Monday, June 17, 2024

Community Board 11 Juneteenth Event

 

It was a nice sunny Saturday afternoon for the Community Board 11 Juneteenth event. The event was being run by the Co-Chair of the Budget Committee CB 11 member Staceyann Deleon and the Co-Chair of the Diversity Committee CB 11 member Cynthia Rodriguez. Other former board members who were involved in last years Juneteenth event also helped out. 


Various elected officials were in attendance as you will see in the photos. There was plenty of food on hand, and three cakes to enjoy this year in celebration of Juneteenth which was explained by North Central Bronx Hospitals Deputy Executive Director Alfredo Jones. An award was given to the  Co-Founder of WeRiseAs1 Willis Booda Dixon, and the Legacy Award was given to Community Board 11 Parks Committee Chair Janice Walcott. 


Assemblyman John Zaccaro recognizes CB 11 Parks Committee Chair Janice Walcott with a citation from the State Assembly.


State Senator Gustavo Rivera also presented CB 11 Parks Committee Chair Janice Walcott with a citation from the State Senate.


Former CB 11 Sergeant of Arms Malcom Gray presents Willis Booda Dixon with a citation. 


State Senator Gustavo Rivera played the role of a staffer to State Senator Nathalia Fernandez as she presented a State Senate citation to a surprised former CB 11 member Serina Munoz.


State Senator Rivera also helped fix the Happy Juneteenth banner as one side began to come away from the wall.


A group photo which included the two state senators, Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (between them), the Acting Chair of CB 11, former and current CB 11 board members, and the honorees.  


Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark stopped in to help celebrate Juneteenth. 


CB 11 board member Cynthia Rodriguez cut the cake, as CB 11 board member Staceyann Deleon ate the first piece of cake. 

D.A. Bragg Announces Indictment Of NYPD Deputy Inspector For Covering Up Drunk Driving Incident In NYPD Vehicle

 

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg, Jr., announced the indictment of PAUL ZANGRILLI, 44, a New York City Police Department Deputy Inspector, for covering up a drunk driving incident in 2022. ZANGRILLI allegedly allowed a person he was dating, NIKOLE RUPPLE, 35, to drive his unmarked NYPD-issued vehicle after they had both been drinking for several hours. With ZANGRILLI in the passenger seat, RUPPLE hit a livery cab vehicle and fled the scene. ZANGRILLI, who later drove the same department vehicle while intoxicated, allegedly lied about the incident and attempted to erase key video evidence.

ZANGRILLI is charged in a New York State Supreme Court indictment with one count of Tampering with Physical Evidence; two counts of Falsifying Business Records in the First Degree; two counts of Offering a False Instrument for Filing in the First Degree; one count of Obstructing Governmental Administration in the Second Degree; two counts of Official Misconduct; one count of Operating a Motor Vehicle While Intoxicated; and one count of Operating a Motor Vehicle While Impaired by Alcohol. RUPPLE is charged with one count of Operating a Motor Vehicle While Intoxicated and one count of Leaving the Scene of an Incident Without Reporting, With Personal Injury. [1]

“This alleged behavior was incredibly dangerous, leading to injuries for one cab driver and putting the safety of many other drivers and pedestrians at risk. Furthermore, this NYPD Deputy Inspector, then a Commanding Officer, allegedly went to great lengths to cover up the incident to avoid responsibility,” said District Attorney Bragg. “We will continue to hold public servants accountable when they violate the public trust.”

According to court documents and statements made on the record, on August 16, 2022, at approximately 5:40 p.m. ZANGRILLI – who at the time was the Commanding Officer of the NYPD’s 5th Precinct – drove to the bar American Whiskey near Penn Station with RUPPLE.

The defendants drank at the bar where, in approximately three hours, ZANGRILLI consumed five shots and seven beers and RUPPLE consumed seven shots and three beers.

When they left together at approximately 8:40 p.m., RUPPLE drove the NYPD-issued vehicle northbound on 10th Avenue with ZANGRILLI in the front passenger seat.

A few minutes later, RUPPLE crashed the car into the back of a livery cab at the intersection of West 30th Street and 10th Avenue, injuring the cab driver’s back and neck, and damaging the back of his car. RUPPLE then sped away, before pulling over a few blocks later and switching seats with ZANGRILLI. ZANGRILLI continued to drive the vehicle northbound on 10th Avenue.

The cab driver eventually stopped at the same red light as the defendants on West 33rd Street and 10th Avenue and called for help from a uniformed officer in a marked police vehicle. When the light turned green, ZANGRILLI started to drive away while the cab driver followed. The uniformed officer pulled the defendant’s car over, with the victim still following.

The uniformed officer instructed the victim, who told her that the defendants were intoxicated and had fled the scene of the vehicle collision, to submit an accident report at a police precinct. ZANGRILLI repeatedly offered $500 and $1,000 to the victim instead of exchanging insurance information both in the uniformed officer’s presence and after she left. 

The victim then called 911 to request someone take a report. At the same time, ZANGRILLI called a Duty Captain to arrive at the scene. ZANGRILLI falsely informed the Captain that he had been driving to work at the time of the collision and safely pulled over as soon as possible. He did not mention that RUPPLE – who at this point was lingering away from the scene out of sight – had been in the vehicle, nor that either of them had been drinking.

The Captain informed an NYPD Inspector about the incident and, relying on the false information provided by ZANGRILLI, instructed a Sergeant to complete the required department-vehicle collision paperwork. 

Later, ZANGRILLI drove to the 5th Precinct with RUPPLE. ZANGRILLI signed in for duty at the 5th precinct and then called the owner of American Whiskey asking him to delete the security cameras’ surveillance video from that night. The video technician who operated the security system did so the next morning.

The NYPD’s Internal Affairs Bureau (“IAB”) was notified of the situation that same evening. At approximately 10:50 p.m., ZANGRILLI falsely told an Inspector that he had gone to his Rockland County home. When IAB arrived at his home at approximately midnight to conduct a “Fitness for Duty” observation to determine if he was intoxicated, he was not there. ZANGRILLI was eventually found at RUPPLE’s apartment.

Several days later, IAB executed a search warrant for American Whiskey’s video surveillance system. IAB and the D.A.’s Office were eventually able to recover and extract the video surveillance footage from the day of the incident. 

D.A. Bragg thanked IAB for its assistance.

Three Defendants Plead Guilty to a Civil Rights Conspiracy Targeting Pregnancy Resource Centers

 

Three Florida residents pleaded guilty to conspiring to injure, oppress, threaten or intimidate employees of pregnancy resource centers in the free exercise of the right to provide and seek to provide reproductive health services. The defendants selected reproductive health facilities that provided and counseled abortion alternatives and vandalized those facilities with threatening messages.

According to court documents, between May and July 2022, Caleb Freestone, Amber Smith-Stewart and Annarella Rivera engaged in a series of targeted attacks on pro-life pregnancy help centers in Florida. The defendants admitted they participated in the attack in the dark of night and, while wearing masks and dark clothing to obscure their identities, spray painted the facilities with threatening messages, including “If abortions aren’t safe than niether [sic] are you,” “YOUR TIME IS UP!!,” “WE’RE COMING for U” and “We are everywhere.”

“These defendants vandalized pregnancy resource centers with threatening messages meant to terrify the employees of those centers,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “Violence and threats have no place in the national discourse about reproductive rights. The Justice Department is committed to holding accountable those who seek to interfere with access to reproductive health services in our country, without regard to the point of view of the defendants or their victims.”

“Federal law protects providers who render reproductive health care and those who seek their services,” said U.S. Attorney Roger Handberg for the Middle District of Florida. “Neither should be subject to unlawful intimidation or threats of harm. We will continue to work with our law enforcement partners in protecting access to reproductive health care and federally prosecuting those interfering with that right.”

“The FBI works diligently to safeguard the civil rights of our citizens,” said Acting Special Agent in Charge Rodney Crawford of the FBI Tampa Field Office. “We and our law enforcement partners will not tolerate those who conspire to attack facilities providing these lawful reproductive health services.”

A sentencing hearing will be scheduled at a later date. The defendants each face a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors. Charges remain pending against a fourth defendant.

The FBI Tampa Field Office investigated the case, with assistance from the Miami Police Department.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Stacie Harris for the Middle District of Florida and Trial Attorney Laura-Kate Bernstein of the Civil Rights Division’s Criminal Section are prosecuting the case. 

Anyone who has information about incidents of violence, threats and obstruction that target a patient or provider of reproductive health services, or damage and destruction of reproductive health care facilities, should report that information to the FBI at www.tips.fbi.gov . For more information about clinic violence, and the Justice Department’s efforts to enforce FACE Act violations, please visit www.justice.gov/crt/national-task-force-violence-against-reproductive-health-care-providers.

East Bronx History Forum, Wednesday, June 19th

 

Dear East Bronx History Forum Members, 

      The East Bronx History Forum is pleased to announce it will hold its 186th meeting on Wednesday, June 19th at 7:30 pm in Msgr. Joseph Raimondo Hall at St. Clare’s of Assisi parish, located at 1027 Rhinelander Avenue. This in-person meeting will be our 14th annual Bronx Road Show. 

     We are asking our East Bronx History Forum members to be historians and search their basements, attics and family collections for items from their Bronx collections or family history. They will be asked to make these items available to exhibit and to discuss how the item was acquired, its age and its connection to Bronx history. Examples include an object, documents, newspaper articles and photographs for display.

     This will be our last meeting of the season, we will be returning on Wednesday, September 18th.

    We are looking to a fun and interesting evening where our members are the presenters, displaying items that are part of their family which have a Bronx connection.

    As always connect with us during the summer months at our website www.BronxNYC.com and especially at our social media pages on Facebook, Instagram and Vimeo for news, events or updates.
     Looking forward to seeing you!
     Dorothy A. Krynicki, Secretary 

Bankside Park Celebrates Opening In Mott Haven, Bronx

 

Photograph of Bankside Park, by Jakob Dahlin

Brookfield Properties recently celebrated the opening of Bankside Park, a new public park in Mott HavenThe Bronx. The park is part of the 4.3-acre Bankside development and provides the community with direct access to the Harlem River waterfront for the first time in over a century.

Designed by landscape design firm MPFP, the park features shade trees, open lawns, and wood-decked outlooks with seating areas. It is part of the larger $950 million Bankside master plan, which will include the construction of 1,379 apartments, 30 percent of which are rent-stabilized.

Photograph of Bankside Park, by Jakob Dahlin

Prior to Brookfield’s involvement, the site was a contaminated Brownfield. The company completed a comprehensive remediation program and constructed a new shoreline bulkhead to increase resiliency and facilitate the creation of the park.

The project will be home to two local non-profit organizations: The Empowerment Center and Emerging Leaders Program Bx. Throughout the development process, Brookfield partnered with Building Skills NY to create a local job training and hiring program, resulting in the employment of over 100 South Bronx residents who were previously unemployed.

“The Bankside Project stands as a testament to our unwavering commitment to revitalizing the Bronx through sustainable and inclusive development,” said Bronx Borough President Vanessa L. Gibson. “This remarkable transformation of a former Brownfield site into a vibrant, mixed-income community with waterfront spaces accessible to all members of our Bronx community, demonstrates what we can achieve when we work together. We are not just building homes; we are creating opportunities, enhancing livability, and shaping a brighter future for all Bronx residents.”

Sunday, June 16, 2024

Weekly News from State Senator Gustavo River


GOVERNMENT HEADER

SENATOR RIVERA'S STATEMENT ON THE GOVERNOR'S PAUSE OF CONGESTION PRICING

SENATOR RIVERA'S END OF YEAR LEGISLATIVE SUMMARY

Another legislative year is on the books, and Senator Rivera and his team have been busy working to deliver for New Yorkers and the community. This year, Senator Rivera passed 75 bills through the Health Committee, 44 Bills through the Senate, and 17 Bills through both houses. Some of Senator Rivera's bills headed to the Governor's desk include requiring public notice and community engagement when a general hospital seeks to close entirely or a unit that provides emergency, maternity, mental health or substance use care; capping the yearly cost of 2 EpiPens at $100; and requiring the Division of Housing and Community Renewal to publish a database of major capital improvements on its website.

SENATOR RIVERA HOSTS SMALL BUSINESS SERVICE MOBILE VAN IN NORWOOD

This week. Senator Rivera hosted the Small Business Services Mobile Van in Norwood. Senator Rivera toured the local businesses in the neighborhood, provided them with the city’s small business program resources and discussed his bill to ensure that NYC’s commercial tenants receive a lease. Thank you for the Jerome-Gun Hill BID for partnering with our office for this event

SENATOR RIVERA ATTENDS BRONX COMMUNITY SOLUTIONS JUNETEENTH JUBILEE

Senator Rivera was grateful to attend Bronx Community Solutions' Juneteenth Jubilee: Educate and Celebrate the Arts. At the Bronx Library Center, Senator Rivera honored the winners of the Freedom Submission Award with Certificates in appreciation of their art. Congratulations to all the awardees, Elizabeth Rodriguez, Larimar Cortorreal, Cyan Mcfarland, Lemuel Ofosu-Asomani (pictured), and Cynthia Alardo for their inspiring art and photography that earned them this well-deserved honor.

SENATOR RIVERA ATTENDS RIVERDALE PRIDE

Senator Rivera was thrilled to attend the 3rd Annual Riverdale Pride Event at Riverdale Neighborhood House. The event was organized in 2022 by Laura Levine-Pinedo of the 4Bronx Project and Mike Gabert from Flexis Media to bring awareness to LGBTQ+ Issues in the Riverdale area. They have put together an event where everyone, regardless of their background, can come and feel welcomed.

SENATOR RIVERA ATTENDS PELHAM PARKWAY NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION MEETING

Senator Rivera attended June's Pelham Parkway Neighborhood Association meeting. Senator Rivera met with community members and discussed the recently concluded 2024 legislative session, congestion pricing, and the proposed Metro North upgrades. Senator Rivera was thrilled to present Oscar Ruiz with his 2024 Veteran's Hall Of Fame plaque and celebrate his honor back in the Bronx following the statewide ceremony in Albany. The Senator thanks Mr. Ruiz for his service to our country and our Bronx community!

SENATOR RIVERA ATTENDS COMMUNITY BOARD 6 MEETING

Senator Rivera attended Community Board 6's June General Board Meeting. Senator Rivera discussed the 2024 session, and passing his Auto Shop Bill (S5936A) through the Senate, a bill proposed by leaders at Community Board 6. Thank you to Community Board 6's President Evonne Capers and District Manager Rafael Moure for hosting the Senator.

SENATOR RIVERA NAMED TO CITY AND STATE BRONX POWER 100

Senator Rivera was honored to be ranked #6 on City & State's 2024 Bronx Power 100 list. Continuing to serve the Bronx for the last 14 years has been a privilege for Senator Rivera, and he is thankful to his constituents for continuing to put their trust in him. To see the full list, click here.

UPCOMING COMMUNITY EVENTS & RESOURCES

SENATOR RIVERA'S OFFICE PROVIDING FREE LIFE-SAVING NALOXONE SPRAY AND TESTING KITS

STARTING FRIDAY 6/21: FORDHAM FARMERS MARKET

SUNDAY 6/23: NORWOOD PRIDE

TUESDAY 6/18: ANNUAL NYC MUSEUM MILE FESTIVAL

DO YOU NEED HELP STAYING COOL?

HEAP Cooling Assistance helps eligible New Yorkers buy a fan or air conditioner for their home. Act fast to prepare for the hot summer. Benefits are available on a first-come first-served basis. Learn more about HEAP and if you qualify: otda.ny.gov/programs/heap 

MAYOR ADAMS’ STATEMENT AFTER SUPREME COURT OVERTURNS BUMP STOCK BAN

 

New York City Mayor Eric Adams released the following statement after the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Garland v. Cargill, which overturned the federal prohibition on bump stocks — deadly devices that effectively convert assault weapons into machine guns. That prohibition was instituted by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in 2018, following the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history in Las Vegas in 2017. Bump stocks remain illegal in New York City. 

  

“In October 2017, 60 people were killed and at least 411 more were wounded in the deadliest mass shooting in American history, where a shooter used bump stocks to turn his guns into automatic weapons that fired 800 bullets per minute. The Supreme Court’s decision today to overturn the bump stock ban will allow dangerous people to access these deadly devices once again. 

  

“While these devices remain illegal in New York City, this decision — and the legacy of this Supreme Court — makes our country less safe. We need to dam every river that feeds the sea of gun violence, and here in New York City, we’re doing everything in our power to do just that. We’ve removed more than 16,000 illegal guns off of our streets in the last two years and invested nearly half a billion dollars in our Blueprint for Public Safety, which focuses on upstream solutions to prevent gun violence before a shot is even fired. As a result, we’ve driven shootings and homicides down by double-digits in each full year of our administration. 

  

“All the good work we’re doing, however, is undermined by this Supreme Court’s Second Amendment decisions, which collectively allow more dangerous weapons in the hands of more dangerous people, with fewer safeguards. We need Congress to step up and reinstate the prohibition on bump stocks before the next deadly mass shooting occurs.” 


Housing Lottery Launches For 3327 White Plains Road In Williamsbridge, The Bronx

 


The affordable housing lottery has launched for 3327 White Plains Road, a six-story residential building in Williamsbridge, The Bronx. Designed by Badaly Architects and developed by Victor Gjonaj, the structure yields 22 residences. Available on NYC Housing Connect are seven units for residents at 130 percent of the area median income (AMI), ranging in eligible income from $87,052 to $218,010.

Amenities include a garage, bike storage lockers, a shared laundry room, elevator, and an on-site resident manager. Units come equipped with hardwood floors, energy-efficient appliances, and name-brand kitchen appliances, countertops, and finishes. Tenants are responsible for electricity.

At 130 percent of the AMI, there is one studio with a monthly rent of $2,539 for incomes ranging from $87,052 to $161,590; three one-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $2,599 for incomes ranging from $89,109 to $181,740; and three two-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $2,899 for incomes ranging from $99,395 to $218,010.

Prospective renters must meet income and household size requirements to apply for these apartments. Applications must be postmarked or submitted online no later than July 2, 2024.