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Support the Bronx News Network!!!

If you want to get a last-minute tax deduction in for 2009, or just want to get a jump on your 2010 return, please consider making a tax-deductible donation to the Bronx News Network by clicking here. After the jump is a letter we just mailed out to some of our friends and supporters. It lays out our accomplishments in 2009 and our plans for 2010 (including making this blog bigger and better!).
We’re trying to raise $15,000 from individuals by Jan. 30. If you value hyper-local Bronx news — if you’re reading this blog you obviously do — please make a donation today! We’ll keep a running daily count of how much we raise. So far, we’ve raised $500. Help us get to $1,000 today. Thanks! (If you’ve already responded to our e-mail appeal, thank you!!!)  — Jordan Moss Read more..

 

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Officer accuses NYPD of racial profiling

The New York Police Department has been accused of racial profiling by one of its own.

NYPD Sgt. Reginald McReynolds, who is African-American, said he was a victim of racial profiling when he was stopped by two fellow police officers while in his girlfriend’s apartment building in the Bronx on October 26.

According to the official police report, the officers were responding to a domestic abuse call in the same building and mistook McReynolds for the suspect, handcuffing him after he refused to identify himself.

Eric Sanders, McReynolds’ attorney, told a different story.

As a former NYPD officer himself, Sanders claims McReynolds immediately identified himself despite what he said was a lack of grounds for stopping him.

“You have to have a legal basis to stop someone in the first place,” Sanders said. “They can’t do that in a private building unless they establish that there are some grounds for suspicion.”

The police report cites the Clean Halls program, which allows officers to stop suspicious occupants of private buildings, interrogate them and place them under arrest for criminal trespass, as legal basis for interrogating McReynolds,

McReynolds was walking up the building’s stairs, returning with a bag of take-out Chinese food, when he encountered Officers Kyle Bach and Joseph Azevedo. Both officers had just left an apartment on the same floor as McReynolds’ girlfriend, Yvelisse Cruz, in response to a domestic abuse call.

The police report said, after being advised that the alleged suspect might still in the building, the officers immediately stopped McReynolds thinking he might be the alleged abuser.

The report also said that after refusing to answer interrogation questions, they attempted to handcuff him as McReynolds pushed Azevedo in the chest. Cruz, who took pictures of the incident, was then instructed by McReynolds to call 911, and, according to the report, was told to lie to the dispatcher and claim that “a uniformed member of the services was hitting him in the face.”

When back-up officers were called in, McReynolds was released, but was later suspended for 30 days on charges of misconduct toward an officer. He has since been ruled to be fit for duty and has returned to his position in the Quality Assurance Division of the department.

Sanders maintained that McReynolds is innocent on all counts of alleged misconduct. Read more..

 

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Friends grieve for 12-year-old Bronx girl killed in joyride

Clutching candles and pink roses, friends of a 12-year-old Bronx girl killed in an apparent joyriding crash held a somber memorial at her apartment Wednesday.

In a strange twist, more than two dozen of Kaitlin Booth’s friends grieved just one floor above the apartment of the teen suspected of driving the doomed SUV that crashed along the Bruckner Expressway Tuesday.

The suspected 15-year-old driver - whom the Daily News is not naming because he is a minor - has not been charged. He told cops Kaitlin, a star student at Villa Maria Academy, was walking along a sidewalk when the SUV hit her. Investigators doubt that story.

Neighbors said the suspected driver’s family fled their home. That was just fine with Kaitlin’s furious friends.

“How could [the driver] come home and stay in his apartment when right above him people are crying and all torn up?” asked Madeline Mussolini, 14. Read more..

 

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Thomas Mager is likely city’s first bust under Leandra’s Law, police say

A Long Island man busted in the Bronx Tuesday for driving drunk with a toddler in the car was likely the first person arrested in the city under Leandra’s Law, police said.

Thomas Mager, 50, was pulled over on the Throgs Neck Expressway about 12:45 p.m. while cruising at 75 mph in a 50-mph zone, police sources said.

Mager, whose 3-year-old daughter was in the backseat of his Chevrolet Silverado, reeked of alcohol and flunked a field-sobriety test, sources said.

“He was intoxicated,” a police source said.

Mager, of Riverhead, L.I., was charged with operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated and other crimes. Read more..

 

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City will relax alternate side parking rules in NW areas of the Bronx

Starting Monday, the city will relax alternate side parking rules in parts of Kingsbridge, Kingsbridge Heights and Van Cortlandt Village.

The move is part of an ongoing pilot program to reduce alternate side parking from twice a week to once a week, and to lower the duration from three hours to 90 minutes in some locations.

“We’re very happy about this,” said Damian McShane, chairman of Community Board 8, which petitioned the Department of Sanitation to relax street cleaning rules.

Alternate side parking will be suspended along Van Cortlandt Park South from Broadway to Mosholu Parkway; portions of Goulden Ave., W. 197th St. and Reservoir Ave.; the north side of W. Kingsbridge Road from Reservoir Ave. to the Major Deegan; the north side of W. 225th St. from the Major Deegan to Broadway; and Broadway (not included) from W. 225th St to Van Cortlandt Park S.

The parking rules suspension will last for six to eight weeks while city crews install 1,400 new signs in the area.

These changes mark the second of two phases of the project, that will ultimately change about 3,600 alternate side parking signs in Community District 8. Read more..

 

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