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Bronx Councilman Seabrook arrested

Thomas HintonLarry Seabrook Bronx City Councilman Larry Seabrook surrendered this morning to federal authorities in Manhattan to face a 13-count indictment accusing him of money laundering and fraud as part of an ongoing probe stemming from a slush fund scandal, according to an indictment unsealed today.

Seabrook, a Democrat who has been a member of the City Council since 2001, has been under investigation by the US Attorney’s office in Manhattan and the City Department of Investigation in connection to city contracts he helped secure for various Bronx community organizations, authorities said.

He is expected to be arraigned later today in Manhattan federal court.

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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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Mayor Bloomberg reassures Riverdale synagogue

 

         NYPD police officers stand guard outside the Riverdale Jewish Center Thursday after four men arrested in a plot to bomb two local synagogues.

“Sadly this is just a reminder that peace is fragile and democracy is fragile and we have to be vigilant all the time,” Bloomberg said early Thursday. “The good news is that the NYPD and FBI prevented what could have been a terrible event in our city.”

Bloomberg spoke hours after the NYPD and FBI arrested four alleged terrorists who planted what they thought were explosives in a car outside the center on Independence Ave. and at the Riverdale Temple, two blocks away.

The cell’s diabolical dream was to create “a fireball that would make the country gasp,” a law enforcement source said.

The group also plotted to blow a plane out of the sky at Stewart Air National Guard Base in Newburgh, Orange County, authorities charge.

The purported terror cell had 37 pounds of inert C4 explosives, Kelly said. The bogus explosives were supplied by FBI agents during the year-long investigation.

Kelly said the alleged terrorists “wanted to commit Jihad,” but added that “no one was ever at risk” because the operation that led to the arrests was “highly controlled.” Read more..

 

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David Weprin gets big ally in David Dinkins

Former mayor David Dinkins is throwing his considerable clout behind City Councilman David Weprin’s run for city controller.

The city’s first African-American mayor announced Sunday that he will serve as co-chairman of Weprin’s campaign.

“In this time … it’s very important to have someone as controller who has the experience and the commitment and the integrity to do that very important job,” Dinkins said of Weprin.

The other campaign co-chairman is former Bronx Borough President Fernando Ferrer.

Weprin is hoping Dinkins and Ferrer will give him a leg up on fellow Queens City Council members Melinda Katz and John Liu in the crowded Democratic primary field. Read more..

 

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South Bronx to the South Bay

Brother Benedict, the youth minister at St. Augustine Catholic Church here in the South Bronx, had some bad news and some good news the other day.
The bad news, he told me, was that the Baltimore Province of his religious order, the Redemptorists, had lost most of its endowment in the Madoff Ponzi scheme.
The good news was that this may not be bad news.
“For years we’ve been rolling in money,” said Benedict, a 26-year-old African-American who grew up in the Holiness Church on Chicago’s South Side, converted to Catholicism in high school, and entered the Redemptorists at 18. “The order gave us credit cards and paid them from the provincial office. The superiors didn’t much look at what you racked up as long as it wasn’t too crazy. The brethren bought nice clothes and shoes, went out to eat at good restaurants. Now the superiors are checking every expense. It’s not like it used to be.”
That’s bad. What’s good? Read more..

 

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