help stop the spread. Our best weapon is the vaccine, so if you haven't, get your shot today and make sure you get your second dose and booster as well."

Today's data is summarized briefly below:  

  • Test Results Reported - 204,126
  • Total Positive - 26,772
  • Percent Positive - 13.12%
  • 7-Day Average Percent Positive - 15.68%
  • Patient Hospitalization - 11,751 (+38)
  • Patients Newly Admitted - 1,196 
  • Patients in ICU - 1,602 (-11)
  • Patients in ICU with Intubation - 900 (-10)
  • otal Discharges - 255,748 (+1,070)
  • New deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS - 152
  • Total deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS - 50,836 


The Health Electronic Response Data System is a NYS DOH data source that collects confirmed daily death data as reported by hospitals, nursing homes and adult care facilities only.  

  • Total deaths reported to and compiled by the CDC - 62,891

This daily COVID-19 provisional death certificate data reported by NYS DOH and NYC to the CDC includes those who died in any location, including hospitals, nursing homes, adult care facilities, at home, in hospice and other settings.  

  • Total vaccine doses administered - 35,033,604
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 24 hours - 42,512
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 7 days - 593,556
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose - 90.2%
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series - 81.3%
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 95.0%
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 83.7%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose - 79.4%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series - 70.9%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 86.1%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 73.0%

WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW - By Councilman Rev. Ruben Diaz District 18, Bronx County

 

“America’s Gonna Burn”

You should know that these were the words shouted out loud by Winston Glynn, an illegal alien accused of murdering 19-year-old Kristal Byron-Nieves during an armed robbery in a Burger King in New York City, according to news reports.

As you may know, Kristal Byron-Nieves was working the late shift (1:00 A.M) at the Burger King in Manhattan, on Sunday January 9th, 2022, when Winston Glynn, allegedly came in to rob the place at gun point. Upon doing so he shot Ms. Nieves killing her ending her young life.

You should also know that thanks to the great, intense hunt for her killer by the NYPD, in less than one week the perpetrator, was captured and identified as Winston Glynn.  He was immediately taken into custody and arrested.  As he was being taken out of the 25th Police Precinct in Manhattan he shouted “America Is gonna burn” among yelling other obscenities to the onlookers. 

It is important for you to know that Winston Glynn is in this country illegally, an “undocumented” resident in this country.  But what makes this case much more tragic is that this young girl’s life could have been saved given that he has a past criminal record. According to news reports he has been previously charged with the following crimes:
 
1. In 2017 he was arrested and charged with Criminal mischief.

2. In 2018 he was arrested and charged with menacing.

3. In December 2020 – He was arrested for criminal possession of a weapon and was set free.8

4. In November 2021 – He was residing in a hotel and got into a violent dispute and threatened a person with a screwdriver.  He was given a ticket    for a desk appearance and with a simple slap on the wrist they let him go free.

5. And tragically now in January 2022 –He is arrested and charged with armed robbery and murder.    

As you can see, my dear reader, we must ask ourselves why is it that an illegal alien, an individual who should not have been in this country to begin with, who has been arrested and continues to commit crimes is allowed to freely walk the streets of our city? How is it that this individual enters our country illegally, gets arrested several times and is not deported?  What is he doing in America to begin with?  This young woman didn’t have to lose her life so tragically, leaving a grieving mother and broken family. Why? What’s the sense? Can someone please help me make sense of this, why was he not deported!?

Now with the new Manhattan District Attorney, Mr. Alvin Bragg, we can only expect crime in our city to get worse.  Mr. Bragg has made his intentions to downgrade crimes to misdemeanors, clearly thereby refusing to bring criminals to justice, including armed criminals.  As residents of this city, we must be vigilant to ensure that Mr. Bragg does not go soft on Winston Glynn and that Kristal Byron-Nieves, and her family get justice.   

It is unacceptable, it’s a disgrace that we are allowing illegals to enter our country, break our laws, overwhelm our government programs and institutions, like schools, hospitals, housing, prisons, etc., while those Citizens of this nation must do with less or do without.  When this criminal shouts out so boldly “America is gonna burn” he shouts it out in our faces, he is not in the shadows.  Shame on us for allowing this outrage. What a disgrace! 

I am afraid that Winston Glynn’s words that “America is gonna burn” are prophetic and will become a reality if we continue to allow our elected leaders to prevent the enforcement of our immigration laws, and tying the hands of our law enforcement officers, while forcing us to live with their open border policies that have allowed unvetted individuals like Winston Glynn to walk freely among us.
 
I am Former Senator and Former Councilman Rev. Ruben Diaz, and This Is What You Should Know.

LABOR BROKER CONVICTED OF INSURANCE FRAUD IN PROCURING WORKERS’ COMPENSATION INSURANCE

 

 Daniel G. Cort, Acting Commissioner of the New York City Department of Investigation (“DOI”), issued a statement on today’s guilty plea by CONSOLIDATED NY SERVICES, INC. (“CONSOLIDATED”), of Brooklyn, N.Y., a labor broker in the construction industry in New York City, to one count of Insurance Fraud in the Second Degree, a class C felony. CONSOLIDATED was convicted of falsifying an application for workers’ compensation insurance that was submitted to the New York State Insurance Fund (“NYSIF”), which has a mission of providing affordable workers’ compensation insurance to New York employers. As part of the negotiated plea, the company was promised a conditional discharge upon payment of $75,000 to NYSIF, the amount of the fraud. Sentencing was adjourned until January 17, 2023. The plea was entered before Judge Charlotte E. Davidson in New York County Supreme Court. DOI investigated the matter in partnership with the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and NYSIF.

 DOI Acting Commissioner Daniel G. Cort said, “Labor brokers who defraud the workers’ compensation fund not only undermine the finances of the fund but place injured workers’ financial security at risk. Construction workers at City construction sites must be covered by workers’ compensation insurance. DOI will continue to work with the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and the New York State Insurance Fund to expose insurance scams and protect these essential worker protection funds.”

 According to the criminal complaint and the investigation, the defendant company is a labor broker supplying labor to various construction companies in New York City, and was required to obtain workers’ compensation insurance. From approximately April 6, 2016, to March 9, 2018, CONSOLIDATED submitted to NYSIF an application for workers’ compensation insurance that contained materially false information about its annual payroll and the type of work its workers performed, which NYSIF used to calculate CONSOLIDATED’s insurance premiums. Specifically, in its application, CONSOLIDATED claimed that it was in the commercial cleaning business with a total annual payroll of less than $30,000. In fact, CONSOLIDATED worked in the construction industry, and its total annual payroll far exceeded $30,000. The false information provided by CONSOLIDATED allowed the company to receive insurance coverage through NYSIF at a lower price that did not accurately reflect the company’s business nor its annual payroll. Additionally, CONSOLIDATED failed to submit its books and records for review as requested by NYSIF's auditors.

 This investigation was an outgrowth of another insurance fraud investigation, in which defendants are charged with scheming to evade more than $1 million in insurance premiums. That case is pending in court. Read more about it here: https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/doi/press-releases/2019/sep/2019-09-05-SouthsideRelease.pdf

Rep. Bowman Statement on Martin Luther King Jr. Day

 

“The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. taught us so much about trauma and healing, adversity and triumph, and most importantly about the impact of service through his work to galvanize communities across this country to enact action, change, and progress,” said Congressman Jamaal Bowman (NY-16). “Right now, as our nation faces vicious attacks on the right to vote, we’re especially reminded of the lessons he left us. In his letter from Birmingham jail, he responds to those who called his non-violent direct actions ‘untimely’ and ‘unwise,’ saying that, ‘We know through painful experience that freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed.’ In our mission to protect our right to vote, we cannot take ‘no’ or ‘wait’ as an answer.”

 

“We know from our history that when people and institutions tell us ‘wait,’ it oftentimes means never,” added Congressman Jamaal Bowman (NY-16). “With over 262 voter suppression bills introduced in 41 states already, we can’t afford to waste any more time. It is clear that with every passing day, the attacks on our fundamental right to vote are worsening. For the last two years, we have been sounding the alarm in the People’s House and have sent the Senate legislation that is vital to protecting our democracy as we know it. Still — no action has been taken. Martin Luther King Jr. would tell us on this day of service, that getting justice is not easy or convenient, and that now is the moment to reject excuses and inaction. With every step that he took in the direction of progress, there is no question that the ground shook beneath his shoes. Let us, through our convictions and actions, shake the ground too. It is time to end the filibuster and protect our right to vote.”


NYC PUBLIC ADVOCATE'S STATEMENT COMMEMORATING MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. DAY

 

"Today we honor Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., a righteous agitator and an inspiration to myself and so many others in our work toward justice. We cannot allow some to sanitize Dr. King's legacy, to misrepresent his message or his methods as a revolutionary for a just and equitable society. This is especially important as we continue to confront many of the issues he led on and the obstacles he fought against, despite the decades that have passed. 


"Dr. King championed voting rights as fundamental and foundational to equality, yet across the country those rights are again being stripped from marginalized communities while the same segregationist tactics are employed to block progress in the Capitol. 


"He fought for Fair Housing legislation to help marginalized people access quality, affordable housing, but here in New York, the eviction moratorium has expired in the middle of the winter and a pandemic surge, without Good Cause protections to keep people in their homes.


"We need courage to continue to push for progress along the moral arc toward justice, to bring about the dream Dr. King envisioned rather than the nightmare he feared. Dr. King said that “a genuine leader is not a searcher for consensus but a molder of consensus,” and it is that kind of clarity of leadership we need today as New Yorkers navigate compounding crises and ongoing uncertainties. In lifting up his name and legacy today, we must also work to live up to and advance that legacy."


California Man Indicted for Stealing Identity of Army Veteran, Applying for Benefits, Including More Than $35,000 in Housing Subsidies

 

Defendant and Girlfriend Variously Charged in 84-Count Indictment; Victim of the Alleged Scheme is the Ex-Husband of the Female Defendant

 Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez, together with Special Agent in Charge Christopher Algieri of the Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General’s Northeast Field Office and Acting New York City Department of Investigation Commissioner Daniel G. Cort, today announced that a California couple has been arraigned on an indictment in which they are variously charged with grand larceny, identity theft, welfare fraud and other charges for allegedly using the identity of a U.S. Army veteran to apply for government benefits, including through the Veterans Administration, for Section 8 housing in Brooklyn. 

 District Attorney Gonzalez said, “These defendants are charged with brazenly stealing the identity of an Army veteran to fraudulently obtain benefits to which they were not entitled. Furthermore, they allegedly harmed his reputation by again using his name when one was arrested for an alleged domestic violence incident. Thanks to the hard work of our prosecutors and our law enforcement partners we will now seek to hold them accountable.”

 Special Agent in Charge Algieri said, “VA OIG is committed to holding accountable those who perpetrate fraud against VA and its programs. We would like to thank our law enforcement partners for their hard work and dedication in this collaborative effort.” 

 Acting DOI Commissioner Cort said, “Over nearly two years, these defendants not only stole public housing and benefit funds but steadily and repeatedly exploited the honor and integrity of the victim in this case, an Army veteran, according to the charges. The crimes charged in this indictment -- identity theft, criminal impersonation, grand larceny and welfare fraud, among others -- alter victims’ official data, undermining their livelihoods and creating avoidable legal and financial obstacles. DOI is proud to have partnered with the Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office and the Office of Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs on this important corruption investigation.”

 The District Attorney identified the defendants as Kevin Middleton, 40, and Tonni Chapman, 49, both of Los Angeles, California (formerly of Brooklyn). They were arraigned today before Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Danny Chun on an 84-count indictment in which they are variously charged with third- and fourth-degree grand larceny, second-degree forgery, first- and second-degree identity theft, second-degree criminal impersonation, third- and fourthdegree welfare fraud, and related charges. They were released without bail and ordered to return to court on March 23, 2022. 

 The District Attorney said that, according to the investigation, in February 2018, Kevin Middleton allegedly posed as Kevin Chapman and obtained a non-driver’s license identification card from the South Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles in Kevin Chapman’s name. The I.D. card was issued in Chapman’s name and with his date of birth, but with Middleton’s photograph.

 It is also alleged that Middleton obtained a replacement Social Security card in Chapman’s name under his Social Security number, and that the defendant forged Chapman’s signature onto the card. The defendant also allegedly obtained a New York State identification card in Chapman’s name, but with the defendant’s photograph.

 Furthermore, it is alleged, the defendant posed as Kevin Chapman in May 2018 and went to the United States Department of Veterans Affairs office in Manhattan and applied for a replacement VA card in Kevin Chapman’s name. He allegedly used the fraudulently obtained non-driver’s license, NYS I.D. card and Social Security card as proof of identity. A replacement card was mailed to the defendant in Brooklyn, with his photo and Kevin Chapman’s name and date of birth on it.

 Kevin Chapman, the victim in this case, is a U.S. Army veteran and the former husband of defendant Tonni Chapman, who is the girlfriend of defendant Kevin Middleton. 

 It is alleged that the defendants applied for benefits pursuant to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) using Kevin Chapman’s identity and received $1,000 in benefits from May 31, 2018 and January 13, 2020.

 It is alleged that the defendants, using Kevin Chapman’s identity, received social services from the VA to which they were not entitled while living in a homeless shelter. In approximately September 2018, social workers from the VA assisted Middleton with his application for Section 8 housing, in Chapman’s name, which the New York City Housing Authority expedited because of his status as a military veteran. From November 2018 through the present, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development paid more than $35,000 to subsidize the defendant’s rent at the Boulevard Houses in East New York.

 Furthermore, it is alleged, on June 8, 2019, police went to the apartment in response to a 911 call involving a domestic dispute and were allegedly told by Tonni Chapman that her assailant (who was not home at the time) was Kevin Chapman. The next day, the police returned to the apartment and arrested Kevin Middleton, who was allegedly posing as Kevin Chapman. When he failed to appear in court in July 2019, a bench warrant was issued for Kevin Chapman.

 An indictment is an accusatory instrument and not proof of a defendant’s guilt.

Attorney General James' Statement on MLK Day

 

“At this time of year when we celebrate what would have been Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s 93rd birthday, and at this moment in our history as a nation, I am thinking about the words Dr. King spoke on his last full day of life. On that evening in Memphis, Dr. King told us that we would someday get to the ‘promised land.’ After the year we just had, the promised land can seem further and further away. We are still struggling with the pandemic. We are still fighting for social justice. We are still watching efforts to deny sacred rights, like the right to vote, from too many Americans.

“None of us is brave enough, smart enough, or prophetic enough to be Dr. King, but at our best we are continuing his work. That means exercising our most basic democratic right to vote whenever we have the opportunity. That means doing all we can to protect that same right for all Americans. Now is the time to do away with any obstacle that infringes upon the people’s right to vote and have their vote counted. In honor of Dr. King, that means passing the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, which are essential to ensuring that our elections are fair, our ballot boxes are accessible, and the voices of all Americans are heard. In order to truly safeguard our democracy, we must safeguard the right to vote.

“America has marched a long road, and we still have a long road ahead, but when we join together in the spirit of Dr. King, someday we will get to the promised land.”

Governor Hochul Delivers Remarks at National Action Network's Annual Martin Luther King Day Public Policy Forum

 Governor Hochul delivers remarks at Public Policy Forum

Governor Hochul: "One of the issues that we must galvanize behind is recognizing that yes, we've come through a difficult time with this virus known as COVID, but there is an insidious virus that's attacking our very core of our democracy. And that's known as voter suppression. We must link arms together to fight against what is going on, not in our state, thank God, but all across America. Well, evil forces are trying to stop Black and Brown people from exercising a right that Dr. King fought for as well and we won't let that happen. We're going to continue fighting marching, making sure that our leaders in Washington respond, even those who are not with us now."

 Good afternoon, what a great day it is as we honor the memory, the man, and the movement of Dr. Martin Luther King. And I want to thank Reverend Al, for keeping the flame glowing as high as Dr. King would’ve wanted, keeping that movement moving through generations and generations. And today we continue to pass the torch on to the next generation to keep the dream of Dr. King alive. And that's what today is all about.

And so my reflections of Dr. King, and this is going to tell you how old I really am, I wrote a book report about his life as a child growing up in a very strong, social justice Catholic family. But we spent a lot of time going to Dr. King's marches that were spreading all across places, even like Buffalo, New York, while he was still alive. And the night that we got word that he had been gunned down, my family gathered and we held hands and we prayed for what was happening to our country.

And that was just a precursor of a very dark time in our history. Months later, we lost Bobby Kennedy. Then we had riots in the streets. We had a lot of injustice and we had a Vietnam war going on. This is all going on as my childhood, was opening up my eyes to what the injustices in this world. And I remember the words of Dr. King that every single day you must wake up and say, what am I doing for others. And that's what drew me to public service. That's why we're here today.

That's why we're here with other outstanding elected officials. Like our great Majority Leader in the U.S, not the New York, but the United States Senate. The one and only Chuck Schumer, who you’ll be hearing from shortly. Chuck Schumer is here and our Congress members, Carolyn Maloney and Adriano Espaillat great leaders who I served with in Congress. Incredible individuals and our brand new speaker, a female speaker, Adrienne Adams, you’re going to be hearing from in a while, as well as our district attorneys and others who have joined us here today.

We come together to join with clergy and community to say, this is our moment. This is how we'll be judged generations from now, how we respond to the call to continue the fight for justice. And that is why on December 23rd, one of the bills I was so proud to sign into law declared that racism is a public health crisis today because the war is not over. The battle is not over. The march must go on toward justice because we are not there yet my friends. Dr. King would say we are not to the top of the mountain just yet. And one of the issues that we must galvanize behind is recognizing that yes, we've come through a difficult time with this virus known as COVID, but there is an insidious virus that's attacking our very core of our democracy.

And that's known as voter suppression. We must link arms together to fight against what is going on, not in our state, thank God, but all across America. Well, evil forces are trying to stop black and brown people from exercising a right that Dr. King fought for as well and we won't let that happen. We're going to continue fighting marching, making sure that our leaders in Washington respond, even those who are not with us now.

We need them to turn their hearts and do what is right. And also at out state level, I am not going to as Governor, without focusing on the issues that matter. Like making sure people have housing over their heads, a great education for our children to lift them out of their circumstances, quality healthcare, which we saw happen during this pandemic. The disparity and why so many more black and brown individuals died of COVID, because they were denied quality access to healthcare and why more mothers to be are being lost in childbirth. Black mothers are losing their lives because they are getting inferior healthcare.

These are the issues of our time, and I'm committed, in the name of Dr. Martin Luther King, to carry on what I can do in our state government, work with my partners in government, our partners at all levels, from Washington down to the local level. We will continue to march forward until we get to the mountain top, because we're not there yet, my friends. So start packing up your backpack, put on your hiking boots because we're going to the mountain top together. Thank you very much.