Stupid tix-fix Tricks

NY Post

FRAZIER Scam bust.

For more than a year, a city data-entry clerk allegedly gave some two dozen drivers what seemed like a great deal on their overdue parking tickets — promising that for half the value of what they owed, she’d make it all go away.

But Department of Finance clerk Karen Frazier wasn’t only scamming the city — she was scamming her customers, too, prosecutors charged yesterday as the unhappy-looking alleged ticket-tamperer was hauled into court in cuffs.

Frazier would promise her customers she’d “take care of” their problem, but typically left them saddled with nonpayment penalties on top of their original, still-unpaid tickets — in worse shape than before they had met her, prosecutors said.

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Top NYPD Cops Under Fire Over Recent Shootings

NY Post

Police officers and detectives at a scene of a shooting on April 7th where 4 youths were shot on Franklin Ave.

Top cops from some of the city’s most violent precincts are facing the NYPD’s “firing squad” over an escalating wave of shootings, sources said.

A routine meeting last week turned into a thrashing session during which precinct commanders were berated for the outbreak of bloodshed.

President George Washington Racks up $300,000 Late Fee for Two Manhattan Library Books

Rich Schapiro for the New York Daily News

He may have never told a lie, but George Washington apparently had no problem stiffing a Manhattan library on two books.

Two centuries ago, the nation’s first President borrowed two tomes from the New York Society Library on E. 79th St. and never returned them, racking up an inflation-adjusted $300,000 late fee.

Bloomberg: Obama Wall Street Attacks Hurting NYC


Mayor, Others Say President’s Ad Campaign, Among Other Things, Hurts City Like Attacking Oil In Texas, Corn In Iowa

NEW YORK [CBS] — President Barack Obama met with House and Senate leaders to push bills to regulate the finance industry. But with Wall Street paying $8 billion a year in New York City taxes officials fear this rage against Wall Street will be another blow to new our already crippled economy.

Record Temperatures, Fire Dangers

myfoxny

Unseasonably warm temperatures have spread across the eastern seaboard and extended into areas all the way to the Mississippi River.

The temperatures are typical of early July rather than early April.

New York City broke an 81-year-old temperature when it hit 90-degrees in Central Park on Wednesday afternoon.

Records were also broken Tuesday in the New York City region.

Thousands May Lose Rental Vouchers

By Cara Buckley for the New York Times

NEW YORK — Because of a $45 million budget gap, the New York City Housing Authority may have to revoke rental-assistance vouchers from more than 10,000 low-income tenants, a drastic move that could cause families to lose their apartments.

After Lazar Loss, Hikind May Be Next Target Among Jews

City Hall News

Assembly Member Dov Hikind

On the day after David Greenfield’s stunning 18-point special election victory over Joe Lazar, leaders in the Hasidic community of Boro Park were already making calls about the elections this November.

But they were not looking for a candidate to run against Greenfield—though he will have to run again for the Council seat he just won.

Instead, these leaders were gauging the interest in running a Hasidic candidate against Assembly Member Dov Hikind, the longtime Orthodox Jewish powerbroker who strongly backed Lazar, according to an individual who has been approached by multiple people about running against Hikind.

“The question everyone is asking today is: Who is running against Dov?” the person said.

Crime up 13% in B’klyn’s 81st Pct.

NY Daily News

The omni-present yellow tape as police and crime scene investigators probe yet another homicide

Crime is up 13% at the Brooklyn precinct where a whistleblower cop accused his supervisors of ignoring felonies to artificially lower the area’s crime stats.

Wind of Change: Greenfield Wins Big, Hikind Loses Bigger

The Jewish Star

Councilman-elect David Greenfield at left (photo Hillel Engel/YWN), Assemblyman Dov Hikind and Joe Lazar, right and far right (photo Michael Orbach/The Jewish Star)

Call him the Jewish Scott Brown.

David Greenfield swept a special election for the 44th District seat on the New York City Council in a landslide victory Tuesday. He soundly defeated fellow Democrat Joe Lazar, taking the seat by a margin of 58 to 40 percent. Kenneth Rice, a Republican, took just three percent of the vote.

New York State Wants to Legalize Medical Marijuana to Help Plug Budget Gap

By Glenn Blain for the New York Daily News

ALBANY — Senate Democrats are counting on a pot of gold!

They want to legalize medical marijuana as a way to generate nearly $15 million in licensing fees to help plug the state’s $9 billion budget gap.

Brooklyn Bridge Park to Open Today

By Andy Campbell for the Brooklyn Paper
It’s done — and on Monday, Brooklyn Bridge Park’s first portion opens.
Roger Swingle / IntervisionMedia

BROOKLYN — Today, Monday, Brooklyn finally gets a chance to park it on the stoop.

The city announced on Thursday that the first phase of Brooklyn Bridge Park — featuring a vast green lawn and a granite front-stoop sitting area located on Pier 1 — will open to the public.

MTA Revises Planned Service Cuts

MYFOXNY.COM — After a series of public hearing on proposed service cuts, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority issued Friday a list of revised proposals for service cuts to help close a nearly $800 billion budget gap.

Five Minutes of Mercy for Alternate-Side Parking Takes Effect

NY Daily News

A ticket sits on the windshield of a car parked at a meter.

New Yorkers finally have the one thing they’ve always wanted – more time.

Five minutes more.

As of 12:01 a.m. Sunday morning, a controversial new law grants that extra 300-second cushion to move your car for alternate-side parking or from an expired Muni meter before getting slapped with a ticket.

A Precinct thats got it Right: Pct. Aims to Curb Loud Parties

NY Post

Police on Carroll Street dispersing a block party last summer.

The 69th Precinct is moving to put the muffler on loud parties before they start for the summer.

Earlier this month, the precinct sent out an email message to area residents asking them to inform the precinct of chronic problem locations.

Starting July, city restaurants will be required to post letter grades based on health inspections

By Kathleen Lucadamo for the New York Daily News

Finding a clean restaurant will be as easy as ABC under a Health Department rule passed Tuesday.

Starting in July, eateries will be required to prominently post letter grades based on health inspections, under a measure the Board of Health passed, 6 to 2.

Bees in the City? New York May Let the Hives Come Out of Hiding

By Mireya Navarro for the New York Times
“The real danger is the skewed public perception of the danger of honeybees,” said Andrew Coté, of the New York City Beekeepers Association.

Kathleen Boyer suspects the mailman.

She said she could not think of anyone else in her neighborhood who would have complained about the two beehives she kept under a pine tree in her front yard in Flatbush, Brooklyn, leading the city’s health department to fine her $2,000 last fall.