Brooklyn +Home Robbery+
Brooklyn +Home Robbery+ PD of the 61 Pct are calling a level one mobilization in regards to an armed robbery of a residence in which 2 male blacks wearing black jackets tied up 2 victims at 1627 E 27th Street and Avenue P and robbed them, taken was a wallet.
3 Comments:
At 7:39 AM, Anonymous said…
was this frum people?
At 8:14 AM, Anonymous said…
their name is Yisrel Elizur and his wife. H'Sham Yrachim
At 10:07 AM, Anonymous said…
http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/news/wabc_082405_actorarrestAM.html#
NYPD and Screen Actors Guild Square Off
(New York-WABC, August 24, 2005) — There's an emergency meeting today between the NYPD and the Screen Actors Guild, the union that represents TV and Film actors.
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The guild wants clarification of a new policy shift. It allows officers to arrest an actor carrying anything that resembles a police uniform.
Actor Preston Handy, who has played police officers in movies and on TV for years. He was carrying a uniform for his job when he went to a Bronx criminal court building recently. Handy says he showed it to security to let them know he had it, but that's when he was arrested and spent two days in jail.
Handy is facing charges, and could potentially be sentenced to a year in jail.
The group that represents TV and film performers has now started warning its New York members not to buy or carry NYPD styled outfits to work, even if their jobs require them.
The Screen Actors Guild said in a statement posted on its Web site on Friday that "an apparent shift in city policy" may put actors at risk of arrest if they are stopped while carrying anything that looks too much like a real police uniform.
City code has long prohibited anyone other than a police officer from possessing a replica uniform or badge. But guild spokesman Seth Oster said on Monday that actors have traditionally been able to obtain letters from the police commissioner giving them permission to carry such items to work on the sets of movies or shows like NBC's "Law & Order."
New York Police Department spokesman Paul Browne said that practice was abolished after the 2001 terrorist attack and has not been revived.
The guild tells Eyewitness News that it has no problem with the police policy, it just wants the department to work with it to figure out the new rules and how actors can do their jobs and get their uniforms to work.
The Screen Actors Guild has 30,000 members in New York. About 200 work in jobs that require them to dress as police officers, union officials say.
Since "9/11" the NYPD has grown especially sensitive about anyone not in the department being able to pass themselves off a police officer.
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