Friday, November 10, 2017

DISTRICT ATTORNEY VANCE ANNOUNCES CREATION OF ANIMAL CRUELTY PROGRAM


Formalized Program Dedicated to Investigation and Prosecution of Cases Involving Crimes Committed Against Animals

  Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance, Jr., announced the formation of the Animal Cruelty Program, which is dedicated to the investigation and prosecution of cases involving crimes against animals, including cruelty, neglect, hoarding, and organized animal fighting cases.
“I’m proud to announce the formation of our Animal Cruelty Program,” said District Attorney Vance. “For many years, Assistant District Attorneys from different areas of my Office have strongly investigated and prosecuted cases of animal abuse and cruelty. This formalized program streamlines our work and ensures that each case is overseen by an expert in the field.
“The successful prosecution of crimes against animals goes beyond protecting four-legged or feathered New Yorkers – study after study has found a strong correlation between animal abuse and other crimes, including domestic violence. We are committed to aggressively prosecuting these cases to better protect the animals – and people – of our City.”
Senior Vice President of the ASPCA Anti-Cruelty Group Stacy Wolf, Esq., said: “The ASPCA commends District Attorney Vance for continuing his office’s commitment to animal welfare through the formation of the Animal Cruelty Program. Dedicated prosecution of animal crimes is critical to the successful fight against animal cruelty in New York City, and the ASPCA looks forward to continuing this life-saving work alongside the NYPD and the Animal Cruelty Program.”
District Attorney Vance appointed Assistant District Attorney Tanisha Palvia as Attorney-in-Charge of the Animal Cruelty Program. In this role, she is responsible for training other Assistant District Attorneys to properly handle cases of animal cruelty and overseeing all investigations and prosecutions. Among other animal cruelty investigations, Assistant District Attorney Palvia recently handled a felony animal cruelty case in which the defendant, Anthony Pastor, brutally beat his girlfriend’s dog to death. In May, following a trial conviction, Pastor was sentenced to two years in state prison – the maximum sentence allowable under the statute – along with a 10-year animal ban and required registration on the Animal Abuse Registry.

Attorney General Schneiderman Files For National Injunction To Block Trump Administration's Unlawful Rollback Of Birth Control Rule


Coalition Of AGs File For Injunction Following Their Lawsuit To Protect Birth Control Access 
Over 62.4 Million Women Have Benefitted From ACA Contraceptive Coverage, Including 3.8 Million New Yorkers
  New York Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman joined a coalition of Attorneys General in filing a petition for a nationwide injunction to protect New Yorkers’ access to birth control and halt the Trump administration’s rules that would allow employers to deny women cost-free birth control coverage under the Affordable Care Act.
Attorney General Schneiderman, along with the Attorneys General of California, Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia, filed the motion for a preliminary injunctionlast night with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.
The filing follows a federal lawsuit filed by the same coalition of Attorneys General earlier this month.
“If a woman can’t control her own body, she isn’t truly free,” said Attorney General Schneiderman. “Healthcare decisions should be made by a woman – not her boss. These retrograde rules seek to deny basic healthcare to millions of women in New York and across the country. We’ll continue to fight back and protect New Yorkers.”
The Trump administration’s rules seek to roll back the contraceptive coverage mandate under the Affordable Care Act by giving employers — even publicly traded companies — the ability to opt out. Since the ACA’s requirement to cover contraceptives took effect in 2012, it’s saved American women $1.4 billion. Over 62.4 million women have benefitted from the coverage, including 3.8 million in New York. The ACA already included an exemption for religious organizations, together with an accommodation for women in those organizations to ensure they have coverage.
New York has one of the highest rates of unintended pregnancy in the nation, and the risk of unintended pregnancy is greatest among the most vulnerable women. While New York has some regulations to protect contraceptive access, they do not apply to self-funded insurance plans, which are governed by federal law and regulated by the federal government. Therefore, as a result of the Trump administration’s new rules, the nearly 1.2 million New York women covered by self-funded employer plans may be forced to seek state-funded access (a cost that would be borne by New York) or forego contraceptive care altogether.
In January, Attorney General Schneiderman introduced the Comprehensive Contraception Coverage Act, which would protect and enhance New Yorkers’ access to cost-free contraception, no matter what happens in Washington.

Bronx Jewish Community Council - Project HOPE December 3





Save the Date!!

    Project HOPE Hanukah Package Deliver
Sunday, December 3 - 9:00am-11:30am

Share the joy of the holidays by 
bringing along  friends and family to deliver 3-5 Hanukah packages to lonely, home-bound or needy Jewish elderly!


  Whether or not you are able to come, you can always help by sponsoring a package for only $25
    
For groups, questions or to deliver to a particular senior contact 
Niti Minkove, Director of Volunteers at 
B'nai B'rith Building (Co-op City)
 
Directions: From Hutchinson River Pkwy So, to Bartow Ave. exit 4N. Stay on exit road until Bartow Ave. Make a right turn at Bartow Ave. Go until you see a 6 story red brick building (about 1/8 mile) with a blue awning.  


Ampark (Near Riverdale): 
95 Gale Place (Community Room #9), 
Bronx, NY 10463  
 
Directions: Take Major Deegan Expressway to Exit 11 (Van Cortlandt Park South). Turn left off the ramp and go up the hill 2 blocks to Orloff Ave. Turn left on Orloff Ave. and then left on Gale Pl. (Community Room #9 is on the corner of Orloff Ave. and Gale Pl.)

Learn more about Bronx Jewish Community Council's volunteer opportunities and how to get involved at www.bjcconline.org 


MAYOR DE BLASIO OPENS ONE OF LARGEST MANUFACTURING SPACES IN DECADES, BUILDING 77 IN BROOKLYN NAVY YARD



$185 million transformation of World War II-era storage facility will be home to 3,000 jobs

  Mayor Bill de Blasio celebrated the opening of the Brooklyn Navy Yard’s Building 77, a one-million-square-foot, state-of-the-art manufacturing building and the largest on the 300-acre industrial campus.

The $185 million renovation of the World War II-era storage facility is a milestone for the growth of manufacturing in New York City and the de Blasio administration’s push to build 100,000 good-paying jobs across a range of industries. Located within the City-owned Brooklyn Navy Yard at the corner of Vanderbilt and Flushing Avenues, the 16-story building will be home to more than 3,000 jobs.

Building 77 is the centerpiece of a billion-dollar investment currently underway at the Yard to add over two million square feet of space and 10,000 good-paying jobs by 2020.

“As a major driver of quality middle-class jobs, investing in and expanding manufacturing space is key to growing and diversifying our economy and boosting wages. As we re-open this historic building we re-imagine New York’s future,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said.

Long a symbol of America’s industrial might, the Brooklyn Navy Yard is among the country’s leading urban manufacturing centers, with some 400 companies currently employing more than 7,000 New Yorkers. In the next three years, that number is expected to more than double to 17,000 accessible middle-class jobs.

Images of Building 77 can be found here.

The Mayor’s New York Works plan to create 100,000 good-paying jobs in 10 years is squarely focused on industrial and manufacturing jobs: Twenty thousand of the total jobs, or one fifth, are in the industrial and manufacturing sectors.

Building 77, the largest in the Navy Yard, includes a 60,000-square-foot ground-floor Food Manufacturing Hub that will serve as a public gateway to the Yard, as well as the central gathering point for Navy Yard businesses, employees and guests. 

Built in 1942 as part of the U.S. Navy’s wartime mobilization, the huge concrete building had been a storage facility with fewer than 100 jobs and no windows on its first 11 floors. More than three million pounds of concrete have been removed and replaced with 50,000 square feet of windows as one component of the upgrade.

The project is financed through a combination of BNYDC investment, $73.1 million of Mayoral City Capital and $7.1 million from the City Council and Brooklyn Borough President.

“Let there be no doubt that in cities across America both existing manufacturing firms and new enterprises need modern space to thrive,” said Alicia Glen, Deputy Mayor for Housing and Economic Development. “Industrial jobs are a springboard for social mobility for many New Yorkers, in particular those without advanced educational degrees.”

“The Brooklyn Navy Yard has been a center of innovation, growth and opportunity for New York City for more than 200 years, and Building 77 represents an incredible continuation of that tradition,” said Brooklyn Navy Yard president and CEO David Ehrenberg. “Building 77 will contribute tremendously to our mission of creating accessible middle-class jobs and securing a vibrant future for manufacturing in Brooklyn. We are grateful to Mayor de Blasio and his team for their unflagging commitment to this bold project and look forward to building on this national model for urban manufacturing we have created together.”

“The opening of Building 77 at the Brooklyn Navy Yard is a watershed moment that symbolizes the remarkable strength of New York City’s manufacturing sector and the businesses that are driving its growth,” said Hank Gutman, chairman of the Brooklyn Navy Yard. “Thanks to the leadership of Mayor de Blasio and BNYDC President David Ehrenberg, the Brooklyn Navy Yard today remains a wellspring of both innovation and inspiration more than two centuries after it first opened.”

“The NYCHA community’s entrepreneurial skills, and delicious food businesses will be on full display in the new Brooklyn Navy Yard,” said Sideya Sherman, executive vice president for community engagement and partnerships at NYCHA, which is partnering with BNYDC to create the first permanent retail opportunity for participants of its Food Business Pathways program, as part of the ground-floor Food Manufacturing Hub. “Created as part of the NextGen NYCHA strategic plan, Food Business Pathways is a proven business program for residents to enter and succeed in the food industry. Now, through this exciting partnership, NYCHA residents will run a food kiosk in the Brooklyn Navy Yard’s new building 77, creating new opportunities for public housing residents’ small businesses to thrive.”

“EDA’s investment of $2M in floors 6 & 7 of Building 77 supports the critical need for space to accommodate new and expanding manufacturers and start-up companies creating approximately 400 jobs to benefit the region,” said Linda Cruz-Carnall, Economic Development Administration Regional Director.

“Empire State Development is proud to support Building 77 and the creation of state-of-the-art, modern manufacturing spaces for New York’s industrial firms,” said ESD President, CEO, and Commissioner Howard Zemsky. “These industries spur innovation, opportunity and jobs for New Yorkers across all skill levels and today’s opening will build on Brooklyn’s strength as a manufacturing hub both for New York City and across the state.”

“Today is truly a milestone in the reactivation of the Brooklyn Navy Yard into a center of 21st century industrial jobs,” said Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito. “The City Council is proud to have contributed to the transformation of Building 77 from an empty windowless warehouse to a thriving center for hundreds of businesses and 3,000 new jobs. The Brooklyn Navy Yard continues to be a great success story for New York’s manufacturing and industrial sector, which provides good middle-class jobs and helps support our growing economy.”

Bronx Chamber of Commerce. - Bronx Business Newsletter November 2017



November Newsletter - What's Inside:

10 New Companies Unanimously approved to serve on the Board of Directors of The Bronx Chamber > Front Cover 

Your Holiday Party is scheduled>Front Cover > Reservation Form on Back Cover

Chamber President and CEO Message > page 2

Officers and members of the Board of Directors > page 2

SBS Commissioner Greg Bishop article > page 3

Testimonials by Jimmy Vacca NYC Councilman; Stephen Jerome Chairman Monroe College; John Bonizio, Metro Optics Eyeware and Lisa Sorin, Westchester Square BID > page 3

Member Spotlight: Lisa Sorin > page 4.

Building Bridges for Small Businesses OATH Seminar > page 5

Country Bank article > page 6

Italian Heritage Luncheon and Celebration > page 7

Recent events and 2017 Bronx Business Expo > pages 5-7

Upcoming networking events >pages 5-8

Calendar of Events>page 8

Corporate Sponsors - Chairman's Circle - President's Circle members > page 8.

To read your copy: Click on the following link:

The Bronx Chamber of Commerce is one of the most influential, professional and successful organizations and voice for businesses in Bronx County. Professionals and companies are drawn to the successful companies and active members affiliated with The Bronx Chamber of Commerce. Membership includes businesses ranging from large corporations, Cultural Institutions, Universities and Colleges, Hospitals and Medical Centers, non-profits, and mid-sized to small companies. Visit: www.BronxChamber.org.

Helping you grow your Bronx Business is our Goal!
 
Nunzio Del Greco
President and CEO
Bronx Chamber of Commerce
 
"You never know where your next big deal is going to come from"

Thursday, November 9, 2017

TWO LATIN KINGS CONVICTED OF FATALLY SHOOTING MAN TO SEND MESSAGE TO RIVAL DRUG DEALER


Defendants Couldn’t Find Target So Shot His Friend Who Happened to Be Sitting on Stoop 
Defendants Found Guilty of Murder, Manslaughter; Could Face Life in Prison

  Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark today announced that two Latin Kings have been convicted of killing a Bronx man whom they happened upon as they sought to shoot a rival drug dealer in 2013. The defendants couldn’t find their target so they shot his 21-year-old friend, to send a message to the dealer to leave their block. 

 District Attorney Clark said, “These defendants came down the street gunning for a rival drug dealer, and when they couldn’t find him they coldly, non-chalantly shot dead a young man who happened to be sitting on a stoop, to send a message. Now two Bronx juries have sent the message that gun violence will not be tolerated by convicting these gang members of charges that carry up to life in prison.” 

 District Attorney Clark said that Jason DeJesus, 31, of 3662 Bronx Boulevard, was convicted of second-degree Murder and second-degree Criminal Possession of a Weapon on November 3, 2017 and Hector Rodriguez, 39, of 2240 Ryer Avenue, was convicted of firstdegree Manslaughter and Criminal Facilitation on November 8, 2017. They were convicted by separate juries after a two-month trial before Bronx Supreme Court Justice Robert Neary.

 Rodriguez will be sentenced on November 29, 2017, and as a discretionary persistent felony offender he could face life in prison. DeJesus will be sentenced on January 10, 2018, and faces up to 25 years to life in prison.

 According to the investigation, at about 11 p.m. on May 20, 2013, Marcos Cabral, 21, was found lying outside 287 East 162nd Street near Morris Avenue in Melrose with two fatal gunshot wounds. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

 According to the investigation, Rodriguez, a First-Crown Latin King, was told by another gang member, Edwin Colon, that Colon was having trouble on East 162nd Street and Morris Avenue with a marijuana dealer who was selling there, and the gang had to push back.

 DeJesus, Rodriguez and Colon went to the block and DeJesus fired five shots at Cabral, who was eating Chinese takeout food on the stoop. 

 Colon pleaded guilty to Criminal Possession of a Weapon on October 12, 2017 and will be sentenced to 11 years in prison.

 District Attorney Clark thanked Detective Al Crawford of the 44th Precinct Detective Squad and the Bronx Homicide Task Force for their work on the case.

DISTRICT ATTORNEY DARCEL D. CLARK’S STATEMENT ON INVESTIGATION OF MATTERS SURROUNDING THE PEDRO HERNANDEZ CASE


  When the case was dismissed on September 6, 2017, I said I would not tolerate misconduct by law enforcement. My Office’s Public Integrity Bureau delved into the allegations surrounding the Pedro Hernandez case. 

Because the investigation has broadened, we saw the need for additional law enforcement resources and the Acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Joon H. Kim, has agreed to assist my office in this investigation.