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Bronx Politics and Community events
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75,522 Vaccine Doses Administered Over Last 24 Hours
60 COVID-19 Deaths Statewide Yesterday
Governor Kathy Hochul today updated New Yorkers on the state's progress combating COVID-19.
“The winter surge in COVID-19 cases is a reminder that we must stay vigilant in our fight against the pandemic,” Governor Hochul said. “Make sure you are using all the tools that we know work in reducing the risk of transmission and serious illness: get vaccinated if you haven’t yet and get the booster if you have, mask up indoors and exercise caution when in large gatherings. Let’s make sure our loved ones and the most vulnerable among us this holiday season are there with us for the next and many more to come.”
Today's data is summarized briefly below:
New York Attorney General Letitia James today released the following statement after Donald J. Trump and the Trump Organization filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York, seeking to stop Attorney General James’ legal investigation into him and his business:
“The Trump Organization has continually sought to delay our investigation into its business dealings and now Donald Trump and his namesake company have filed a lawsuit as an attempted collateral attack on that investigation. To be clear, neither Mr. Trump nor the Trump Organization get to dictate if and where they will answer for their actions. Our investigation will continue undeterred because no one is above the law, not even someone with the name Trump.”
In August 2020, Attorney General James filed a motion to compel the Trump Organization to provide the Office of the Attorney General with documents and testimony from multiple witnesses regarding several, specific Trump Organization properties and transactions. Since then, the court has ruled in Attorney General James’ favor multiple times.
Hey Rubensito Mayor Eric Adams has named Lorraine Grillo his first deputy mayor, and four other women as his other Deputy Mayors. That crack Political Reporter you have in the Bronx Robert Press was right that you would not be first Deputy Mayor. Ruben, he now says that you will be working for a developer just like your predecessor did. The developers have a new frontier to build in the East Side of the Bronx.
I just have to get through these two weeks until Mayor Adam takes over, and I can run for Governor as the mayor who saved New York City. I want to keep that pesky reporter Robert Press from telling people, as of yesterday December 19, 2021 there were only 41 cases of Omicron in the city, and 192 statewide. There are 8.4 million people in the city and 20.8 million people in the state. I don't want my moderator to call on him to ask a question, so I don't get showed up again by him.
Trainer Jorge Navarro Ordered to Pay Over $26 Million in Restitution
Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced that defendants JORGE NAVARRO received a sentence of sixty months’ imprisonment for his leading role in the felony drug misbranding and adulteration charges arising from this Office’s investigation of the abuse of animals through the use of performance enhancing drugs and as charged in United States v. Navarro et al., 20 Cr. 160 (MKV). NAVARRO was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil, who furthered ordered that NAVARRO pay $26,860,514 in restitution for the fraud perpetrated through his doping program.
U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: “Jorge Navarro’s case reflects failings, greed, and corruption at virtually every level of the world of professional horse racing. For money and fame, corrupt trainers went to increasing extremes to dope horses under their care. Unscrupulous owners, who stood to profit directly, encouraged and pressured trainers to win at any cost. Veterinarians sworn to the care and protection of their patients routinely violated their oaths in service of corrupt trainers and to line their own pockets. Assistants and grooms all witnessed animal abuse in the service of greed, but did little to stop such conduct, and engaged in myriad ways to support notoriously corrupt trainers. Structures designed for the protection of the horses abused in this case failed repeatedly; fixtures of the industry – owners, veterinarians, and trainers – flouted rules and disregarded their animals’ health while hypocritically incanting a love for the horses under their control and ostensible protection. Standing as the keystone for this structure of abuse, corruption, and duplicity was Jorge Navarro, a trainer who treated his animals as expendable commodities in the service of his ‘sport.’ Today’s sentence appropriately condemns the danger inherent in Navarro’s crime and reflects the seriousness with which this Office takes the kind of abuse that Navarro practiced.”
According to the allegations contained in the Superseding Indictment, prior charging instruments and other filings in this case[1], and statements during court proceedings:
The charges in the Navarro case arise from an investigation of widespread schemes by racehorse trainers, veterinarians, PED distributors, and others to manufacture, distribute, and receive adulterated and misbranded PEDs and to secretly administer those PEDs to racehorses competing at all levels of professional horseracing. By evading PED prohibitions and deceiving regulators and horse racing officials, participants in these schemes sought to improve race performance and obtain prize money from racetracks throughout the United States and other countries, including in New York, New Jersey, Florida, Ohio, Kentucky, and the United Arab Emirates (“UAE”), all to the detriment and risk of the health and well-being of the racehorses. Trainers, like NAVARRO, who participated in the schemes stood to profit from the success of racehorses under their control by earning a share of their horses’ winnings, and by improving their horses’ racing records, thereby yielding higher trainer fees and increasing the number of racehorses under their control. Veterinarians, including those whom NAVARRO directed in the corrupt administration of illegal substances, profited from the sale and administration of these medically unnecessary, misbranded, and adulterated substances.
NAVARRO operated his doping scheme covertly, importing misbranded “clenbuterol” that he both used and distributed to others, avoiding explicit discussion of PEDs during telephone calls, and working with others to coordinate the administration of PEDs at times that racing officials would not detect such cheating. Among the horses that NAVARRO trained and doped was XY Jet, a thoroughbred horse that won the 2019 Golden Shaheen race in Dubai. Among NAVARRO’s preferred PEDs were various “blood building” drugs, which, when administered before intense physical exertion, can lead to cardiac issues or death.
NAVARRO’s crime was far from a single lapse in judgment. Rather, NAVARRO engaged in repeated and persistent efforts to cheat over the course of years, cycling through various sources of supply, and pursuing aggressively new means to illegally dope horses. Throughout, NAVARRO maintained a flippant attitude towards his dangerous and illegal conduct. NAVARRO, notoriously known in the horse racing world as the “Juice Man” due to his routine doping, kept a pair of customized shoes in his barn with the words “#JUICE MAN” emblazoned across the front:
In addition to the prison sentence, NAVARRO was ordered to payment of restitution in the amount of $26,860,514, reflecting winnings obtained through his fraudulent doping scheme.
Mr. Williams praised the outstanding investigative work of the FBI New York Office’s Eurasian Organized Crime Task Force and its support of the Bureau’s Integrity in Sports and Gaming Initiative. This case is being handled by the Office’s Money Laundering and Transnational Criminal Enterprises Unit.
COVID-19 emergency contract and spending data to be highlighted on Checkbook NYC to further enhance transparency and accountability
New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer announced enhanced interactivity on the award-winning Checkbook NYC website to track contracts, amendments, and spending specific to the City’s COVID-19 emergency response. This added functionality will allow unprecedented insight into COVID-19 emergency procurements for the general public, good government groups, and government officials.
“Transparency and accountability matter – especially regarding emergency contracts and spending during a time of crisis,” said Comptroller Stringer. “This added transparency regarding the COVID-19 emergency response is an important step for the good governance of our city. Without such data and resulting analysis, the City risks repeating the mistakes of the past and eroding the public trust. The COVID-19 pandemic continues to evolve in ways that will challenge the City for the foreseeable future, and climate change will certainly cause more frequent weather-related emergencies. We must be transparent in how we respond to these inevitable emergencies.”
The vast majority of COVID-19 emergency contracts and contract amendments were registered by the Mayor’s Office of Contract Services (MOCS), pursuant to Emergency Executive Order 101 (EEO 101). While EEO 101 was active between March 17, 2020 and July 16, 2021 over 1,600 contract actions, including amendments, were registered by MOCS, representing at least $7 billion in potential contractual spending. As such, requests for further information on any specific COVID-19 emergency contract action registered under EEO 101 should be directed to the contracting agency and the Mayor’s Office of Contract Services, the current custodians of those records.
Since Checkbook was launched in 2010, emergency contracting data has been available under the “EMERGENCY” Award Method heading. However, in order to provide an additional level of transparency regarding COVID-19 emergency procurements, Checkbook will now include the following specialized sections and new search criteria:
This spending table will be updated daily with any additional spending transactions related to a MOCS registered COVID-19 contract.
Budget codes are continually updated, and as additional codes related to COVID-19 are created, they will be included in Checkbook NYC’s enhanced interactivity.
For future emergencies, this same functionality could be used to similarly distinguish any related contracts and spending, with additional drop-down selections made available under the Catastrophic Event field.
To view this updated functionality, visit Checkbook NYC website.
Welcome to part one of our 2021 Year in Review email series highlighting some of our major accomplishments from the year.
As we get ready to wrap up 2021, we’re excited to highlight some of our movement’s major accomplishments from the year.
We can’t talk about this past year without talking about the climate and our work to move the needle forward on the Green New Deal. So that brings us to part one of this series focusing on our Green New Deal deep canvass program.
In order to win a Green New Deal, we know we need to organize and talk to people one-on-one about what it is, how it would impact them, and what they can do to help.
So we decided to lead by example starting in our own district and developed a program to train volunteers to phone bank, text bank, and canvas door-to-door to talk with voters about the Green New Deal and the proposed NRG fracked gas power plant planned in Astoria, Queens.*
* NRG is a Texas based energy company whose current power plant in the district is so dirty that the state is forcing it to shut down by 2023. But the company wanted to replace it with a fracked gas plant that would continue to pollute our community and climate just the same — instead of with a renewable energy option.
From January to October 2021, here’s what we accomplished:
Working with a coalition of local elected officials, community organizations, and activists, the pressure from our campaigning resulted in the NY Department of Environmental Conservation denying the permit for the power plant in a huge victory for our community and for environmental justice.
After Hurricane Ida devastated our community, we pivoted and used our weekly canvasses to share FEMA resources while drawing connections to the climate crisis, extreme weather, and the Green New Deal. We texted over 200,000 people with FEMA relief info.
Our conversations with voters focused on deep canvass techniques of sharing personal stories and finding common ground – and we tracked our persuasion efforts by asking voters to rank their favorability towards the GND on a 10-point scale, once at the start of the conversation and again at the end.
We learned valuable lessons about the efficacy of phone vs. in-person communication with voters, what scripts were most effective at persuading constituents, and the need to create more bilingual resources about the Green New Deal.
This was a big undertaking, Robert, but a worthwhile one. Most campaigns only organize around elections, but our campaign is different. We know that talking to voters only when it's time to vote is not enough to win the change we need. Transformative change and organizing isn’t just electoral.
It requires outside community organizing on and off election years. That is our path forward and that’s why we will continue to invest our resources into advocacy and deep organizing in 2022.
None of this would have been possible without your support and we’re so grateful for all of you.
Stay tuned for more highlights from 2021 to come.
Team AOC
The U.S. Attorney for the District of Colorado and the Special Agent in Charge of the Denver FBI reminded air travelers that criminal conduct on commercial aircraft is a prosecution priority for their Denver based offices.
United States Attorney Cole Finegan noted, “As travel season begins, passengers should know that the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Colorado and our law enforcement partners are prioritizing the prosecution of criminal conduct on aircraft. We are all highly concerned about an increase in criminal conduct on commercial aircraft which endangers the safety of every person on a plane: passengers, pilots, and flight attendants. Please be assured that our office will investigate and prosecute crimes on aircraft.”
"The FBI is committed to investigating criminal acts aboard commercial aircraft that endanger the safety of passengers, flight crews, and flight attendants,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge Michael Schneider of the Denver Division. “We will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to ensure the safety of all individuals during their air travel this holiday season and throughout the year.”
Working with the FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, and the Denver Police, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado prosecutes offenses that originate on commercial aircraft. Among these offenses, federal law prohibits the interference with flight crews and the commission of certain enumerated crimes while aboard commercial aircraft, such as sexual abuse (18 U.S.C. §§ 2241-43) and assault (18 U.S.C. § 113).
Colorado is home to several commercial airports, including Denver International Airport (DIA), which claims to be the third-busiest airport in the world by passengers. (https://www.flydenver.com/about/media_center/ranking) In the last year, the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the FBI handled several incidents on board commercial aircraft that landed at DIA.
If you are aware of a crime on board a commercial aircraft that has landed in Colorado, you can report that crime to the Denver FBI at (303) 629-7171.