Showing posts with label queens district attorney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label queens district attorney. Show all posts

Friday, November 26, 2010

Queens Sex Fiend Suraj Persaud Told Women He Was Cop Before Raping Them by Thomas Zambito - NY Daily News

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A Queens sex fiend raped two women he met on Craigslist after lying that he was a cop and threatening to have them arrested as hookers, prosecutors say.

Suraj Persaud showed the women his guns, a bulletproof vest and a PBA card before attacking them.

The 34-year-old accused perv faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted; he was being held Tuesday night on $100,000 bail.

'The offenses that he is charged with are crimes of violence that pose a serious threat to public safety,' said Queens District Attorney Richard Brown.

Prosecutors say that on May 16, 2010 Persaud took a 29-year-old woman he met through a Craigslist ad to his Queens Village home and raped her after telling him he was an officer. A week later, he brought home a 19-year-old girl who had offered a 'massage' on the online classified ad service.

Persaud was arrested on May 24, 2010 after the 19-year-old victim went to cops.

He was released on a $35,000 bond and arrested again in July when prosecutors learned about the May 16 incident.

The District Attorney's Offce is asking that others who believe they might also be victims to contact the Special Victims Bureau at 718-286-6111.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Woodhaven Man Convicted in '06 Queens Shooting Rampage by Zachary R. Dowdy - Newsday

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A Queens jury Monday convicted a Woodhaven man who prosecutors said went on a rampage more than four years ago, shooting at over a dozen people and killing a Massapequa Park man while driving around Queens neighborhoods picking off victims at random.

Matthew Coletta, 38, of 85-26 98th St. in Woodhaven was convicted in state Supreme Court in Queens of one count of second-degree murder, 13 counts of second-degree attempted murder, one count of first-degree assault, two counts of second-degree assault, two counts of second-degree criminal possession of a weapon, and one count of fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance.

Todd Upton, 51, of Massapequa Park, was shot in the neck on the Cross Island Parkway while riding in the passenger seat of a minivan with his wife and daughter in the Aug. 25, 2006 attack. Upton died at New York Hospital Medical Center of Queens.

In all, 13 people were shot and three people were seriously hurt.

'The defendant carved a bloody swath across Queens County during a violent six-hour shooting rampage in which he drove around randomly firing at individuals standing on the sidewalk or traveling in vehicles,' said Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown, in a statement. He will be sentenced Dec. 16 and could receive in excess of 25 years to life in prison.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Ozone Park Homeowner Nabs Burglar 102nd Precinct - The Queens Courier

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Homeowner nabs burglar

A man and his father apprehended a man who broke into their Ozone Park home and tried to make off with their belongings.

According to the district attorney, Hector Bermudez, 51, admitted that he broke into the 117th Street residence by forcing the front door, and took a watch, a BlackBerry cell phone and more than $1,000.

When the homeowner and his father saw Bermudez, they apprehended him and took their belongings back.

Bermudez, who is charged with second-degree burglary, fourth-degree grand larceny, criminal possession of stolen property and possession of burglar’s tools, was found to have a screwdriver in his back pocket.

Friday, May 21, 2010

Alleged Con Men Steal Millions in Bad Mortgages by Connor Adams Sheets - YourNabe.com

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Queens District Attorney Richard Brown (c.) announces his office is charging 17 people in connection with a multimillion-dollar mortgage fraud scheme. Photo courtesy Queens District Attorney

Queens District Attorney Richard Brown charged 17 attorneys, mortgage brokers and real estate advisers last Thursday with defrauding homeowners and other entities out of millions of dollars.

The scheme the suspects were allegedly involved in targeted homeowners in Queens, Brooklyn and the Bronx who were attempting to avoid foreclosure on their homes, according to Brown. The scam, which targeted lending institutions as well as homeowners, cheated its victims out of $3 million of equity at 26 residential properties, according to the DA.

Roger Huggins of Queens Village and Inderpaul Sookraj of South Ozone Park, who were identified as the scheme’s ringleaders, allegedly owned and operated a Richmond Hill company that went by several names — Home Solutions Management, Home Solutions Enterprises and Home Solutions Limited — and claimed to be a home foreclosure rescue company, according to Brown.

“The defendants are accused of creating a human tragedy of immense proportions for the homeowners who had turned to them in a desperate hope of saving their homes from foreclosure,” Brown said.

The scheme targeted homeowners who had substantial equity in their homes but either faced foreclosure or who were behind in payments and wanted to modify their loans with their lenders, according to prosecutors.

Prosecutors said Huggins and Sookraj used various means to trick clients and make it appear that they had sold their homes to the pair. They also convinced people to sell their properties to them for reduced prices, shortly after which they would resell them for more.

In another instance, Huggins and Sookraj allegedly created and filed fraudulent documents showing they had purchased a home from a homeowner who had actually died the year before, the DA said. They then flipped the property to a buyer at an inflated price, according to Brown.

Richmond Hill attorneys Trevor Rupnerain of South Ozone Park and Shawn Chand of Valley Stream, L.I., were also charged with fraudulently preparing financial and real estate documents in connection with the fraud.

Assistant District Attorney Gregory Pavlides said they used a database of “bad lawyers” compiled by the DA’s office in order to uncover the fraud scheme.

“As we were looking to the database we found a pattern, and that’s how we were able to make this case,” Pavlides said.


Those charged in the fraud were each charged with one or more of a number of crimes, including grand larceny, money laundering, identity theft, forgery, falsifying business records and scheme to defraud. If convicted, the defendants face as many as 25 years in prison.

Targeted Queens homes include ones in Queens Village, Hollis and South Ozone Park.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Halliburton's Murky Name Resurfaces After Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill by Denis Hamill - NY Daily News

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Some things never change.

When Al Gaudelli, noted attorney and former Queens homicide prosecutor, first read about the disastrous oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico, one word popped out of the spreading dark sea of words:

Halliburton.

Halliburton is one of the world's largest oil-field services corporations. And, as we all know, the odious company that made Dick Cheney super rich. The same company that received exclusive no-bid government contracts for almost everything involving oil in the invasion of Iraq.

But Gaudelli wasn't thinking about Dick Cheney or the untold billions Halliburton made from Iraq.

He was reading the part of a newspaper story that said Halliburton might be in for some legal problems in the Deepwater Horizon oil spill because it was in charge of "cementing" on the rig.

"I flashed back to Aug. 18, 1973, when I was the chief homicide prosecutor in the Queens DA's office," says Gaudelli. "At the time Con Ed was building a water intake facility at 20th Ave. and 31st St. in Long Island City to suck water from the East River into coal turbines. A watertight cofferdam that was constructed to build the facility had collapsed. Two sandhogs, fathers of young children, died down there. One of the companies working on that cofferdam was Ebasco Services, a wholly owned subsidiary of Halliburton."

Like all New Yorkers, Gaudelli was saddened by the deaths of those two workers - Vincent Calzolaio, father of one, with a second kid on the way, and Donato Callaro, father of six.

"Then NYPD Sgt. Robert Byrne, a Harbor Patrol cop for 15 years back then, who knew that river better than anyone, called me up and said he'd watched them construct that cofferdam and that it wasn't kosher," says Gaudelli. "That corners were cut."

The veteran police salt took Gaudelli and a few ADAs out onto the river for a look-see.

Gaudelli says the construction plan was to anchor the intake facility to the river floor. In order to do that they had to put in a cofferdam, which is a watertight steel box made of corrugated tongue-and-groove steel sheeting that is driven into the hole to refusal.

"The bottom of the box was supposed to be sealed with saline concrete," Gaudelli says now. "Then the plan was to pump the water out of the box to allow workmen to go down there into the hole to build the water intake facility under the river. And later they were to remove the cofferdam. But we discovered that the contractors didn't put the concrete in place. Didn't do the cementing. And the goddamned bottom of the cofferdam kept blowing and causing great leaks. And finally on Aug. 18, 1973, it blew altogether, water rushing into the hole at 40-60 mph, and two sandhogs were killed."

Seven others barely escaped.

Gaudelli, aided by Sgt. Byrne and Detective Thomas Shay of the 17th homicide squad, conducted an exhaustive investigation and on Dec. 18, 1973, he brought homicide indictments against the contractors Spearin, Preston & Burrows, and Ebasco Services, and three of their supervisors. The charges stated that they had "failed to properly construct and supervise construction on the cofferdam and failed to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk of death in construction of the cofferdam."

Gaudelli says Con Ed was insulated from prosecution because they'd contracted the construction job out.

"Halliburton was insulated, too, because Ebasco was a subsidiary," Gaudelli says. "But as soon as we brought the indictments against the SOBs, these big companies hired the top lawyers from the biggest firms in town and our case was dismissed. But we wanted justice for those two men whose kids had lost their fathers because the contractors had failed to secure the cofferdam with concrete. So we appealed. But it was also denied. I always thought they'd all gotten away with murder."

Then, last week, Gaudelli, now a private attorney in Queens, was reading the papers about the disastrous oil spill in the Gulf and the name Halliburton pops out of the murk as possibly being legally responsible for the catastrophe. Oil construction experts were saying that the timing of the explosion indicates faulty, ahem, cementing. Transocean, the operator of the doomed oil platform, has claimed that Halliburton workers had been capping the 18,000 foot well with cement prior to the explosion that ultimately sank the rig, sending some 200,000 gallons of oil per day into the Gulf.

Talk about rounding up the usual suspects.

"Who knows if Halliburton will be held responsible for the oil spill," says Gaudelli. "It just gave me the chills that 37 years after two men died unnecessarily in Queens that one of the companies involved in that long forgotten underwater tragedy is implicated in the oil spill in the Gulf. Some things never change."


Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Queens Woman, 78, Trips Up 'Empty Wallet' Grifters by Going to Cops by Thomas Zambito - NY Daily News

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Two con artists preying on the elderly with the age-old "found wallet" scam were nabbed with the help of a 78-year-old Queens woman, authorities said Wednesday.

Looking for marks on Queens Blvd., the grifters left a wallet that appeared to be stuffed with cash on the sidewalk last month.

The sharp-eyed senior was walking to a bookstore when she saw the wallet - and was accosted by two men who opened it and claimed it held $300,000.

Also inside was a note that read: "We hit it big in the third race. Give mom five or ten thousand. I'm going to Iraq."

"There appeared to be a lot of cash in there and a note that led me to believe it had something to do with terrorism," the woman told the Daily News.

"I said, 'Let's go to the police.'"

One of the suspects, Hiram Whitener, 69, of Spartanburg, S.C., claimed to be a lawyer and suggested they go to his boss' office to discuss what to do, officials said.

He and Charlet Merrit, 56, of Manhattan allegedly drove the woman there - apparently hoping to convince her they would split the cash if she gave them a "good faith" deposit.

"It's a frightening episode," the senior said. "The way he put it was that if we share the money, we'll have to put it in an escrow.... I told him I don't have any money."

The woman left and called cops, who picked up the duo a few hours later while they were trying to swindle another older woman, prosecutors said.

They are charged with just one con, but three others are accused of hoodwinking a dozen victims out of $62,500 with a similar scam.

Gullible immigrants and seniors turned over $1,000 to $11,000 in exchange for some of the proceeds from a bag or wallet stuffed with phony bills - but all they got was shredded newspaper.

Arrested in that scheme were Paula Sandy, 53, of the Bronx and Myles Riles, 62, and Etta Washington, 59, both of Birmingham, Ala.

"This case must serve as a warning to the public that people should always be suspicious of any financial scheme that requires them to turn over their money to a complete stranger on short notice," said Queens District Attorney Richard Brown.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Queens DA Richard Brown Sets Milestone - NYPOST.com

I bet he's also the shortest serving District Attorney in Queens history...

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District Attorney Richard A. Brown's staff congratulates him on historic milestone: becoming the longest serving district attorney in Queens County history as he surpasses the record set by District Attorney Benjamin W. Downing, who served from January 1, 1865, to October 26, 1883.


Richard Brown yesterday became the longest-serving district attorney in Queens history.

Brown, who was first elected to office on June 1, 1991, completed his 6,874th day on the job, breaking a record by Benjamin Downing that dates to 1883.

Brown has a long way to go before catching recently retired Manhattan DA Robert Morgenthau's 33 years.

"This historic achievement could not have been possible without the overwhelming support and confidence of the people of Queens County," Brown said.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Man Awaits Arraignment In Connection With Wife's Death - NY1.com

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A husband was awaiting arraignment late Friday in connection with the death of his wife, whose dismembered body parts were found inside a suitcase in a Queens park.

Edwin Fuentes of Newark is charged with second-degree murder and tampering with evidence.

The Queens district attorney said Fuentes killed Reina De Los Santos Reyes, seen above, in their Woodhaven apartment in June 2007 and then dismembered her body.

Nearly a year later, a group of teenagers walking in Forest Park found a suitcase containing some of the woman's remains.

Police say Fuentes told them he used to be a butcher.

If convicted, Fuentes faces 25 years to life in prison.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Boro Man Head-Butted Angel Statue: DA Brown - YourNabe.com

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What a dopey criminal...You can't make this stuff up...lol
A South Ozone Park man was busted on suspicion of vandalism after head-butting another man’s cement angel sculpture, the Queens district attorney’s office said.

Around 2 a.m. Jan. 24, the resident of a home on 97th Avenue spotted Mark Jarvis, 21, shaking and then head-butting the yard ornament, causing it to fall off its base, the DA said. When apprehended by police, Jarvis allegedly told them, “Yeah, it was a stupid thing. I did it.”

Jarvis was arraigned Jan. 24 on criminal mischief charges and released on his own recognizance.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Woodhaven Chiropractor Faces Fraud Charges - Queens Chronicle

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A chiropractor with a practice in Woodhaven has been charged with insurance fraud and other charges after allegedly convincing a “patient” to fabricate injuries and then billing an insurance company more than $26,000 for medical treatments over three months, said Queens District Attorney Richard Brown. The defendant then allegedly gave a $1,000 kickback to the “patient,” who was actually an undercover investigator.

Anthony Latona, 50, of Long Island, who practices at 93-11 91st St. in Woodhaven, was charged with third-degree grand larceny, third-degree insurance fraud and first-degree falsifying business records. The defendant was released without bail and will return to court in February. If convicted, he faces up to seven years in prison.

According to the charges, an undercover investigator met Latona at his office on Sept. 16, 2008, at which time the defendant allegedly instructed the agent to fabricate back and knee injuries for the purpose of fraudulently obtaining insurance payments.

The undercover visited Latona’s office more than 40 times between September and December 2008 for the purported treatments, according to charges. During that time it is alleged that the defendant billed Empire Insurance for approximately $26,647 and was paid $9,557 by the insurance company. On Dec. 18, Latona reportedly gave the undercover investigator a kickback of $1,000 in cash.

Ozone Park Man Convicted in Drunken LIE Hell Ride by Howard Koplowitz - YourNabe.com

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An Ozone Park man was convicted last week of reckless endangerment, vehicular assault, driving while intoxicated and other charges stemming from what Queens District Attorney Richard Brown called a “terrifying ride on the Long Island Expressway” in 2006.

Anthony Rampino, 35, of 103-17 90th St. in Ozone Park, was driving his 2002 Chrysler convertible with the roof down at speeds up to 100 mph while under the influence on the Long Island Expressway near Flushing Meadows Corona Park July 25, 2006, the DA said.

A man was sitting in the front passenger seat and three women in the back passenger seat with another three women sitting on the their laps when Rampino ignored the women’s pleas to slow down and stop weaving in and out of traffic, instead just raising the volume on the car’s radio, Brown said.

Rampino eventually crashed into two mediansand then fled the scene of the accident on foot, the DA said.

One of the passengers was ejected from the convertible and thrown across three lanes of traffic, the DA said. She suffered severe abrasions on her arms, shoulders and face and had to have reconstructive surgery on her knees, Brown said.

Another woman suffered a broken pelvis, while the other four women were all treated at local hospitals for various back injuries and lacerations, the DA said.

“The defendant’s reckless actions left several of his passengers with severe injuries,” the DA said in a statement. “It is a miracle that he did not cause the death of any of his passengers or other motorists on the road that night. This dangerous behavior cannot be tolerated and must be dealt with severely.”

An off-duty police officer saw Rampino leave the scene of the accident and chased him, eventually finding the defendant walking in Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Brown said.

Rampino was arrested and taken to the 112th Precinct, where an Intoxilyzer exam was administered which indicated his blood-alcohol level to be .10, above the legal limit of .08.

He was convicted Dec. 10 of reckless endangerment, vehicular assault, driving while intoxicated, speeding, leaving the scene of an accident, driving without insurance and driving without a license after a two-week jury trial before Queens Supreme Court Justice Kenneth C. Holder, Brown said.


*
Rampino faces up to seven years in prison when he is scheduled to be sentenced Dec. 23. He has been remanded without bail until the sentencing.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Forest Park Rape Suspect in Custody by Lisa Fogarty - Queens Chronicle

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A man suspected of rape and sexual assault in Forest Park this year is in custody, police said.

Carl Wallace, 29, from Brooklyn, was arrested on Oct. 28 after cops suspected he is the same man responsible for at least one of the three sexual attacks that took place in or just outside the park within the past five months, the 102nd Precinct confirmed this week. Wallace was denied bail and has been charged with first-degree rape, predatory sexual assault, first-degree robbery and unlawful imprisonment in the first degree.

Wallace’s DNA was found to match that of a 29-year-old woman who was raped on Sept. 24 at around 3 a.m., according to the Queens District Attorney’s Office. The victim was reportedly dragged at knife-point to a wooded area near the intersection of Woodhaven Boulevard and Park Lane South, where the defendant allegedly raped and threatened to stab her if she screamed. After the attack, the man stole cash, an iPod and identification from the victim’s bag before fleeing.

The victim was treated at a Queens hospital, where she immediately submitted to testing that has helped in the capture of her assailant.

It is still unknown if the man is suspected in connection with a rape and a sexual assault that occurred on one day in July in or around the park. At 6 p.m., a 60-year-old woman said a man tried to rip off her clothes while she was exercising near Myrtle Avenue. He fled after she began screaming. At 7:45 that same evening, a 47-year-old woman was reportedly raped while walking near Freedom Drive.

Wallace, whom police said has eight prior arrests, was arraigned in Queens Supreme Court on Nov. 9 and will next appear in court on Nov. 30.

Maria Thomson, president of the 102 Precinct Community Council, said she is among those Woodhaven residents relieved to hear of the arrest. Many area women reported feeling uneasy walking around the park since the incidents occurred this summer.

“They announced the arrests at the community council meeting,” Thomson said. “It was a fact, it was a great fact — we are all very pleased.”

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Judge Finds Monserrate Not Guilty Of Felony Assault - NY1

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A judge today found State Senator Hiram Monserrate not guilty on two counts of felony assault in connection with an incident last year where his girlfriend was injured.

However, the Queens lawmaker was found guilty of a lesser reckless endangerment charge, also a misdemeanor, for causing injury to his girlfriend, Karla Giraldo, by forcibly dragging her by her arm.

He could face up to one year in jail for the charge, but will not be forced to give up his State Senate seat.

The order of protection against Monserrate was extended.

Monserrate was accused of slashing Giraldo in the face with a broken glass.

Earlier this week, hospital employees testified his girlfriend told them Monserrate attacked her. But both Monserrate and Giraldo say she was cut accidentally when the lawmaker tripped while bringing her a glass of water.

Prosecutors argued that Giraldo changed her story after she discovered the lawmaker was going to be arrested.

In a released statement, Senate Majority Leader John Sampson said, "Accusations against public officials are of the utmost concern to everyone in a just and civil society and I take them very seriously. A court of law has now ruled and we respect the decision rendered by the justice system. The leaders of our conference are discussing the potential for further disciplinary action by the Senate and will comment further once a determination has been reached. There is no doubt that this has been a troubling situation for all those involved, but the Senate will continue to move forward and fulfill its duty. New York faces many challenges in the coming months – we will meet those challenges head on and continue to serve the best interests of the people of New York.”

Monserrate's sentencing is set for December 4.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Crash Claims Ozone Park Man by Ivan Pereira - New York Post

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A fatal accident on an Ozone Park street early Sunday morning sent residents into shock as they raced to try to save the man who was hit by a luxury car.

Donald Bryan was dropped off by a cab near his home around 85th Street and Sutter Avenue around midnight when he was struck by a 2008 Lexus that was being driven westbound on Sutter by a unidentified 18-year-old, police said.

The 32-year-old, who worked at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center as a security guard, was flipped in the air, then hit the back window and landed on the street while the car crashed into the gate of Mokom Sholom Cemetery on Sutter Avenue and 84th Street, according to eyewitnesses.

Bryan was pronounced dead at Jamaica Hospital less than an hour later due to brunt trauma to his lower body, police and the city's medical examiner said.

"Quite a lot of people were coming out with towels," said Kevin Wickers, 47, one of several nearby residents who ran to help when they heard the accident. "He was bleeding all over the place."

The teen driver, who was with two other passengers, stayed at the scene of the accident and had not been arrested or charged as of press time Tuesday, the police and Queens district attorney's office said. It was not known whether he was speeding, although Wickers and other neighbors said they heard the car go fast.

"They weren't hurt, they were more shook up," Wickers said of the car's occupants.

Wickers and several other neighbors said a cab was dropping off Bryan from Manhattan after he finished work that night. Christopher Gianni, who stayed with the victim until first responders arrived, said he saw the cab drive off after the accident.

Gianni, who spent 20 years with the U.S. Navy and currently works with the U.S. Coast Guard as a civilian, said he tried to administer first aid to Bryan.

"He asked, 'What happened?' and I told him, 'You were just hit by a car,'" Gianni recalled.

Friends of the security guard set up a makeshift memorial at the edge of the cemetery where he was hit. In addition to flowers and a candle, the memorial included a picture of Bryan, posing casually in a black T-shirt.

Several neighbors said the road in the area, which borders Tudor Village, has had problems with speeding drivers over the years. Several drivers have caused minor accidents and near-misses due to their excessive driving, according to Wickers.

"They come off flying off the Conduit," he said.

Gianni said he and several neighbors have complained to the city about the dangerous road and said the fatal accident could spur someone to come up with a way to curb speeders. He suggested a flashing yellow light to slow down drivers.

"I hope after this they could do something with the street," Gianni said.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

NYPD Daily Police Blotter - New York Post

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A woman was busted for roughing up a traffic agent who was giving her a summons in Ozone Park, authorities said yesterday.

Arleen Goorwah, 27, confronted the agent at Liberty Avenue and 106th Street at around 4 p.m. on June 29, cops said.

Goorwah allegedly shoved the female agent and tried to grab her hand-held ticketing device.

Police were called and arrested Goorwah, who was charged with attempted assault and harassment, according to a spokeswoman for DA Richard Brown.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Woodhaven Writer Choked By Bandits - Murdered As He Slept In Vehicle by Robert Pozarycki www.timesnewsweekly.com | Times Newsweekly

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Two teenagers were arrested last week and charged in connection with the robbery and strangling death of a 49-yearold Woodhaven journalist who was killed while sleeping inside a double-parked car in Flushing, it was announced.

Law enforcement sources identified the suspects as Chris Levy, 17, of Harlem and Cory Azor, 16, of East Elmhurst, who allegedly murdered and robbed David Kao, 49, of 76th Street in Woodhaven early on the morning of Saturday, June 6.

A third individual—Kevon Wilthshire, 17, of Corona—was apprehended with them last Monday, June 8, after police found him operating the victim's vehicle, which was reportedly stolen by the two other suspects.

All three individuals were previously arrested for robbing a 42-yearold man inside a Flushing apartment on the night of May 27, Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown stated.

"While all three defendants are accused of preying on Asian men to rob, two of [them] are charged with a senseless and brutal crime that, by their own alleged actions, shows a complete disregard for human life," Brown said in a press release. "This case will be vigorously prosecuted."

According to law enforcement sources, the murder occurred at around 1 a.m. on Saturday, June 6, as Kao—a reporter with the Chinese language newspaper World Journal—slept inside a 2000 Lexus SUV that was parked in front of a home on Colden Street between Franklin and Cherry avenues.


Reportedly, Levy and Azor entered the vehicle and placed the victim in a chokehold, eventually pulling him over the driver's seat into the rear. There they continued to choke and punch the victim about his body until he was dead.

Prosecutors said the two teens al- legedly drove the Lexus to a location in the vicinity of Barclay Avenue and 147th Avenue, where they dumped Kao's body. The suspects then fled from the scene in the SUV.

Members of the 109th Precinct apprehended Levy, Azor and Wilthshire on June 8 in Flushing, inside the vehicle registered to Kao. During a search, the victim's wallet and credit cards were found in the suspects' possession.

Regarding the May 25 robbery in Flushing, law enforcement sources said the three teenagers allegedly confronted and mugged a 42-year-old man at around 8:50 p.m. inside an elevator at an apartment house on Ash Avenue.

Reportedly, Wilthshire grabbed the victim from behind and placed him in a chokehold while Levy held a silver pistol to the man's head and demanded cash. Police said the three teens allegedly removed a cell phone and wallet before fleeing from the scene in an unknown direction.

Prosecutors noted that the phone was later discarded by Wilthshire, who allegedly told detectives that he didn't like the device.

Levy and Azor were charged with second-degree murder, first- and second degree robbery and third- and fourth-degree criminal possession of stolen property. Wilthshire was booked on first- and second-degree robbery and third-degree criminal possession of stolen property.

They were each arraigned in Queens Criminal Court last Wednesday, June 10, according to court records. Levy and Azor were remanded without bail, while Wilthshire was ordered held in custody on $75,000 bail.

The three are scheduled to return to court on June 25. If convicted, they each face up to 25 years to life in prison.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Suzanne D. O'Hare of the D.A.'s Homicide Investigations Bureau, under the supervision of Assistant District Attorneys Peter T. Reese, bureau chief, and Peter J. McCormack III, deputy bureau chief.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

9 in Queens, Including Educator, Charged with Cutting Holes in Fences, Driving Off with Luxury Cars by Nicole Bode and Larry McShane - NY Daily News

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A middle school assistant principal was among nine arrested for stealing luxury SUVs, officials said. Above, Queens District Attorney Richard Brown. Anderson/News

A nine-month probe dubbed "Operation Lockbox" produced nine arrests - including a Brooklyn middle school assistant principal, Queens District Attorney Richard Brown said.

The car theft ring, focusing on BMWs, Mercedes-Benzes and Lincolns, made off with late-model SUVs worth more than $400,000.

The clever crooks' favorite target was the Recon Motors storage facility in Whitestone, where they easily dodged security to drive SUVs off the lot like buyers taking a late-night test drive, officials said.

Members of the ring used wire cutters to slice an enormous hole in the chain-link fence farthest away from the front gate security booth and then cruised into the night, authorities said.

The facility was not equipped with security cameras, and the thieves drove the cars through the parking lot of an adjoining business.

"They saw a weakness, and they exploited it," said Deputy Inspector Charles Talamo, head of the NYPD Auto Crimes Division.

In other cases, the thieves actually took the luxury vehicles for test drives and stole the dealer's keys - returning later to drive away with the SUVs.

Brown said the thieves "leisurely window-shopped" at nine dealerships in Queens, Brooklyn and on Long Island for the exact makes and models they wanted. The crew would create new VIN numbers for the vehicles before resale.

The arrests were the result of a joint NYPD-Queens DA probe. Talamo said the police were sometimes aware of the thefts before the dealerships.

The ring's accused mastermind, 54-year-old Melvin Pinckney of Brooklyn, was ordered held on $100,000 bail on a variety of charges.

He and co-conspirators David Jimenez, 40, and Alexander Gil, 34, both of Brooklyn, each face up to 15 years in prison.

Lisle Jackson, 54, was reassigned from his job at Middle School 61 in Brooklyn after he was released without bail. The 12-year veteran of the New York schools planned to supplement his $96,405 annual salary by re-selling the stolen SUVs to new buyers, officials said.

lmcshane@nydailynews.com

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

NYC Buy-Back Nets 919 Guns - New York Post

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New York City officials say 919 guns were collected during a one-day buy-back program at six Queens churches.

The program paid $200 to anyone who turned in a gun. A pellet or BB gun was worth $20. The officials say they paid a total of $158,880.

The weekend buy-back results were announced Tuesday by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and Queens District Attorney Richard Brown.

Since last summer, similar programs in Brooklyn, Manhattan and Staten Island - plus the Queens effort - have netted more than 3,500 guns. More than half of them are handguns.

The goal is to reduce crime and tragic accidents.

$30-35 Million Windfall for Anti-Crime Programs in NYC: Says Rep Weiner...

Stimulus Provides Record Boost for Fighting Drugs, Gangs, and Violence against the Elderly Funding is More Than the Last Four Years Combined


Buried deep in the stimulus bill is more than $30 million to help New York City fight crime. The “Justice Assistance Grant” (JAG) program is a multi-purpose, anti-crime initiative that helps cops, District Attorneys, and prosecutors take on gang violence, drug trafficking, and juvenile justice.


According to a study released today by Representative Anthony Weiner (D – Queens and Brooklyn), a member of the House Judiciary Committee, the City will receive a $30 to $35 million windfall in JAG funding – more than the last four years combined.

Among the programs that have been funded with jag dollars in the past are:

  • NYPD used funds to implement state-of-the-art child exploitation tracking system

  • Brooklyn DA used funds to try violent juvenile offenders, particularly those affiliated with gangs

  • Manhattan DA used funds to target criminals who are violent and habitual offenders

  • Queens DA used funds to target hate crimes and track patterns of youth gang development

  • Staten Island DA to enhance the prosecution of violent offenders.

  • Special Narcotics Prosecutor used funds to crackdown on career and violent narcotics offenders

  • City used funds to manage digital images and videos sent to 911 and 311 systems via cell phones and computers.

The recently-enacted stimulus provides more than $2.76 billion nationwide to allow states and local governments to support a broad range of activities to prevent and control crime and to improve the criminal justice system.

Rep. Weiner said, “These funds get the federal government back in the business of keeping our streets safe. They will help all levels of law enforcement put violent criminals and gangs behind bars.”