Saturday, November 9, 2024

Attorney General James’ Office of Special Investigation Releases Report on Death of Sofia Gomez

 

New York Attorney General Letitia James’ Office of Special Investigation (OSI) released its report on the death of Sofia Gomez, who died on October 8, 2020 following an encounter with a member of Highway District 1 of the New York City Police Department (NYPD) on October 5, 2020 in Bronx County. Following a thorough investigation, including review of dashboard camera footage from the NYPD vehicle and a civilian vehicle, interviews with witnesses and the involved officer, and interviews with an expert in motor vehicle incidents and NYPD officials, OSI concluded that a prosecutor would not be able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that criminal charges are warranted in this case.

On the afternoon of October 5, 2020, an NYPD officer assigned to Highway District 1 responded to a call for backup on the Throgs Neck Bridge in the Bronx. The officer was driving in a marked NYPD vehicle with the sirens on and turret lights activated. As the officer was in transit to the Throgs Neck Bridge, he received a transmission over the radio stating, “shots fired,” and so he increased his speed. While driving eastbound on Pelham Parkway South, the officer approached the intersection at Wallace Avenue while traveling at a speed of more than 60 MPH and went through a standing red light. At that moment, Ms. Gomez was crossing Pelham Parkway South in the crosswalk and the officer struck her with his vehicle. Ms. Gomez was taken to a local hospital, where she was pronounced dead on October 8, 2020. 

Under OSI’s analysis of New York’s Vehicle & Traffic Law, and Penal Law, and case law articulated by New York’s highest court, a police officer who causes a death while properly responding in a police vehicle to an emergency cannot be charged with a crime unless the officer acts recklessly or intentionally. The criminal charge that requires recklessness is Manslaughter in the Second Degree, in which a person is guilty when they recklessly cause the death of another person. Recklessly means that the actor consciously disregards a “substantial and unjustifiable” risk of death and that their actions are a “gross deviation” from a reasonable standard of conduct.

In this case, while the officer is responsible for Ms. Gomez’s death, the evidence does not establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the officer’s conduct was a gross deviation of the standard that would have been observed by a reasonable officer in the same circumstances, or that the officer consciously disregarded a substantial and unjustifiable risk of death. The officer was speeding because he was responding to an emergency, including a report of “shots fired.” He took precautions before passing through the red light by activating his emergency lights and sirens and, when the officer did see Ms. Gomez, he braked, slowing from 65 MPH to 58 MPH, and turned the wheel to avoid the collision. There was no evidence that the officer was impaired by drugs or alcohol, or was texting or on a phone call or otherwise distracted. Therefore, OSI concluded that there was insufficient evidence to pursue criminal charges. 

The NYPD’s patrol guide requires that if qualified to do so, the patrol supervisor must administer an alcohol test to any police officer involved in a collision that results in a death, and if not qualified, the patrol supervisor should request a qualified Highway Unit officer to administer the test. A test was not administered to the officer until almost two hours after the collision. While there is no evidence the officer in question was impaired or intoxicated, OSI recommends that all patrol supervisors be trained in administering alcohol breath tests to avoid similar delays in the future.

The OSI also recommends that NYPD heighten the security of their radio transmissions. The officer increased his speed after a radio transmission indicated shots had been fired. The OSI investigation revealed that this transmission came from an unknown source and that the NYPD should heighten radio security to decrease the risk of outside transmissions, such as this one, that may affect police investigations and emergency responses. 

Finally, OSI recommends that every NYPD officer receive Emergency Vehicle Operator Course (EVOC) training once per year in an effort to prevent future collisions between police cars and civilians. 

Telefónica Venezolana to Pay Over $85M to Resolve Foreign Bribery Investigation

 

Telefónica Venezolana C.A. (Telefónica Venezolana), a Venezuela-based subsidiary of Telefónica S.A. (Telefónica), a publicly traded global telecommunications operator based in Spain, will pay over $85.2 million to resolve an investigation by the Justice Department into a scheme to bribe government officials in Venezuela to receive preferential access to U.S. dollars in a currency auction.

Telefónica Venezolana entered into a deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) in connection with a criminal information filed today in the Southern District of New York charging the company with conspiracy to violate the anti-bribery provisions of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA).

“Telefónica Venezolana bribed Venezuelan government officials to participate in a government auction through which it exchanged Venezuelan bolivars for U.S. dollars. The company concealed the illicit payments by purchasing equipment at inflated prices from two suppliers who paid the bribes on the company’s behalf,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Nicole M. Argentieri, head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. “Telefónica Venezolana chose to support a corrupt regime to circumvent the difficulties of conducting legal business in Venezuela. This resolution is yet another example of the Justice Department’s commitment to fight corruption and hold companies accountable for their criminal conduct.”

“Telefónica Venezolana, a subsidiary and agent of a U.S. issuer, agreed to line the pockets of corrupt Venezuelan officials to gain access to U.S. currency and maintain its position in the Venezuelan telecommunications market,” said U.S. Attorney Damian Williams for the Southern District of New York. “Intermediaries then funneled the bribe payments through U.S. correspondent bank accounts. This office will not tolerate the use and abuse of the U.S. financial system to enrich corrupt foreign officials and those who maintain their market position by appeasing them.”

“This case is an example of the IRS Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI)’s and our law enforcement partners’ relentless effort to fight corruption and protect United States interests,” said Executive Special Agent in Charge Kareem Carter of the IRS-CI Washington Field Office. “We are committed to pursuing investigations into corporate fraud in an effort to protect consumers from bearing the costs associated with criminal activity.”

“Telefónica Venezolana engaged in a complex and criminal financial fraud scheme, in which they bribed Venezuelan government officials to obtain access to U.S. dollars,” said Executive Associate Director Katrina W. Berger of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI). “Thanks to the cooperative efforts of HSI, IRS-CI, and the Justice Department, the perpetrators of this conspiracy will be forced to pay for their illicit actions. HSI will continue to collaborate with our law enforcement partners, at home and overseas, to investigate and bring to justice any corporations engaging in such financial crimes.”

According to court documents and admissions, in 2014, Telefónica Venezolana participated in a government-sponsored currency auction in Venezuela that allowed it to exchange its Venezuelan bolivars for U.S. dollars. To ensure its success in the auction, Telefónica Venezolana recruited two suppliers to make approximately $28.9 million in corrupt payments to an intermediary, knowing that some of those funds would be paid as a “commission” to Venezuelan government officials. To conceal the bribe payments, Telefónica Venezolana covered the cost of the bribes by purchasing equipment from the two suppliers at inflated prices. As a result of its corrupt payments, Telefónica Venezolana was permitted to exchange and subsequently received over $110 million through the currency auction, which it used to purchase equipment from the two suppliers it recruited to join the scheme. These funds represented over 65% of the funds that the Venezuelan government awarded in the 2014 currency auction.

As part of the DPA, Telefónica Venezolana and its corporate parent, Telefónica, have agreed, among other things, to continue cooperating with the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York in any ongoing or future criminal investigation arising during the term of the DPA. In addition, Telefónica Venezolana and Telefónica have agreed to enhance their compliance program where necessary and appropriate, and to report to the government regarding remediation and implementation of their enhanced compliance program.

The Justice Department reached this resolution with Telefónica Venezolana based on a number of factors, including, among others, the nature and seriousness of the offense. Telefónica Venezolana received credit for its cooperation with the department’s investigation, which included: (i) making regular factual presentations to the department based on the information learned in the course of Telefónica Venezolana’s internal investigation; (ii) voluntarily making employees based outside the United States available for interviews in the United States; (iii) producing a significant number of documents to the department, while navigating foreign data privacy and related laws; and (iv) collecting, analyzing, and organizing voluminous evidence and information for the department, accompanied by translations of documents. However, in the initial phases of the department’s investigation, Telefónica Venezolana failed to timely identify, collect, produce, and disclose certain records and important information, which affected investigative efforts by the department and reduced the impact of Telefónica Venezolana’s cooperation.

Telefónica Venezolana also engaged in timely remedial measures, including: (i) disciplining certain employees involved in the relevant misconduct or who were otherwise made aware of the misconduct, including terminating employees; (ii) strengthening its anti-corruption compliance program by building and empowering an independent compliance function, appointing a Chief Compliance Officer with direct access to the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors, and investing in additional compliance resources throughout its global operations; (iii) overhauling its review and approval process for transactions with non-standard pricing, including by ensuring that the compliance function reviews all such transactions globally; (iv) reviewing, enhancing, and testing its broader internal controls for pricing and other transactions with the assistance of a forensic accounting firm; (v) strengthening processes for vetting, engaging, and monitoring third parties, including implementing additional controls concerning payments to third parties through a proprietary software tool; and (vi) establishing risk assessment and audit processes to regularly review and update the compliance program and otherwise mitigate business risks.

In light of these considerations, as well as Telefónica Venezolana’s and Telefónica’s prior history, which includes a resolution involving a subsidiary of Telefónica, Telefónica Brasil S.A., in an action brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission in 2019 for alleged violations of the accounting provisions of the FCPA, the criminal penalty of $85,260,000 calculated under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines reflects a 20% reduction off the fifth percentile above the low end of the otherwise applicable guidelines fine range.

IRS-CI and HSI are investigating the case as part of the IRS Global Illicit Financial Team in Washington, D.C.

Senior Litigation Counsel Nicola Mrazek and Trial Attorney Abdus Samad Pardesi of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jilan Kamal for the Southern District of New York are prosecuting the case.

The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs and authorities in Panama, Switzerland, and Luxembourg provided assistance in this matter.

New York State Parks Announces 24 Nominations for State and National Registers of Historic Places

 

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Nominations Represent Varied Histories Highlighting Stories Across New York State

Sites include a grain elevator in Buffalo, industrial buildings in Schenectady, a crafts colony historic district in the Hudson Valley, and additional documentation for a lesbian and feminist publishing house in Ithaca.  

The New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation announced the nominations of 24 properties and districts to the State and National Registers of Historic Places. The nominations include bank buildings, factories, historic district updates, and more.  

 

New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation Commissioner Pro Tempore Randy Simons said, “New York State’s historic resources are a real asset for the people of New York. As we continue to expand the listings in the State and National Registers of Historic Places, these new additions will be eligible for historic preservation programs and incentives, such as matching state grants and federal and state historic rehabilitation tax credits. These resources can be a lifeline for preservation projects that contribute to the economic vitality and vibrancy of communities across the state.” 

 

New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation Deputy Commissioner for Historic Preservation Daniel Mackay said, “The work of the Division for Historic Preservation is, necessarily, ongoing as ‘new’ historic resources become eligible for the State and National Registers every year. Working within the guidelines of the National Park Service, we aim to consider the varied and rich histories of the state through nominations and to connect communities with resources to help them preserve and promote their historic resources.” 

 

The State and National Registers are the official lists of buildings, structures, districts, landscapes, objects, and sites significant in the history, architecture, archaeology, and culture of New York State and the nation. There are more than 126,000 historic properties throughout the state listed on the National Register of Historic Places, either individually or as components of historic districts. Property owners, municipalities, and organizations from communities throughout the state sponsored the nominations.  

 

The nominations were made by the New York State Board for Historic Preservation and the Deputy State Historic Preservation Officer at a Board meeting held on September 12, 2024, at the New York State Museum in Albany. The Deputy Commissioner, who serves as the Deputy State Historic Preservation Officer, approved the proposals thereby listing the properties on the New York State Register of Historic Places and then nominating them to the National Register of Historic Places, where they are reviewed by the National Park Service and, once approved, entered in the National Register. More information, with photos of the nominations, is available on the Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation website

 

New York State continues to lead the nation in the use of historic tax credits, with $3.96 billion in total rehabilitation costs from 2018-2022. Since 2009, the historic tax credit program has stimulated over $13 billion in project expenditures in New York State, creating significant investment and new jobs. According to a report, between 2018-2022, the credits in New York State generated 72,918 jobs and over $1.47 billion in local, state, and federal taxes



Capital Region 

 

Center Square/Hudson-Park Historic District Additional Documentation, Albany County – The Center Square/Hudson-Park Historic District, a large, primarily residential, district located just west of Albany’s major commercial and governmental center, was listed in the National Register in 1980 with a period of significance ending in 1920. This additional documentation chronicles the last phase of historic and architectural development in the district and extends the period of significance to 1957. It also reevaluates nine buildings in the district constructed during the 1950s; all embody a restrained Modern aesthetic marked by simple, geometric forms, large windows, and a lack of applied historicist ornament. They are modest in scale and use similar materials to the district’s older buildings, while offering an update to the Victorian period styles that otherwise dominate the district. Most of these buildings were built to meet the increasing need for office space associated with the phenomenal growth of New York State government in the period after World War II. They complete the catalogue of period types and styles documented in the original district nomination. 

 

General Electric Building 31, Schenectady County – General Electric (G.E.) Building 31 is a ca. 1887 two-story brick industrial building with Italianate style detailing that was originally constructed for the Westinghouse Illuminating Company, an early rival of inventor and businessman Thomas Edison. Located in downtown Schenectady, it originally faced the Erie Canal before the canal was filled in to create Erie Boulevard. General Electric acquired the building to supplement their large Schenectady campus, and it was the home of their Illuminating Engineering Laboratory, where lighting pioneer William D’Arcy Ryan led his team in researching and testing new products and lighting technologies. Ryan is known for designing the lighting scheme of the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition and for popularizing the use of floodlighting. After the demolition of much of GE’s Schenectady campus in the 1980s, G.E. Building 31 is now one of only a few surviving buildings in the city that were used by General Electric during its heyday. It is also a rare remaining late-1800s industrial building in this section of Schenectady. 

 

General Electric Building 32, Schenectady County – General Electric (G.E.) Building 32, located between downtown Schenectady and the former headquarters of General Electric, is one of the earliest surviving examples of “Daylight Factory” design in the Electric City. Built in 1909 by the A.G. Lindley Company of Schenectady, the four-story brick building was originally occupied by the Mohawk Overall Company until G.E. purchased it in 1915. Reinforced steel cast concrete buildings such as this were revolutionary because they offered a degree of fireproofing and allowed for uninterrupted floor plans with large windows. G.E. found this new design advantageous and used the building initially as a machine shop. From the 1930s to the 1980s, it served as an educational training center for G.E. employees. It is one of the few remaining G.E. linked buildings still standing on Erie Boulevard today. 

 

 

Central New York 

 

Montgomery Street/Columbus Circle Historic District Boundary Expansion/Boundary Decrease, Onondaga County – The Montgomery Street/Columbus Circle Historic District was originally listed in the National Register in 1980 for its architectural and historical significance as an exceptionally intact historic urban neighborhood that retained significant streetscapes and buildings chronicling the character and development of Syracuse’s historic urban core between ca. 1846 and ca. 1930. The primary purpose of the new nomination is to expand the boundary of the original district and to extend the period of significance to 1975 to better reflect downtown Syracuse’s development through the post-World War II and urban renewal eras. The nomination also reduces the boundary in two places to eliminate the site of a building that has been demolished and an empty lot that was mistakenly included. The contributing buildings being added to the district were all constructed within the amended period of significance (1846-1975) and are similar in architectural character and historic associations to other buildings in the district. In addition, there are important examples of Syracuse’s Modern architecture designed by significant local and regional architects of the day: Horatio Nelson White, George B. Post & Sons, Gustavus A. Young, King & King, Gordon Schopfer, I. M. Pei, and Kahn & Jacobs. Three resources within the expansion area – the Onondaga County War Memorial, Plymouth Congregational Church & Parish House, and the Hotel Syracuse – were all previously listed in the register individually. 

 

 

Finger Lakes 

 

Reed Manufacturing Company, Wayne County – The Reed Manufacturing Company was founded in 1890 in the village of Newark. Reed Manufacturing produced rust-resistant coated containers – including kitchenware and utensils, pans and roasters, pails, tubs, and wash boilers – which were sold at stores throughout the country. This 1903 factory building is a notable example of a transitional industrial building, which shifted from traditional heavy-timber mill construction to curtain wall “Daylight Factory” design. It includes an H-shaped manufacturing building and a small, freestanding administration building. The building was eventually sold in 1946, after the Reed Company vacated it, and was used by the C.H. Stuart Company to manufacture cosmetics.   

 

Seneca Chief Shipwreck, Ontario County – The Seneca Chief shipwreck is located on the bottomlands of Canandaigua Lake in the Town of Canandaigua. This steam yacht was built by shipbuilder David Bell and launched by the Canandaigua Lake Steamboat Company in 1887. The Seneca Chief was primarily used for excursion trips but also was sometimes used to support commercial and agricultural industries. After nearly ten seasons on the lake, the vessel was salvaged and then towed out onto the lake and sunk. It has great historic integrity and is a highly representative example of a steam yacht of its era, a vessel class important to the tourist, commercial, and agricultural industries of Canandaigua Lake during the late 1800s.  

 

 

Mid-Hudson 

 

Kingston Barrel Factory, Ulster County – The Kingston Barrel Factory is locally significant as a building central to the industrial development of Kingston. The two-story brick building was constructed ca. 1914 as a box factory but transitioned to barrel manufacturing in 1917. Located near the Hudson River and railroad, the Kingston Barrel Factory served a large New York market and employed as many as fifty to seventy skilled workers, even during the economic downturn of the Great Depression. The factory was a “tight cooperage,” meaning the barrels manufactured there were designed to hold liquids instead of solids. The plant trained craftsmen to produce the barrels, which needed to be expertly finished to avoid leaks. Tight barrels were in demand and required more skill to make; thus, the factory brought a successful and lucrative business to Kingston at a time when the United States led barrel production. Despite officially turning from the liquor industry during Prohibition, the factory had a link to Legs Diamond, a notorious gangster and bootlegger who bottled and stored ale at the site until federal agents seized one million dollars’ worth of alcohol and equipment during a raid there in 1931. 

 

Sailing Vessel Gitana, Westchester County – The Gitana is a 40-foot Bermuda-rigged Yawl sailing yacht built in 1936 to the design of respected naval architect John G. Alden, using entirely traditional materials and techniques. She is an increasingly rare example of the transitional phase of boat design of the 1930s and representative of a bygone age of wood boat construction and the boating culture that flourished around it, which was replaced by mass produced reinforced plastic boats starting in the 1960s. Gitana’s builders utilized the plank-on-frame method using shaped planks of Cuban mahogany fastened onto a skeleton of white oak timbers using bronze screws and bolts. Belowdecks, she has accommodations for a crew of six, a small pantry and woodburning stove, and an auxiliary inboard engine. Her furnishings, down to the kitchen sink, are original. The Gitana is in unaltered condition and true to the materials, technology, and art of traditional shipbuilding of her time. The vessel is currently docked in the lower harbor of New Rochelle. 

 

Sugar Loaf Historic District, Orange County – The Sugar Loaf Historic District is comprised of a small group of late 1800s/early 1900s buildings sited on both sides of Kings Highway in the hamlet of Sugar Loaf. This area was originally a small commercial center that provided services to local farms and travelers. Its heyday in the mid to late 1800s coincided with an era of prosperity for local dairy farmers. However, the rise of large corporate farms and the onset of the Great Depression caused the area’s agricultural economy to decline. Then, in 1967, Sugar Loaf was “discovered” by craftsman Walter Kannon, who spurred the revitalization of the hamlet as a crafts colony with help from woodcarver Jarvis Boone. Within a short time, the former single-family houses on Kings Highway were occupied by craftspeople who made candles, leather goods, wooden objects, metalwork, and pottery and sold their products out of small, in-home shops. By hosting regular art shows and craft fairs, Sugar Loaf built a reputation as a hub for handmade goods that it still enjoys today. 

 

 

Mohawk Valley 

 

Joseph Peck House, Otsego County – Located in the hamlet of New Lisbon, the 1852 residence was built by local merchant Joseph Peck. Architecturally, the two-story, three-bay, double-pile, hip-roofed building shows Peck’s stylistic preferences and reflects his standing in the community. Notable features include a prominent Greek Revival portico, with many other Gothic Revival and Italianate details throughout the building. There is also a ca. 1820 one-story, gable-roofed, wood frame barn on the property. 

 

Schuyler Lake Stone Church, Otsego County – Located in the hamlet of Schuyler Lake, the meeting-house style church was built in 1838 as a Union Church for three different church societies: Free Baptist, Universalist, and Methodist Episcopal. Constructed with local stone and embellished with interior decorative paint work, this prominent landmark has both Federal and Greek Revival architectural characteristics. The church was shared by the three congregations, which met on different Sundays on a monthly rotation.   


 

 

New York City 

 

28th Police Precinct Station House, New York County – The 28th Police Precinct Station House was constructed 1892-1893 during a period of rapid urbanization in the East Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan. It was designed by Nathaniel D. Bush, resident architect for the New York City Police Department in the late 1800s, and exemplifies the mature phase of his later career. With the expressionism of its façade and the extensive use of sculpted stone trim, the building stood out amidst the surrounding row houses and tenement buildings. The interior followed a standardized floor plan that included offices on the first floor, sleeping quarters and a gymnasium on the upper levels, with a rear annex for jail cells and lodging for the unhoused. The 28th Precinct also played a significant role in the community's response to police brutality, particularly during the East Harlem uprising of 1967, which arose amid accusations of racially motivated violence against the predominantly Puerto Rican and Black residents of the area. Hope Community, Inc., the current owner since 1981, was established in response to the housing injustices that helped fueled the unrest. 

 

Dollar Savings Bank, Bronx County – The Dollar Savings Bank, located in the Fordham neighborhood of the Bronx in New York City, is a monumental example of classicized Art Deco-style bank architecture. This building was completed in three phases between 1932 and 1952 and was designed by Adolf F. Muller of the architecture firm Halsey, McCormack & Helmer. The design of the earlier sections reflects a transition from Beaux Arts principles to modernism, featuring a sleek exterior of polished Texas pink granite ashlar, large double-height openings, and stylized decorative elements like the “Liberty Head” silver dollar representations above the main entrances. The 1952 tower addition, while maintaining elements of the original design, showcases a simpler yet still monumental approach to bank symbolism. The Dollar Savings Bank is also significant for its association with the commercial development of the Bronx. Established in 1890 by Bronx business leaders, the Dollar Savings Bank was the first thrift institution, or mutual savings bank, created in the Bronx. This location originally housed the Fordham branch office for the company and later became its headquarters after the ten-story office tower was completed. This building served as a bank until 2014, having been absorbed into the Emigrant Savings Bank in 1992. 

 

Gaylord White Houses, New York County – The Gaylord White Houses is a public housing development for seniors located in the Metro North section of East Harlem, Manhattan. Planning began in 1957 and the complex was completed in 1964. It was designed by the firm of Mayer, Whittlesey & Glass. The need for specialized housing for older Americans became a national priority in the 1950s due to the rapidly increasing senior population and the advent of the nuclear family. State and federal laws encouraged local authorities to build housing with senior-specific accommodations like accessible bathrooms and kitchens. The White Houses represents the first time the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) planned a housing development exclusively for senior residents. This development is also an example of NYCHA’s early vest-pocket program, initiated under Mayor Robert F. Wagner Jr. as a direct response to the federal Housing Act of 1954. This important housing law shifted focus from “slum clearance” – the wholesale demolition of areas determined to be irredeemably blighted – to “urban renewal,” which aimed to preserve neighborhoods deemed to be declining but salvageable through smaller, targeted interventions. The Gaylord White Houses was developed in coordination with Union Settlement, an important community organization that had long promoted social services in the neighborhood. The building includes a wing that contains the headquarters for the Union Settlement, as well as a children’s center and community center. 

 

Louise Terrace/Colonial Road Historic District, Kings County – The Louise Terrace/Colonial Road Historic District is an intact, representative example of a Tudor Revival-style terrace development in the Bay Ridge neighborhood of Brooklyn. The district consists of three identical blockfronts – two facing Louise Terrace and one facing Colonial Road. The development was constructed in 1927 to the designs of Swedish-born architect Olaf B. Almgren for local developer Adam Schumann and named after Schumann’s daughter, Louise Schumann McCormick. The attached row houses are symmetrically arranged on each blockfront and feature typical Tudor Revival-style characteristics such as brick-clad walls laid in English bond, pitched slate roofs, front-facing gables, prominent chimneys, and decorative half-timbering with stucco. 

 

Dominican Historic District, New York County – The Dominican Historic District encompasses 40 blocks in northern Manhattan that capture the unique architectural and cultural history of this immigrant neighborhood. Many significant immigrant communities shaped the neighborhood over time; substantial communities of Armenian, Greek, Irish, German, and European Jewish immigrants influenced the building of Washington Heights during the first part of the 1900s. By the mid-1900s, Puerto Ricans and African Americans had settled in the neighborhood and, in the 1960s, a substantial number of Dominicans had come to call Washington Heights a permanent home. Since then, the Dominican community has worked to establish a cultural, political, and social center in the neighborhood. The community’s emphasis on establishing organizations to teach Dominican history and culture; encouraging political engagement; addressing social needs such as affordable housing and poverty; and continuing Dominican lifeways in Washington Heights demonstrate ongoing contributions to the history of the neighborhood and capture a unique period of immigration history. The combination of the built environment and the Dominican cultural use of the space speaks to the vibrant relationship between past, present, and future in this iconic neighborhood. 

 

West Brighton Plaza, Richmond County – The West Brighton Plaza is federally funded, low-rent public housing that was developed for the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) on Staten Island and built as two separate projects, in 1960 and 1965. Historically, it illustrates examples of long-term patterns of housing segregation and discrimination on Staten Island as the result of redlining, failed zoning initiatives, and neighborhood disinvestment. The architect of West Brighton I, Irwin Clavan, designed the first phase as eight, eight-story brick-faced towers with H-shaped plans. The architects of West Brighton II, Simeon Heller and George Meltzer, reconceived the low-income elderly housing as rows of rectangular, one-story brick apartments with low-pitched hipped roofs, occasional cupolas or decorative gables, and wide overhanging eaves that form porches supported on decorated iron posts. The interiors were equipped to meet state requirements for elderly and disabled occupants. West Brighton I and West Brighton II were unified by landscape designs from renowned designers Clarke and Rapuano that incorporate open, parklike space, connecting paths, and specific activity areas. The West Brighton Plaza has served as public housing since its completion and has undergone minimal alterations.

 

North Country 

 

Lowville & Beaver River Railroad, Lewis County – The Lowville & Beaver River Railroad (LBRR) is a 10.6-mile short line railroad corridor from Lowville to Croghan that was built between 1903 and 1906. Characterized as a “short line” railroad, it was capitalized, constructed, and operated purely by local and community interests for the development of Lewis County. The district remains as one of the few short lines in the state and is particularly notable as it shows the transition period between canals and railroads, eating rooms and dining cars, ice harvesting and refrigeration, and the development of northern New York communities through locally owned and managed railroads. The railroad is highly unusual in that is virtually intact from its original construction and retains several notable resources such as three depots, a dining house, two Armstrong turntables, largely uninterrupted track, and several historic steel bridges that reflect the engineering standards of the late railroad era. Until 2007, the LBRR transported several important goods to markets near and far, including dairy and maple products, wood products from some of the largest paper manufacturers in the state, ice blocks, potatoes, and passengers.   

 

 

Southern Tier 

 

Ithaca Downtown Historic District Additional Documentation, Thompkins County – The Ithaca Downtown Historic District, listed in the National Register in 2005, encompasses almost the entire commercial core of the city of Ithaca and is characterized by small-scale multi-story, primarily brick buildings with first-story storefronts and residential or other commercial spaces above. The purpose of this additional documentation is to add areas of significance for LGBT and Women’s History and to document the building at 141-143 East State Street as the headquarters of Firebrand Books, a multiple award-winning lesbian and feminist publishing house. Firebrand, founded by activist, editor, and publisher Nancy K. Bereano in 1984, became a nationally recognized leader in the publishing revolution that occurred during the Second Wave Feminist, Women in Print, and lesbian and gay (today, LGBT) movements of the 1970s and 1980s. The press produced work in a wide variety of genres by ethnically and racially diverse authors, including Dorothy Allison, Alison Bechdel, Cheryl Clarke, Leslie Feinberg, Jewelle Gomez, Audre Lorde, and Minnie Bruce Pratt. Bereano has been recognized by scholars for her contributions to small press publishing, women’s history, and LGBT scholarship. The press was headquartered on the second floor of the building at 141-143 East State Street, and the three rooms in which Bereano and her colleagues worked have remained nearly unaltered since the press closed in 2000. This documentation adds 1984-1993 as an additional period of significance for these areas.  

 

Lawrence Memorial Chapel and Cemetery, Schuyler County – The Lawrence Memorial Chapel and Cemetery is located in the rural Town of Catharine. The Gothic Revival chapel and the adjacent Lawrence Cemetery occupy a low knoll along New York State Route 228 on the west side of Cayuta Lake. The Lawrences were one of the founding families of today’s Schuyler County. The cemetery was established sometime before 1832 and contains fifty monuments ranging from plain gravestones to tall obelisks and statuary marking burials of Lawrence family members, friends, and associates. Under the direction of Jane G. Lawrence Campbell, per the wishes of her brother Abraham Lawrence, a one-story Gothic Revival chapel built of local fieldstone was built next to the cemetery in 1880. It is a five-by-three bay building with nature-themed stained-glass windows in lancet openings, a decorative slate roof, and granite-capped buttresses. A well-fashioned dry-laid stone wall surrounds the property, and a series of stone steps leads to the entrance of the chapel. The chapel retains original furnishing throughout and is little changed from the final cemetery interment in 1914.  

 

 

Western New York 

 

Alden State Bank, Erie County – Located in the village of Alden, the Alden State Bank building was constructed in 1925 to the designs of architect Herbert C. Swain. The building Swain designed was in the Neoclassical style, a style typically used for financial institutions as a way of conveying permanence and stability – all important associations for a bank. In 1963, the building was sold to the Alden Advertiser newspaper; the Alden State Bank constructed a new facility next door. Recently, the Alden State Bank has re-acquired their historic building and is renovating it to be used as a branch bank once again.  

 

Sattler Theater, Erie County – Built in 1914 to the designs of prominent local architects William and Henry Spann, the Sattler Theater, later known as the Broadway Theater, is a notable example of a neighborhood theater in the heart of Buffalo’s East Side. Commissioned by local department store entrepreneur John G. Sattler, the theater served as both a way to promote his business interests and to enhance the community which gave him his start. Neighborhood theaters like the Sattler were designed with the same level of opulence and attention to detail as the grander movie palaces and theater houses sited in larger commercial districts and offered moviegoers the same elevated experience but at a discounted rate. Sattler sold the theater in 1916, and it continued showing movies during the 1920s and 1930s, eventually becoming part of the larger Basil theater chain. Despite some remodeling in 1948, the theater struggled in the post-war era and closed as a motion picture theater around 1963. The building was vacant from 1996 to 2008, when the current owner purchased it and started stabilizing and redeveloping it. 

 

Spencer Kellogg & Sons Elevator, Erie County – The Spencer Kellogg & Sons Elevator is an example of a reinforced concrete grain elevator, located in the heart of Buffalo’s “Elevator Alley” along the Buffalo River. Built in 1910, the elevator is unusual; unlike Buffalo’s other elevators, which housed wheat or barley grains, this elevator housed linseed, which was used by the Spencer Kellogg company to manufacture linseed oil for paints and other industrial uses. The birthplace of the grain elevator, Buffalo is known for its many extant facilities in the 1920s, these sleek, functional, agricultural structures inspired European Modern architects; architect Erich Mendelsohn photographed the Kellogg Elevator for his Amerika: Bilderbuch eines Architekten (1926). 

 

Yeomans House, Erie County – The Yeomans House, located in East Aurora, has been described as "one of the best examples of a 'High Victorian' brick residence in the county." This Queen Anne style house is prominently located among the stately houses on East Main Street and has welcomed visitors to the village since its construction in 1885. Built for James D. Yeomans, a railway executive and Iowa State Senator, the building features elements such as a seventy-five-foot-tall tower, oriel windows, a two-story bay window, and a combination of terra cotta and wood details.


Weekly News from State Senator Gustavo Rivera!

 

GOVERNMENT HEADER

SENATOR RIVERA ATTENDS THE SOMOS CONFERENCE IN PUERTO RICO

This week, Senator Rivera attended the annual SOMOS Conference in Puerto Rico. Senator Rivera participated in the SOMOS Day of Service, in which he focused on enhancing the environmental restoration of the skate park in beautiful Punta Las Marias. Senator Rivera participated in the clean up of the skate park and community garden, as well as in the planting, weeding and revitalizing of the coastal forest, and the rebuilding of the skate ramps. Senator Rivera thanks City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams for inviting him to this special occasion.

Senator Rivera participated in three workshops during the SOMOS Conference. During the first one titled Resourcing our Aspiration: Federal and State Funding for Community Led Solutions, Senator Rivera and his fellow panelists discussed the pathways and strategies for leveraging and utilizing funding to support environmental sustainability, community development and social equity through coalition and collaboration building both in New York and in Puerto Rico.

During the second workshop titled Addressing Sovereign Debt and Vulture Funds: New York's Impact on Countries in Distress and Advocating for Sustainable Recovery, Senator Rivera discussed the predatory practices of vulture funds on sovereign nations. Senator Rivera discussed his Sovereign Debt Stability Act, which in part, will provide mechanisms for restructuring sovereign and subnational debt for foreign governments and US territories, while ensuring that access to New York courts are not abused by holdout creditors.

During his third workshop titled “Looking Ahead: 2025 Policy Solutions for Improving Behavioral Health Outcomes in Urban Areas” Senator Rivera discussed the unique dynamics of mental and behavioral health in New York’s urban communities including addressing stigma, implementing preventative screenings in primary care settings, and made resources not only accessible but culturally competent. Senator Rivera also discussed how the new 1115 waiver and how it includes investments to create social care networks to address the social determinants of health.

This week, Senator Rivera attended Bronx Community Board 7's Meet and Greet Luncheon at the Catholic Kolping Society. Senator Rivera talked about the continuing results that Community Board 7 members have delivered for the neighborhood. Thank you to District Manager Karla Cabrera Carrera for the kind invitation.

CRAINS: WHAT WOMEN'S HEALTH CARE COULD LOOK LIKE UNDER TRUMP

“Whatever you think is going to be the worst thing that they are going to do is going to be the bare minimum,” Senator Gustavo Rivera said.

Prior to the results of this week's presidential election in favor of President-elect Donald Trump, Senator Rivera spoke with Crains' Amanda D'Ambrosio about the negative health prospects of a potential Trump second term. Senator Rivera discussed the importance of the passage of Prop 1, which was overwhelmingly voted in favor by New Yorkers last Tuesday, as a way to ensure that the right to abortion in New York State is constitutionally preserved. He also discussed how his colleagues could earmark more money in next year's state budget to support abortion providers such as Planned Parenthood.


Senator Rivera also discussed his concern that a Trump administration could curtail federal funding for Medicaid as well as jeopardize some of New York’s Medicaid waiver programs that aim to increase benefits for pregnant people and the Medicaid population at large.

New York State Parks is looking to fill Park Ranger positions statewide for the 2025 Summer season. Park Rangers serve as ambassadors for the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. They help oversee a variety of environments including campgrounds, tourist attractions, beaches, marinas, trails, park offices, and more!


Park Ranger job duties range from responding to calls for assistance to proactively engaging with visitors in the parks and helping to maintain a safe environment for all. If you have a passion for the outdoors and love to connect with people, this could be the job for you! Apply before December 31

D.A. Bragg Announces Hate Crimes Indictment Of Man For Antisemitic Subway Threats

 

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg, Jr., announced the indictment of CHRISTOPHER HUSARY, 36, for threatening, harassing and making antisemitic remarks towards a 35-year-old Jewish man on the subway. HUSARY is charged in a New York State Supreme Court indictment with one count each of Attempted Coercion as a Hate Crime and Aggravated Harassment in the Second Degree. [1]

“As alleged, Christopher Husary tried to force a Jewish man to comply with his demands by spewing antisemitic comments and threats at him,” said District Attorney Bragg. “We will continue using all the tools at our disposal to hold those accountable who commit acts driven by hate and discrimination. I thank the victim for his bravery in coming forward about these allegations and I urge anyone who believes they have been the victim of a hate crime to call 911 or report it to our Office’s Hate Crimes Unit at 212-335-3100.”  

According to court documents and statements made on the record in court, on June 10, 2024, at approximately 8:30 p.m., the victim boarded a northbound 5 train at the Fulton Street station in Lower Manhattan. Several minutes later, the victim observed HUSARY using a marker to draw an upside-down red triangle on the train door.   

Noticing the drawing, the victim took a picture with his cellphone. HUSARY then approached the victim, who was wearing a yarmulke, and demanded he delete the image. HUSARY threatened the victim and made antisemitic remarks at him, including, stating in substance, “Yo, we got a Zionist over here,” “We’ll find you and there will be consequences,” and “You’re not a real Jew.”  

The victim exited the train at the 86th Street and Lexington Avenue station and reported the incident to law enforcement on June 22, 2024.   

Charged:

Attempted Coercion in the First Degree as a Hate Crime, a class D felony, one count
Aggravated Harassment in the Second Degree, a class A misdemeanor, one count

[1] The charges contained in the indictment are merely allegations and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty. All factual recitations are derived from documents filed in court and statements made on the record in court.