Saturday, December 7, 2019

BRONX MAN SENTENCED TO PRISON FOR STABBING ELDERLY WOMAN TO DEATH AND FOR ASSAULTING NYPD COP


Jury Found Defendant Guilty of Manslaughter and Other Charges

 Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark today announced that a Bronx man has been sentenced to 25 years in prison for Manslaughter in the fatal stabbing of a 69-year-old woman. The defendant was also sentenced to five years in prison for Assault and three and a half years to seven years in prison for Reckless Endangerment. 

 District Attorney Clark said, “The defendant carried out a series of appalling acts; first by viciously stabbing his former landlady in her home’s basement. He then returned to the scene of the crime and attempted to conceal his actions by trying to blow up the victim’s home. About a week after the murder, he assaulted a NYPD Police Officer who had stopped him on the street.” 

 District Attorney Clark said the defendant, Nakia Bent, 39, who at the time of the incident had been recently released from jail after serving time for assaulting his ex-wife, was sentenced to prison today by Bronx Supreme Court Justice Steven Barrett. Bent was sentenced to 25 years in prison for first-degree Manslaughter, three and a half years to seven years in prison for first-degree Reckless Endangerment, and five years for second-degree Assault, to be served consecutively. A jury found the defendant guilty of the charges on November 7, 2019. 

 According to the investigation, on or about and between October 8-9, 2016 the defendant went to 886 Crawford Avenue, where his ex-wife lived on the first floor. The defendant entered through the basement apartment where Lilawate Ramsaran, 69, lived alone. He stabbed Ramsaran 19 times, including 14 times in the back, causing her death. On October 9, 2016, he returned to the victim’s home, disconnected the stove’s gas line and lit candles inside the apartment. The defendant’s ex-wife called 911 after smelling gas and FDNY Firemen found Ramsaran. She was pronounced dead at the scene. According to the FDNY, the house was dangerously close to exploding when Firemen arrived, endangering the lives of the defendant’s ex-wife, her 14-yearold son and another individual.

 On October 17, 2016, the defendant assaulted a NYPD Police Officer of the 47th Precinct after the cop stopped him on the street. Bent bit the Officer on his arm, breaking the skin and causing him to seek medical attention at a hospital.

 Bent was arrested for Ramsaran’s death on April 11, 2017, after his DNA was identified from the crime scene.

  District Attorney Clark thanked Detective Robert Regnier of the 47th Precinct and retired Detective Matthew McCrosson of Bronx Homicide for their assistance in the investigation

Comptroller Stringer: Cost of Incarceration per Person in New York City Skyrockets to All-Time High


Annual cost of incarceration grows to $337,524 a person per year – or $925 each day
DOC budget declined by 4 percent but costs outside DOC’s budget continue to grow
Average daily jail population fell by 41 percent over past decade – but violent infractions increased by 79 percent
  The cost of incarceration per person in New York City ballooned to an all-time high in FY 2019, according to a new analysis of the Department of Correction released today by New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer. The City now spends $337,524 to incarcerate one person for a full year, or $925 per day – an 85 percent increase since 2014. At the same time, while the Department of Correction’s budget declined for the first time in recent history, additional jail-related expenses continue to grow. And, continuing a disturbing trend identified in previous analyses by the Comptroller’s Office, violent incidents continue to rise disproportionately to the declining incarcerated population. As the City moves to construct four new jail facilities in the Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens and implement sweeping changes to bail, discovery and speedy trial laws, these findings underscore the continued financial and personal costs of the current system.
“It’s time to fundamentally transform our criminal justice system – and key to that, is an efficient, thoughtful, and modern corrections system. Although our jail system has shrunk, this analysis shows that the system has not changed, as spending, violence, and the use of force continue to rise disproportionately. For long-term savings—and the long-term good of our City—we must start seeing better all-around outcomes as our jail population declines,” said New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer. “Our vastly reduced jail population should be yielding significant savings that we can reinvest in communities and strategies that keep our jail population as small as possible and turn the page from decades of mass incarceration. We have far more work to do.”
This analysis is the Comptroller’s 6th annual update of spending and performance trends of the New York City Department of Correction (DOC). The analysis uses budget data, claims against the City, reports of violence in City jails, and personnel data to analyze the DOC’s operations.
The Comptroller’s Office has also included the DOC on its Agency Watch List for fiscal years 2019 and 2020.
According to the analysis:
The full annual cost of incarceration grew to $337,524 per person in FY 2019
  • Including all costs related to the City’s jail facilities, the City spends $337,524 to incarcerate one person for a full year, the equivalent of $925 per person per day.
  • Since FY 2014, the full cost of incarceration has increased by 85 percent.
DOC’s budget declined in FY 2019
  • The DOC’s budget declined for the first time in recent history, falling $60 million to about $1.3 billion in FY 2019, a contraction of about 4 percent
  • The budget contraction followed the closure of the George Motchan Detention Center in June 2018 and the removal of all 16- and 17-year olds to the Horizon Juvenile Detention Center in October 2018, as required under the state Raise the Age law.
  • While the Horizon Center is operated by the Administration for Children’s Services, the DOC provided temporary staffing for the center in FY 2019. For purposes of comparability with previous analyses, DOC costs related to staffing the youth center have been excluded.
Additional costs outside the DOC’s budget continue to grow
  • In FY 2019, the City funded an additional $1.3 billion in jail-related expenses outside the DOC budget, including employee fringe benefits and pension contributions and correctional health care services.
  • Jail-related expenses outside the DOC budget are estimated to have grown by about 2 percent in FY 2019.
Steep decline in the number of incarcerated persons
  • The average daily jail population fell by 11 percent from 8,896 in FY 2018 to 7,938 in FY 2019. Over the last 10 years, the average population has contracted by 41 percent.
  • Further reductions in the jail population are expected when State-adopted reforms to bail, discovery, and speedy trial laws take effect on January 1, 2020.
The ratio of correction officers to incarcerated persons continued to rise
  • At the end of FY 2019, the DOC employed 9,931 correction officers, excluding 258 officers assigned to the Horizon Juvenile Detention Center.
  • The number of officers has exceeded the average daily population since FY 2016 and reached a ratio of 1.25 officers for every incarcerated person in FY 2019.
  • DOC overtime spending fell for the third consecutive year in FY 2019 to $177 million after reaching a high of $275 million in FY 2016.
Violent incidents keep rising disproportionately
  • In FY 2019, the rate of fight and assault infractions per incarcerated person rose by 12 percent, while the rate of assaults on staff rose by 37 percent and the rate of use of force rose by 42 percent.
  • As the average daily jail population fell by 41 percent over the past decade, the raw number of fight and assault infractions in jail went up by 79 percent and the raw number of incidents and allegations of correction officer use of force on incarcerated individuals more than tripled.
  • The number of tort claims filed for personal injury at a correctional facility has nearly quadrupled from 1,061 in FY 2008 to 3,894 in FY 2018.
  • While the incarcerated population has decreased, the share of the population with a disproportionate propensity to violence has increased. From FY 2014 to FY 2019, the share of the jail population designated as a “security risk” increased from 8.2 percent to 16.4 percent, as the share of the population with a mental health diagnosis grew from 38 percent to 45 percent.

Chanukah Party And Concert at The Young Israel Of Pelham Parkway








































Team Ritchie - HUGE news:


Hey there: We have some BIG news to share: Ritchie’s campaign to represent New York’s 15th Congressional District has been endorsed by BOLD PAC, the Congressional Hispanic Caucus’ political action committee!

Founded in the late 1970s, its membership includes Hispanic representatives from all across the country who are committed to advocating for Hispanics and Latinos in the US and Puerto Rico. It means the world to Ritchie to have an organization so dedicated to moving our communities forward on our side.
 
At a time when Donald Trump’s administration has viciously targeted immigrants with nasty rhetoric and cruel policies, we need leaders like Ritchie in Washington to fight back. He’ll stand up to a corrupt president and hold this administration accountable for seditious immigration policies that make us less safe, less secure, and less free.

News from Congressman Eliot Engel


Engel Signs on as Original Cosponsor of the Protect SNAP Act

Legislation introduced to fight new Trump Admin. rule that cuts SNAP benefits for 700k people

 Congressman Eliot Engel has signed on as an original cosponsor of the Protect SNAP Act, legislation introduced today which would restore and protect the current regulations surrounding able-bodied SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) recipients, as well as prevent the use of funds to carry out a new Trump Administration rule that would drastically cut SNAP eligibility.

SNAP provides nutrition benefits to supplement the food budget of needy families so they can purchase healthy food and move towards self-sufficiency. Earlier this week, the Trump Administration announced a new rule that would create work requirements for SNAP recipients. The move would result in nearly 700,000 people losing SNAP benefits.

As I said when this move was announced, slashing SNAP benefits for nearly 700,000 people during the holiday season is beyond heartless,” Engel stated. “Time and again the Trump Administration has demonstrated its willingness to hurt the most vulnerable among us. Whether its trying to take away health care or trying to take away food, they don’t care how many people are made to needlessly suffer. House Democrats are once again fighting back against this cruel Administration with the introduction of the Protect SNAP Act, which will undo this new rule and allow families who need it most to continue putting food on their tables. President Trump may be fine allowing people to starve, but I’m not. I’m proud to join this bill as original cosponsor.”

The Protect SNAP Act was authored by Reps. Barbara Lee and Rosa L. DeLauro.

Engel Statement on Passage of H.R.4 the Voting Rights Advancement Act

  Congressman Eliot L. Engel issued the following statement on today’s House passage of H.R. 4, the Voting Rights Advancement Act, legislation he was an original cosponsor of that would protect minority groups in states that have recently worked to suppress voting rights:

“The right to vote is sacred and must not be infringed upon. Sadly, our nation has a long and even bloody history of racial voter suppression, but lately that suppression has been super charged by the terrible Shelby County v. Holder decision. That case gutted key protections of the Voting Rights Act and since that decision in 2013, states have implemented measures to prevent certain groups from accessing the ballot through voter ID laws, closing polling locations, and even purging voter rolls.

“We can’t stand still and allow these conservative state legislatures to destroy our democracy. I am proud to help pass H.R. 4 today, as it represents a major step toward ensuring every citizen has the ability to vote. The bill develops a process for states that have made discriminatory changes in their election procedures, forcing them to receive preclearance with the Department of Justice before the changes take effect. It would undoubtedly curtail and prevent the spread of discriminatory voting practices used in many states, but we can do even more to ensure fair and free elections.

“I have introduced a Constitutional Amendment to overhaul our elections, H.J.Res. 9. My amendment takes a comprehensive approach to fixing our voting system, by abolishing the electoral college, making election day a national holiday, automatically registering voters at 18-years-old, and outlawing political gerrymandering. It’s time we leveled the playing field for all Americans when it comes to the right to vote.”

Friday, December 6, 2019

Borough President Diaz Urges Bronx Residents to Apply to Their Local Community Board



Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. is once again inviting Bronx residents to make a difference in their community by applying to join their local Community Board. The Office of The Bronx Borough President will be accepting applications for all 12 Bronx Community Boards from city residents who reside, work or have professional or other significant interests in the borough.
 
“Participation on local Community Boards can provide Bronx residents with a forum to share with their community their expertise and talents,” stated Borough President Diaz. “There are great things happening in The Bronx that involve the participation of community boards. It is important that community residents participate in the decisions that are building and revitalizing our borough, and our community boards are a great place to do so,” said Borough President Diaz.
 
In addition, Borough President Diaz is encouraging young people ages 16 and 17 to apply for community board membership, as his office is working to ensure that there is a least one youth member per community board.
 
“I believe that the earlier young people become engaged in community affairs and interact with government officials and agencies, the better they will understand government and become active leaders in their communities. It is important to hear the voices of our youth when planning for our neighborhoods,” said Borough President Diaz.
 
Applications are available online at the Borough President's website at https://on.nyc.gov/2DPrh2I. Applications can also be received by calling the Community Board office at (718) 590-3913 or picking one up at your local community board office.
 
The deadline for submission of applications for the next round of appointments is February 7, 2020.

EDITOR'S NOTE:

I know which community board I am applying for. I have more knowledge of what a community board does than almost all of the current members, and I know that a community board meeting is not a city council meeting.

Bronx Democratic Party - We're Just Days Away From Our Annual UGLY SWEATER HOLIDAY PARTY & TOY DRIVE


Happy Friday,

We're just a few days away from our annual Ugly Sweater Holiday Party and Toy Drive! Celebrate with us and consider donating toys.
See you Tuesday, December 10 at 6:30PM!
Bronx Dems Headquarters
1534 Boone Avenue
The Bronx, NY 10460

Sincerely,
The Bronx Democratic Party

Wave Hill events December 19‒December 26


Thu, December 19

Wave Hill Members Sale in The Shop

Find naturally appealing gifts for everyone on your shopping list this holiday season, from the handsome new book about Wave Hill, Nature into Art: The Gardens of Wave Hill, to jewelry and accessories for the women--and men--in your life, children’s books and toys.

Fri, December 20

Wave Hill Members Sale in The Shop

Find naturally appealing gifts for everyone on your shopping list this holiday season, from the handsome new book about Wave Hill, Nature into Art: The Gardens of Wave Hill, to jewelry and accessories for the women--and men--in your life, children’s books and toys.

Sat, December 21

Family Art Project: Chasing-Light Poetry Catchers

Use flower petals and other natural materials to create celestial scenes that capture light on the longest night of the year. Celebrate the balance of night and day by coming together to tell stories and create poetry to welcome winter and invite dormancy, rest and snowy nights. Create a three-dimensional light catcher infused with your own found poetry. Free, and admission to the grounds is free until noon.

Wave Hill House, 10AM–1PM

Sat, December 21

Wave Hill Members Sale in The Shop

Find naturally appealing gifts for everyone on your shopping list this holiday season, from the handsome new book about Wave Hill, Nature into Art: The Gardens of Wave Hill, to jewelry and accessories for the women--and men--in your life, children’s books and toys.

Sun, December 22

Family Art Project: Chasing-Light Poetry Catchers

Use flower petals and other natural materials to create celestial scenes that capture light on the longest night of the year. Celebrate the balance of night and day by coming together to tell stories and create poetry to welcome winter and invite dormancy, rest and snowy nights. Create a three-dimensional light catcher infused with your own found poetry. Free with admission to the grounds.

Wave Hill House, 10AM–1PM

Sun, December 22

Garden and Conservatory Highlights Walk

Join a Wave Hill Garden Guide for a public tour of seasonal garden highlights. Free with admission to the grounds.

Meet at Perkins Visitor Center, 2PM

Mon, December 23

Wave Hill is closed.

Wed, December 25
Wave Hill is closed.
                         
A 28-acre public garden and cultural center overlooking the Hudson River  and Palisades, Wave Hill’s mission is to celebrate the artistry and legacy of its gardens and landscape, to preserve its magnificent views, and to explore human connections to the natural world through programs in horticulture, education and the arts.

HOURS  Open all year, Tuesday through Sunday and many major holidays: 9AM–4:30PM, November 1–March 14. Closes 5:30PM, starting March 15.

ADMISSION – $10 adults, $6 students and seniors 65+, $4 children 6–18. Free Saturday and Tuesday mornings until noon. Free to Wave Hill Members and children under 6.

PROGRAM FEES – Programs are free with admission to the grounds unless otherwise noted.

Visitors to Wave Hill can take advantage of Metro-North’s one-day getaway offer. Purchase a discount round-trip rail far and discount admission to the gardens. More at http://mta.info/mnr/html/getaways/outbound_wavehill.htm
  
DIRECTIONS – Getting here is easy! Located only 30 minutes from midtown Manhattan, Wave Hill’s free shuttle van transports you to and from our front gate and Metro-North’s Riverdale station, as well as the W. 242nd Street stop on the #1 subway line. Free offsite parking is available nearby with continuous, complimentary shuttle service to and from the offsite lot and our front gate. Complete directions and shuttle bus schedule at www.wavehill.org/visit/.

Information at 718.549.3200. On the web at www.wavehill.org.