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Sunday
Jun192016

Smithtown Resident Kathy Albrecht Receives NYS Gift Of Life Medal Of Honor

Fitzpatrick, Assembly Republican Conference Award Albrecht With NYS Gift of Life Medal of Honor

Assembly Minority Leader Brian M. Kolb (R,C-Canandaigua) and Assemblymen Michael Fitzpatrick (R,C,I-Smithtown) and Phil Palmesano (R,C,I-Corning) present Kathy Albrecht with the New York State Gift of Life Medal of Honor in the State Capitol on June 14. 

Assemblyman Michael Fitzpatrick (R,C,I-Smithtown) and the Assembly Republican Conference presented Kathy Albrecht with the New York State Gift of Life Medal of Honor in the State Capitol on June 14. Albrecht donated a kidney to save the life of a 28 year old woman with a rare disorder.

“Kathy Albrecht’s selfless act in donating her kidney to save the life of another human being is inspiring and should encourage us all to consider how precious every life is,” said Fitzpatrick. “Kathy has always been a great advocate for increasing organ donations and saving lives as a blood donor and registered bone marrow donor.” 

Albrecht was awarded the New York State Gift of Life Medal of Honor, an award established by former Gov. Pataki’s tenure. The medal was created to recognize those who give life-saving organ donations and to encourage others to consider becoming donors.

  

Left to right: Assembly Minority Leader Brian M. Kolb (R,C-Canandaigua), Kathy Albrecht, Assemblymen Michael Fitzpatrick (R,C,I-Smithtown) and Phil Palmesano (R,C,I-Corning)

Earlier this year, Albrecht donated her kidney to Rachel Eisensen who suffered from familial dysautonomia. More information about organ donation and the New York State Gift of Life Medal of Honor can be found at: www.alliancefordonation.org.

Thursday
Jun162016

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP - Root Of Spota - Bellone Battle Smithtown Men

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP

By Karl Grossman

Suffolk County, which has known frequent governmental scandals through the decades, may or may not see a new big one erupt. And two Smithtown men are in the middle of it. 

Meanwhile, some are charging that a rush to judgement in regard to the culpability of governmental officials is happening.

“It’s like a lynch mob not interested in innocence or guilt, just the strength of the tree branch and thickness of the rope,” Suffolk County Legislator Thomas Barraga has declared about recent demands made by some county officials that other county officials resign.

The backdrop is a federal investigation into corruption in the criminal justice system in Suffolk. More about this probe will become clear if and/or when the office of the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York (which includes Suffolk County) comes forward with what case or cases it might make. 

Mr. Barraga was a state assemblyman for 23 years before being elected to the county legislature in 2005.  He said “neither the DA nor the county executive has been charged with anything, so what gives other elected officials the right to call for their resignation?”

Also urging a “more cautious” approach to the situation is DuWayne Gregory, presiding officer of the Suffolk Legislature and thus the second highest official in Suffolk County government after county executive.  Says Mr. Gregory: “I’m of the mindset to trust but verify, not distrust and vilify.” Interestingly, he is the polar-opposite politically of conservative Republican Barraga, a Democrat in the highest governmental post an African-American has ever achieved in Suffolk.

Central to what’s been happening is James Burke of Smithtown, chief of the Suffolk County Police Department until his resignation and then arrest in December. That happened in front of his Smithtown house after an indictment of Mr. Burke brought by the office of the U.S. Attorney.  

“I find the corruption of an entire department by this defendant is shocking, “said U.S. District Court Judge Leonard Wexler at an initial hearing for Mr. Burke at the federal courthouse in Central Islip. In February, Mr. Burke pled guilty to the indictment of his beating up, in the Suffolk Police Fourth Precinct house in Hauppauge, a suspect, Christopher Loeb, also of Smithtown. Mr. Loeb had been arrested for breaking into Mr. Burke’s police vehicle.  

Mr. Burke was subsequently accused by the office of the U.S. Attorney of orchestrating a police cover-up of the beating and violating Mr. Loeb’s civil rights. Mr. Burke is now in jail awaiting sentencing.

Widely reported on has been an anonymous letter from “several long-time members” of the Suffolk Police Department relating other earlier misdeeds of Mr. Burke. “These have been personally witnessed by the writers or by first hand witnesses, these are not speculation, rumors or tall tales, they are facts,” it said. It was sent to Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone and his transition team in December 2011, just after his election, in an effort, to save the incoming “administration from scandal and embarrassment.” It described Mr. Burke as a “prolific spinner of facts” and “a master of winning people over and gaining their trust. He can and has had very high powered people do his bidding.”

Despite the letter and information it contained, Mr. Bellone appointed Mr. Burke police chief. Mr. Bellone says he discounted the letter because Suffolk DA Thomas Spota, for whom Mr. Burke worked as chief investigator and with whom he was close, discounted it to him. Mr. Bellone’s shift of blame to Mr. Spota expanded dramatically last month with his demand that Mr. Spota resign amid what has been a succession of investigative articles in Newsday highly critical of the Suffolk DA’s office. These have included articles describing the DA’s office as not taking appropriate action upon receiving evidence on wiretaps of crimes.  

Also calling for the DA to resign has been Suffolk Sheriff Vincent DeMarco. And several county legislators have demanded that both Messrs. Spota and Bellone resign. 

Mr. Spota shot back that Mr. Bellone’s demand “is not based on anything but a personal vendetta against me for investigating and prosecuting people that he is close to.” Mr. Spota specifically cited Mr. Bellone’s “multiple” pleas “in the presence of other prosecutors”  on behalf of his “childhood friend” Robert Stricoff and Donald Rodgers, the county’s information technology commissioner.  The DA said “I refused” to “discontinue my ongoing investigation” of Mr. Stricoff and financial improprieties when he was chairman of the Democratic committee in Mr. Bellone’s hometown of Babylon. That investigation has since been “referred to the chief law enforcement counsel for the state Board of Elections….And I did prosecute Rodgers…He pled guilty to official misconduct and offering a false instrument.” 

As to the Newsday reporting, Mr. Spota maintained it is “fundamentally flawed.” Since taking office in 2001, “I have tried my very, very best to do what is right…I have prosecuted probably over 100 public officials. I never shied away from one of them,” he said.

What might happen?  A wrinkle involves what directions Mr. Burke—with his ability to spin and at ”winning people over”—might send federal authorities. By making a deal with the office of the U.S. attorney and pleading guilty, he avoided a possible 20-year prison sentence if he went to trial. Ironically, it was Mr. Burke when he was a high Suffolk law enforcement official who started and continued a feud with the office of the U.S. Attorney that resulted in years of conflict between that office and the Suffolk DA’s office.

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Karl Grossman is a veteran investigative reporter and columnist, the winner of numerous awards for his work and a member of the L.I. Journalism Hall of Fame. He is a professor of journalism at SUNY/College at Old Westbury and the author of six books. 

 

 

Saturday
Jun112016

Book Review - 'Hemingway in Love'

BOOK REVIEW

‘Hemingway in Love’ By A.E. Hotchner 

172 pages – St. Martin’s Press

Reviewed by: Jeb Ladouceur 

I am not one of those who feels that Ernest Hemingway’s writing is all that exquisite … I’m more interested in the part and parcel of the man’s existence, than in the style of his prose per se. Accordingly, the slender volume, ‘Hemingway in Love,’ with its concise recounting of this most interesting fellow commonly and affectionately known as ‘Papa,’ is my dish of tea.

As most Hemingway aficionados will likely do when they read A.E. Hotchner’s masterfully written account of his friend Ernest’s marriages (and ‘Hem’s’ disastrous love of two women simultaneously) I absorbed this book in one session. In fact, I even found myself at one point eager to finish so that I could start it all over again (I re-read it the following evening, by the way).

It’s no news that Ernest Hemingway was married four times … that his one true love appears to have been his first wife, Hadley … that Hadley’s successors were Pauline, Martha, and Mary … and that the most romantically exciting relationship of the four clearly was his liaison with the wealthy seductress, Pauline Pfeiffer.

But even after a lifetime of reading everything I could lay my hands on by and about the ‘great’ Hemingway, I found much in Hotchner’s book that I hadn’t known. For instance, at one point Ernest describes himself to his friend ‘Hotch’ as a young husband who, upon meeting the determined Pauline, “…was as stupid as a bird dog who goes out with anyone with a gun.” We see how Hotchner quotes this perfect metaphor to paint the swarthy author/sportsman, who finds himself the unsuspecting target of a different kind of hunter … this one wrapped in a high-fashion outfit right out of the pages of ‘Vogue.’

If there is any literary criticism to be leveled at this intriguing memoir, it is that the book jumps unevenly between Hemingway’s serial marriages and his related sojourns over three continents. Unlike ‘The Paris Wife,’ Paula McLain’s superbly penetrating step-by-step analysis of Ernest’s marriage to Pauline Pfeiffer, ‘Hemingway in Love’ is a bit short on detail. Nowhere does Hotchner point out, for instance, that Hadley was eight years Ernest’s senior … and Pauline four years so … whereas, McLain finds substance in that, and says so. Similarly, Hotchner fails to mention Hadley’s unpardonably once losing a number of major Hemingway manuscripts (including carbon copies). OMG!

If Ernest was vacillating in his marital devotion, he certainly never seemed to backslide in his love of self … or of his writings. If Hadley Hemingway (nee Richardson) couldn’t see the end coming after the incident of the manuscripts lost on a train from Paris to Switzerland, she probably wasn’t paying attention. Hotchner ought to have included the now legendary incident.

That said, it should be noted that ‘Hemingway in Love’ depends on Hotchner’s notes and electronic tapes … his letters from Ernest … and his own recollections, as the source materials for this volume. It’s likely that what might seem oversight on Hotch’s part to some, is simply an event that Hemingway considered unimportant … or at least, unrelated to the subject at hand: namely, Ernest’s true love. 

But I wouldn’t bet on it.

At any rate, this is a thoroughly enjoyable book on several levels. It is terse … it is romantically compelling without being smutty … and it shines a rather unique literary spotlight on one of the more fascinating personalities of the twentieth century.

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Award-winning writer, Jeb Ladouceur is the author of eleven novels, and his theater and book reviews appear in several major L.I. publications. His newest book, THE GHOSTWRITERS, explores the bizarre relationship between the late Harper Lee and Truman Capote. It maintains that each wrote the other’s most famous work. Ladouceur’s revealing website is www.JebsBooks.com


Thursday
Jun092016

Sitting On The Job Made Possible By Kings Park MS Art Department

“CHAIRS ABOUT OUR TOWN” PROJECT

Principal Lauren Moreno and Christine SchneiderSt. Johnland Nursing Center is the proud recipient of a beautifully designed new outdoor chair thanks to the Kings Park Middle School art department.  Organized by teachers Christine Schneider and Beth LaFantano, the “Chair About Our Town” project was created to capture the attention of our Kings Park community to increase awareness of William T. Rogers Middle School’s Fine Arts program and highlight the artistic talents of the middle level students. Many of the local businesses were given an opportunity to participate in the project. 

The teachers worked to organize the student artists, supervise them, and encourage their best creative efforts. All of the art sessions were scheduled after school. “I love the project’s connection to the community and enjoy working in the more relaxed manner with the young artists of my group. At our initial Fine Arts Department planning meeting, I jumped right away to work on a chair for St. Johnland Nursing Center. With their 150-year history of caring service, and their consistent support whenever my orchestra has performed there, I’ve always felt a personal connection to them”, said Ms. Schneider. “We researched the nursing home’s website for additional ideas and began to sketch some templates. After a few planning sessions and choosing between paint samples I had picked up at the hardware store, we finally started to paint. We tweaked and discussed our vision as we worked, and our St. Johnland chair is a showpiece that I hope the nursing home will be proud to display.”

St. Johnland sends sincere thanks to the student artists!

 

Thursday
Jun092016

FYI - Empire Center Lists Islandia As Highest Tax Rate In Suffolk County

Empire Center has produced a chart listing highest (effective tax rate) tax areas in NY. The chart is broken down into regions. Smithtown did not make it into the top twenty. Babylon has nine hamlets in the top twenty followed by Islip with six, Brookhaven with four hamlets and Riverhead with one.

The village of Islandia had the highest effective property tax rate in Suffolk County, paying $42.64 per $1,000 of property values during 2014, according to the newest edition of Benchmarking NY, the Empire Center’s annual examination of local property taxes.

“There’s no question that New Yorkers pay some of the highest property taxes in the country, but the burden can vary widely even among neighboring jurisdictions,” said Tim Hoefer, executive director of the Empire Center. “By making it easier to compare taxes in different localities, we hope to encourage local taxpayers and elected officials to search for ways of reducing taxes and spending.”

The lowest effective tax rate in the state was $4.70 per $1,000, levied on properties in Southampton falling within the Sagaponack school district. The taxes on a median-value home there were $2,769, the lowest in Suffolk County. See More