Friday, February 16, 2024

VCJC News & Notes 2/16/24

 

Van Cortlandt Jewish Center
News and Notes

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

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Van Cortlandt Jewish Center
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Bronx, NY 10463

Supportive Housing Project Breaks Ground At 3118 Webster Avenue In Norwood, The Bronx


 

The Doe Fund, a nonprofit organization dedicated to combatting homelessness, has broken ground at 3118 Webster Avenue, the site of an 11-story affordable and supportive housing project in the Norwood neighborhood of The Bronx. Designed by Curtis + Ginsberg Architects and developed in collaboration with Urban Builders Collaborative, the 98,400-square-foot structure will yield 109 apartments in studio to three-bedroom layouts, with 70 affordable units for residents earning 40 to 80 percent of the area median income and 39 supportive units for individuals and families who have experienced chronic homelessness. The property will also feature 1,500 square feet of ground-level retail space. The project is located between East 204th and 205th Streets.

The rendering depicts the main northwestern elevation clad in a mix of gray and earth-toned masonry framing a grid of recessed rectangular windows. The southwestern side profile is shown left blank. There is a setback above the ninth story, and the building culminates in a flat parapet.

Amenities will include an interior courtyard with outdoor recreation space, a gym, a laundry room, 24/7 front desk security, and a live-in superintendent. The Doe Fund will offer residents on-site supportive services, including case management and substance abuse counseling, along with services for education and employment.

3118 Webster Avenue, via Google Maps

“The Doe Fund has been leading with proven solutions to combat homelessness for more than 30 years,” said Jennifer Mitchell, president and CEO of The Doe Fund. “3118 Webster Avenue will bring a critical solution to the North Bronx: high-quality, affordable homes with services that ensure our neighbors at risk of homelessness can live with dignity. In doing so, 3118 Webster Avenue will join 12 other Doe Fund residences open or in development that serve nearly 1,400 individuals and families.”

3118 Webster Avenue was financed through a variety of sources, including the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development‘s Extremely Low and Low-Income Affordability Program, tax credit equity, discretionary funding from the New York City Council, and financing from financial institutions.

The property is located steps from stops for the Bx41 and Bx41+ bus lines, and is a short walk from the Norwood-205th Street subway station, which services the D Train.

3118 Webster Avenue is slated to open in late 2025.

Florida Conspirators Sentenced to Nearly Five Years in Prison Each for Evading Over $42 Million in Duties When Illegally Importing and Selling Plywood

 

A Florida husband and wife, Noel and Kelsy Hernandez Quintana were both sentenced yesterday to 57 months in prison for illegally importing and selling between $25 million and $65 million worth of plywood products in violation of the Lacey Act and customs laws. Their employee, Marta Angelbello, was also sentenced.

In addition to their prison sentences, the Quintanas were ordered to pay, jointly and severally, $42,417,318.50 in forfeitures, as well as $1,630,324.46 in storage costs incurred by the government when the Quintanas declined to abandon illegal wood seized by the government, thus forcing the government to maintain the wood in storage pending resolution of the case. The Quintanas were also ordered to serve three years of supervised release following their prison sentences, during which time they are prohibited in engaging in businesses regarding importing or exporting in products specifically protected under the Lacey Act.

Angelbello was sentenced to three years of probation to include 90 days in home detention and was ordered to pay a fine of $3,000.

“Illegal timber trafficking has serious environmental effects. Also, accurate plant import declarations protect domestic producers from dumping by foreign countries and detect potential over-harvesting and trade in timber from high-risk sources,” said Assistant Attorney General Todd Kim of the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division. “This case clearly illustrates the ties between natural resource crime and customs laws, and is the result of excellent investigative work by customs officers, import specialists and Homeland Security Investigations.”

“The enforcement of customs laws serves an integral part of U.S. foreign policy and trade policy,” said U.S. Attorney Markenzy Lapointe for the Southern District of Florida. “In this case, the defendants undermined U.S. policy by evading legally mandated customs duties on plywood manufactured in China using Russian timber. Moreover, by doing so, the defendants covered up their criminal scheme to violate federal environmental law, while also unjustly enriching themselves. This case shows the importance of prosecuting customs and environmental offenses.”

“Homeland Security Investigations is committed to pursuing individuals or entities that attempt to defraud the government of millions of dollars, violate U.S. Customs laws and undermine a fair marketplace for businesses,” said Special Agent in Charge Anthony Salisbury of the Homeland Security (HSI) Miami Field Office. “These types of criminal activities only serve to negatively impact the U.S. economy and we will continue to work with our federal law enforcement partners to combat this illicit activity.”

According to court filings, the Quintanas and Angelbello together engaged in a sophisticated scheme to evade antidumping and countervailing duties owed on hardwood plywood products made in China by falsely declaring the species, country of origin or country of harvest of the wood from which the plywood was made. At times they caused containers of plywood to be shipped from China to Malaysia or Sri Lanka, for example, where the wood was taken out of the original containers and put into a second set of containers to conceal the Chinese origin of the product. 

The Quintanas incorporated seven companies in the United States – naming relatives or friends as corporate officers and agents – and used these shell companies to import hundreds of shipments of plywood products into the United States between February 2016 and December 2020. The Quintanas also incorporated a financial shell company through which they accepted payments from purchasers for the plywood they imported in violation of law, including the Lacey Act and customs laws.

When importing plant products, the Lacey Act requires filing a declaration which contains, among other things, the plant’s scientific name and its country of harvest. The Lacey Act makes it unlawful to transport or sell a plant product knowing it or the plant it was made from was transported in violation of any plant-related law. Customs laws prohibit false statements in any import declaration without reasonable cause to believe the truth of such statement. It is also illegal to import merchandise contrary to law, including the Lacey Act.

According to the Quintana’s October plea agreement, softwood plywood – regardless of country of export – carried a general duty of 8%, with a few duty-free exceptions, such as if the outer ply was made from Parana pine. Antidumping and countervailing duties of more than 200% applied to hardwood plywood manufactured in China after approximately April 2017.

Before April 2017, the Quintana’s importing shell companies imported containers of plywood into the United States and almost exclusively declared them to be hardwood plywood imported from China. But after April 2017, the companies evaded applicable duties by falsely declaring their hardwood plywood imports from China to be either the product of another country or to be made with a species of wood not subject to duties.

For example, a declaration from July 2018 said plywood in three containers was manufactured in Russia. But the containers were manufactured and loaded in Qingdao, China, and transported to Port Everglades, Florida, through the Panama Canal, without ever stopping in Russia. After federal authorities stopped such a shipment through Panama, the Quintanas used a different tactic to evade duties by shipping Chinese-produced hardwood plywood to Malaysia and transferring the wood to new containers to be shipped onward to the United States. This change of containers was intended to better conceal that the plywood originated from China. 

The Quintana also falsely declared some shipments of softwood plywood to be duty-free Parana pine, which allowed them to evade the 8% general duty on these imports.

Additional court filings reflect that, after being alerted to the possibility of prosecution for their illegal acts, the Quintanas fled the United States initially to Panama and then to Montenegro where they were the subject of extradition proceedings.

The couple pleaded guilty to conspiring to import hardwood plywood in violation of the Lacey Act and customs laws and conspiring to sell the illegally imported plywood. Noel Quintana also pleaded guilty to one count of smuggling and one count of importing plant products without filing a declaration including the scientific name and name of the country from which the plants were taken. Kelsy Quintana also pleaded guilty to two counts of importing plant products without filing a declaration including the scientific name and name of the country where the plant was harvested.

HSI investigated the case with support from Customs and Border Protection, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Animal and Plant Health Investigation Service.

Attorneys from the Environment and Natural Resources Division’s Environmental Crimes Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida prosecuted the case.

Statement from NYC Comptroller Lander on Unacceptable Climate Pullback by BlackRock, JPMorgan Asset Management & State Street Global Adviso


New York City Comptroller Brad Lander released the following statement 

Following the withdrawal by BlackRock, JPMorgan Asset Management, and State Street Global Advisors from Climate Action 100+.

“Climate risk is financial risk. Today BlackRock, JPMorgan, and State Street are choosing to ignore both.

“By caving into the demands of right-wing politicians funded by the fossil fuel industry and backing out of their commitment to Climate Action 100+, these enormous financial institutions are failing in their fiduciary duty and putting trillions of dollars of their clients’ assets at risk.

“As long-term, universal investors, invested broadly across the economy and across the planet, we know that ignoring climate change’s destabilization of the economy is not an option. We have asset management holdings with all three of these firms; it is profoundly disappointing to see that that our asset managers and financial institutions are choosing to be a part of the problem and not the solution.

“BlackRock took a step even further in the wrong direction, abdicating its responsibility for shareholder engagement with its portfolio companies on climate action under the guise of ‘client choice.’ Three years ago, Larry Fink declared that climate risk is financial risk, but today’s announcement makes a mockery of that recognition. Putting clients who take climate risk seriously in their own small silo, while voting most of BlackRock’s shares against even the most minimal climate disclosures is a failure of both leadership and fiduciary duty.

“Put plainly: they are caving to climate deniers. We can’t expect to preserve long-term value for beneficiaries when we are lighting our investments on fire. Securing strong, long-term returns requires real world decarbonization on the timeline of the Paris Accords.

“We are in the process of reviewing how well our managers are aligned in that approach and will consider our options for the management of our public market investments.”

 

Governor Hochul Awards $166 Million in Grants to 187 Water Quality Projects Across the State

Manhole Cover with the word Water printed on it.

 $101 Million Awarded to Projects Benefitting Environmental Justice Communities

Funding to Modernize Aging Water Infrastructure, Mitigate Climate Change, Combat Harmful Algal Blooms, Protect Drinking Water, and Prevent Potential Contamination

EFC to Remove Population Threshold, Allowing Larger Municipalities to Compete for Hardship Financing]

Governor Kathy Hochul today announced more than $166 million is being awarded to 187 projects to improve water quality across the state. The grants support projects that will help protect drinking water, update aging water infrastructure, combat contributors to harmful algal blooms, and improve aquatic habitat in communities statewide. More than $101 million of the funding will support water quality improvements for environmental justice communities, which have been disproportionately impacted by environmental pollution.

“New York’s record investments in water quality continue to protect New Yorkers' health, the economy, and quality of life,” Governor Hochul said. “Communities across the state will benefit from this critical water infrastructure funding, which will protect water quality, prevent pollution and improve habitats."

More than $146 million is being awarded today to 81 projects through the Water Quality Improvement Project (WQIP) grant program administered by the State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). The WQIP grant program supports projects that will directly improve water quality or aquatic habitat, promote flood risk reduction, restoration, and enhanced flood and climate resiliency, or protect a drinking water source. An additional $2 million is being awarded to 35 projects through the Non-Agricultural Nonpoint Source Planning and Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System Mapping Grant (NPG) to fund projects that help pay for the initial planning of non-agricultural nonpoint source water quality improvement projects, such as undersized culvert replacements and green infrastructure technologies, and State permit-required storm sewer mapping in urban areas. These projects will reduce the amount of polluted stormwater runoff entering lakes, rivers, and streams, and improve resiliency against the impacts of climate change.

The State is awarding $18 million through the Green Innovation Grant Program (GIGP) and Engineering Planning Grants (EPG) administered by the Environmental Facilities Corporation (EFC). Of that, $15 million in GIGP will support projects that help mitigate the effects of climate change in environmental justice communities. An additional $3 million in EPG will help 61 municipalities develop engineering reports to support their efforts to better leverage state and federal funding and advance fiscally sound and well-designed projects to construction.

EFC also announced today that it is removing the 300,000-population threshold as part of the hardship financing eligibility criteria. Removing the threshold will allow larger municipalities to compete for hardship financing on clean water projects. To be eligible for federal grant, the grant would need to be directed to benefit a specific disadvantaged community within the municipality. This change is proposed for the 2025 Intended Use Plan that will account for how the State Revolving Funds are allocated during the federal fiscal year.

Wastewater Improvement Projects:

  • Buffalo Sewer Authority - $10 Million for Wastewater Treatment Infrastructure, Combined Sewer Overflow/Sanitary Sewer Overflow Pollution Reduction (Western New York): Buffalo Sewer Authority (BSA) will construct an underground storage tunnel along East Delavan Avenue to provide a minimum of 1.5 million gallons of offline storage. This project, identified in BSA’s Long-Term Control Plan, will reduce the discharge entering Scajaquada Creek from combined sewer overflows during periods of heavy rain and snow melt.
  • Village of Endicott – $1,781,120 for Wastewater Treatment Infrastructure Phosphorus Reduction (Southern Tier): Endicott will rehabilitate sewer lines and manholes and remove municipally owned stormwater connections from the system in identified high priority areas. The project will reduce the amount of phosphorus entering the Susquehanna River and Chesapeake Bay watershed.
  • Town of Oswego – $1,000,000 for Wastewater Treatment Facility Improvements (Central New York): The Town of Oswego will achieve disinfection of its wastewater for the Sleepy Hollow Sewer District by decommissioning their current facility and building a pump station and force main to send their flow to the City of Oswego’s West Side wastewater treatment facility.
  • Village of Speculator – $226,500 for Wastewater Treatment Facility Improvements (North Country): Speculator will upgrade the wastewater treatment facility by adding a disinfection system, improving the Sacandaga River’s water quality.

Nonpoint Source Abatement and Control Projects:

  • Village of Lakewood - $244,876 for Constructing a Wetland (Western New York): Lakewood will replace a stormwater basin with a shallow wetland pond system to capture and treat stormwater from a 109-acre area. The project will use native seed mixes, live stakes, shrubs, and trees to increase flood resiliency while reducing nutrient runoff to Chautauqua Lake.
  • Essex County Soil and Water Conservation District - $150,000 for a Road Ditch Stabilization Program (North Country): Essex and Clinton County Soil and Water Conservation Districts will work with local municipalities to stabilize roadside ditches across the two counties using hydroseeding, check dams, erosion fabric, and sediment basins. The program will reduce roadside erosion and improve water quality in portions of the St. Lawrence, Upper Hudson, and Lake Champlain basins.
  • Seneca County Soil and Water Conservation District - $60,000 for Streambank Stabilization (Finger Lakes): The district will stabilize a highly eroded streambank on Burroughs Creek that has been experiencing soil erosion leading to destabilization of vegetation and water quality impacts. This project will reduce nutrient runoff in the Cayuga Lake watershed.

Land Acquisition Projects to Protect Drinking Water Sources:

  • The Fingers Lakes Land Trust, Inc. (FLLT) - $1,240,000 for Land Acquisition to Protect Owasco Lake (Finger Lakes): FLLT will work with landowners and partners in the Owasco Lake watershed to permanently protect approximately 500 acres through direct acquisition and the use of perpetual conservation easements. The program will focus on conservation and stewardship efforts to protect Owasco Lake, a drinking water source.

Salt Storage:

  • City of Watertown - $406,028 for New Salt Storage Facility (North Country): The city will construct a salt storage facility to cover an exposed salt storage pile. This project will help protect the Black River and groundwater within a principal aquifer from road salt contamination.

Aquatic Connectivity Restoration:

  • Trout Unlimited, Inc. - $249,146 to Reconnect Fish Passage (North Country): Trout Unlimited will replace two priority stream culverts on the Saranac River in Franklin County. The project will reconnect 3.6 miles for native brook trout.

Marine Habitat Restoration:

  • North Shore Land Alliance - $192,969 for Natural Habitat Restoration (Long Island): The alliance will restore natural habitat and reduce stormwater impacts on a 40-acre parcel in Cold Spring Harbor. The project will improve water quality and marine habitat for Long Island Sound.

NPG Highlights
The full list of NPG awardees can be found at https://dec.ny.gov/get-involved/grant-applications/non-agricultural-nonpoint-source-planning-ms4-mapping-grant. Examples of the 35 projects funded in this round that highlight the breadth and scope of NPG awards include:

Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) Mapping:

  • Dutchess County Soil and Water Conservation District - $180,000 for Three Towns MS4 Mapping (Hudson Valley): The Dutchess County Soil and Water Conservation District will work with the towns of LaGrange, Pleasant Valley, and Hyde Park to complete basic MS4 mapping elements. The district will complete field work to locate and inventory the storm sewer conveyance systems and structures which will include pipes, ditches, catch basins, and outfalls. The project will assist the towns in further tracking, inspection, and maintenance of their stormwater conveyance systems.

Nonpoint Source Planning Reports:

  • Hamilton County Soil and Water Conservation District - $50,000 for Hamilton County Courthouse Complex Green Infrastructure Feasibility Study (Mohawk Valley): The Hamilton County Soil and Water Conservation District will complete an engineering feasibility study to evaluate and design green stormwater infrastructure at the Hamilton County Courthouse Complex in the town of Lake Pleasant. The study will design green infrastructure mitigation strategies to treat stormwater runoff for 5.65 acres of impervious area. The plan will lead to reduction of stormwater runoff and chloride, phosphorus, and nitrogen pollution in Lake Pleasant.

GIGP Project Highlights
GIGP supports projects across the state that utilize green stormwater infrastructure design and green technologies. The full list of 10 projects is available at https://efc.ny.gov/gigp-2024. Examples of awarded projects include:

  • Erie County (Western New York) - $3 million to install more than an acre of green roof on their central library located in the heart of the city of Buffalo. The County will modify the Central Library to incorporate a green roof and installation of solar panels to further promote sustainability. The project will reduce combined sewer overflows and improve the water quality of the Buffalo River and Lake Erie.
  • City of Mount Vernon (Hudson Valley) - $3 million to revitalize the Fourth Street Park with green infrastructure practices including bioretention, rain gardens and porous pavement. This project will alleviate flooding at the Fourth Street Park and help improve the water quality of the Hutchinson River. The award complements New York State’s $150 million commitment to modernize Mount Vernon’s aging infrastructure and reverse the effects of decades of disinvestment for this environmental justice community.
  • New York City Department of Environmental Protection (New York City) - $3 million to transform multiple streets into green streets in Brooklyn and the Bronx. The city will retrofit the medians with bioretention and stormwater street trees to help reduce runoff and combined sewer overflows to the East River and Jamaica Bay.
  • Town of Ticonderoga (North Country) - $1.8 million to install 1,700 water meters in the currently unmetered town. This project will help the town comply with water withdrawal permitting regulations and improve the water quality of the LaChute River.

EPG Project Highlights
This round of EPG awards will fund engineering costs to help jumpstart planning for 61 sewer projects. The planning grants help communities prepare to apply for grants and financing through the Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF) administered by EFC. Planning grants help fund the development of an engineering report, which is required in the EFC financing application process. EPGs help municipalities advance fiscally sound and well-designed projects to construction. The full list of awardees is available at https://efc.ny.gov/epg-2024. Examples of awarded projects include:

  • City of Schenectady (Capital District) - $50,000 to study the Downtown District Pump Station modernization project.
  • Livingston County Water and Sewer Authority (Finger Lakes) - $100,000 to study options for sewer overflow improvements at Camp Run.
  • City of Jamestown (Western New York) - $100,000 to study options for inflow and infiltration.

Sources of Funding
WQIP is primarily supported by the state's Environmental Protection Fund (EPF) and Clean Water Infrastructure Improvement Act (CWIA); NPG is supported by the EPF; GIGP is supported by the CWSRF and EPG is supported by EFC administrative funding. Governor Hochul's 2024-25 Executive Budget sustains the EPF at a historic $400 million. The EPF provides funding for critical environmental programs such as land acquisition, farmland protection, invasive species prevention and eradication, enhanced recreational access, water quality improvement, and an aggressive environmental justice agenda.

New York's Commitment to Clean Water
New York State continues to increase its nation-leading investments in water infrastructure, including $325 million in grant opportunities available now. With Governor Hochul’s Executive Budget’s proposed $500 million over two years, New York will have invested a total of $5.5 billion in water infrastructure since 2017. In the past two years alone, more than $5 billion in state and federal funding and financing has been awarded to communities statewide. In addition, an initiative in Governor Hochul’s 2024 State of the State Address increases water infrastructure grants for small, rural, and disadvantaged communities from 25 to 50 percent of net eligible project costs to help support smaller communities.

The funding is also in addition to other substantial water quality investments, including the voter-approved $4.2 billion Clean Water, Clean Air and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act of 2022, which is advancing historic levels of funding to update aging water infrastructure and protect water quality, strengthen communities' ability to withstand severe storms and flooding, reduce air pollution and lower climate-altering emissions, restore habitats, and preserve outdoor spaces and local farms. The first round of funding under the Environmental Bond Act was awarded through the WIIA/IMG programs in December, when Governor Hochul announced $479 million in grants to 156 projects across New York State. Disadvantaged Communities will receive at least 35 percent of the benefits of Bond Act funding, with a goal of 40 percent.

About the Consolidated Funding Application
The grants announced today were issued following completion through the Consolidated Funding Application (CFA) process. The CFA was created to streamline and expedite grant applications and marks a fundamental shift in the way state resources are allocated, ensuring less bureaucracy and greater efficiency to fulfill local economic development needs. The CFA serves as the single-entry point for access to economic development funding, ensuring applicants no longer have to slowly navigate multiple agencies and sources without any mechanism for coordination. Now, economic development projects use the CFA as a support mechanism to access multiple state funding sources through one application, making the process quicker, easier, and more productive. Learn more about the CFA at https://apps.cio.ny.gov/apps/cfa/.

Statement from NYGOP Chair Ed Cox on new Congressional lines

 New NYSGOP logo 2023


NYGOP Chair Ed Cox released the following statement:

 

“The Congressional District lines proposed by the IRC represent minor changes to the existing lines imposed by the Harkenrider Court.  The current congressional districts are the most competitive districts in the nation and resulted because New York Republicans brought action against the illegal gerrymander attempted in 2022 by Democrats in Albany and Washington.

 

"The State Legislature should adopt these district lines without change.  The voting public deserves to have continuity in district boundaries and to avoid chaos. Unfortunately, this entire process was made necessary by the ill-advised decision in the Hoffman case by the politicized Court of Appeals.”


BRONX MAN SENTENCED TO 25 YEARS TO LIFE IN PRISON FOR SHOOTING WOMAN IN CITY ISLAND CONSTRUCTION SITE

 

Defendant was Convicted by Jury

Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark today announced that a Bronx man was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison after shooting a woman who was working at a City Island construction site, after finding out she was in a relationship. 

Bronx District Attorney Clark said, “The defendant shot the victim, Lizbeth Mass, three times in the middle of her shift during a fit of jealous rage. Lizbeth was beloved in her community and wassenselessly killed. After a 15-day trial, the jury reached a guilty verdict, and the defendant will now spend decades behind bars for the death of a working mother.” 

District Attorney Clark said the defendant, Jose Reyes, 69, of 321 East 150th Street was sentenced today to 25 years to life in prison by Bronx Supreme Court Justice Margaret Clancy. Reyes was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison for second-degree Murder and 15 years in Prison and five years of post-release supervision for second-degree Criminal Possession of a Weapon, which will run concurrently. He was found guilty of the charges after a jury trial.

According to the investigation, on the afternoon of April 14, 2021, the defendant went to the construction site on 636 City Island Avenue where Mass, 52, worked. Reyes, who was acquainted with Mass, became enraged when he saw her boyfriend at the site and realized she was in a relationship. The defendant left the scene and returned on a bicycle. The boyfriend of the victim saw Reyes on his bike and was concerned he would do something to Mass. He followed Reyes in his car and saw the defendant shoot Mass. She was shot a total of three times, once each in the back, leg, and hip with a revolver which was taken from the defendant’s employer’s home. The boyfriend ran over the defendant with his vehicle and he, along with other individuals, restrained Reyes until police arrived. The victim was taken to Jacobi Medical Center where she was pronounced dead about an hour after the shooting.

District Attorney Clark thanked NYPD Detective Francis Orlando formerly of the Bronx Homicide Squad and NYPD Detective Kristopher Persaud of the 45th Precinct for their assistance in the investigation.

Thursday, February 15, 2024

Two Bronx Men Charged With Distributing Narcotics Out Of Bronx Residence Connected To Multiple Fatal And Non-Fatal Drug Overdoses

 

Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and Edward A. Caban, the Commissioner of the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”), announced today the filing of a criminal Complaint in Manhattan federal court charging RUBINSKY PADILLA and LUIS ROSARIO, a/k/a “Gallo,” with conspiracy to distribute narcoticsROSARIO was arrested yesterday afternoon in the Hunts Point neighborhood of the BronxPADILLA is currently at largeROSARIO will be presented today before U.S. Magistrate Judge Valerie Figueredo. 

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: “Yesterday afternoon, law enforcement conducted a Court-authorized search of a residence in the Bronx at 755 Coster Street, a home that the defendants have allegedly used for years to sell lethal narcoticsThe defendants’ alleged actions have plagued the neighborhood and littered the street with drugs — endangering residents, including childrenAs alleged, there have been 12 fatal overdoses and 30 non-fatal overdoses within a three-block radius of this residence in the last five yearsThe most recent suspected fatal overdose was less than a month ago and occurred inside the houseIf you or anyone you know has bought drugs from 755 Coster Street, they are considered extremely hazardous, potentially fatal, and should not be ingested under any circumstance.” 

NYPD Commissioner Edward A. Caban said: “These charges underscore the gravity of the illegal drug crisis plaguing New York City and our nation.  For far too long, the Bronx house from which these two men allegedly distributed their poison was a locus of tragedy that diminished quality of life for everyone in the neighborhood.  I commend our NYPD narcotics investigators for their perseverance in shutting down this alleged drug operation, and I thank everyone from the Office of the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York for their partnership in prosecuting this important case.”

According to the allegations in the Complaint charging PADILLA and ROSARIO:[1]

From at least in or about October 2022 through on or about February 15, 2024, a group of narcotics traffickers, including PADILLA, ROSARIO, and others, illegally ran an extensive narcotics distribution operation out of a house located at the street address 755 Coster Street in the Bronx, New York.  Over the course of the investigation, the NYPD has established that the group is responsible for the sale of heroin, fentanyl, para-fluorofentanyl (a fentanyl analogue), and cocaine, among other drugs, at the house.  Residents in the neighborhood have called 911 on multiple occasions to report continuous narcotics activity and use at the house and drug paraphernalia found outside on the sidewalk.  The group continued to operate despite repeated law enforcement actions, including multiple judicially authorized searches of the house from approximately 2015 through 2024.  Each search resulted in the seizure of narcotics, including, for example, heroin, fentanyl, cocaine, and cocaine base.  PADILLA and ROSARIO were both arrested in April 2023 after one such search of the house resulted in the seizure of a substantial quantity of narcotics, but both continued operating the narcotics distribution operation uninterrupted from the same location.

Between approximately in or about 2018 through 2024, there have been at least 12 fatal overdoses and 30 non-fatal overdoses reported within a three-block radius of the house at 755 Coster Street.  Most recently, on or about January 19, 2024, law enforcement responded to a 911 call reporting an unresponsive male in need of medical assistance at the house located at 755 Coster Street and found an individual who appeared to have died hours earlier of an apparent overdose.

On or about February 14, 2024, law enforcement searched 755 Coster Street and found ROSARIO inside.  As pictured below, during their search, law enforcement found, among other things, quantities of suspected cocaine base and heroin, as well as narcotics paraphernalia, including materials designed for use in packing narcotics for distribution. 

Photo of suspected narcotics and materials designed for use in packing narcotics for distribution
Photo of suspected narcotics
Photo of materials designed for use in packing narcotics for distribution
Photo of materials designed for use in packing narcotics for distribution
Photo of suspected narcotics, narcotics paraphernalia, and materials designed for use in packing narcotics for distribution

Any member of the public who has overdosed, or has knowledge of anyone who has overdosed, as a result from narcotics purchased at 755 Coster Street should anonymously call 866-874-8900.

RUBINSKY PADILLA, 48, and LUIS ROSARIO, 67, both of the Bronx, New York, are charged with one count of conspiracy to distribute narcotics, which carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in prison and a maximum sentence of life in prison.

The statutory minimum and maximum sentences are prescribed by Congress and provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendants will be determined by the judge.

Mr. Williams praised the outstanding investigative work of the NYPD’s Narcotics Bureau Bronx Major Case Unit as well as the Bronx County District Attorney’s Office.   

The prosecution of this case is being handled by the Office’s Narcotics Unit.  Assistant U.S. Attorneys Ashley C. Nicolas and Lisa Daniels are in charge of the prosecution.

The charges contained in the Complaint are merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

[1] As the introductory phrase signifies, the entirety of the text of the Complaint and the description of the Complaint set forth herein constitute only allegations, and every fact described should be treated as an allegation.