Brooklyn, NY +MVA+
Brooklyn, NY +MVA+ A accident involving multiple vehicles on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway near the Kosciuzko Bridge, Hatzolah on the scene requesting multiple ambulances to respond, traffic delays in the area.
VOS IZ NEIAS Breaking news and community news that might be to your curiosity as it happens, before you get it from your news source.
Brooklyn, NY +MVA+ A accident involving multiple vehicles on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway near the Kosciuzko Bridge, Hatzolah on the scene requesting multiple ambulances to respond, traffic delays in the area.
New York, NY - City Council voted yesterday to increase property taxes. The $64 million citywide increase will cost the average single-family homeowner an extra $66 for the fiscal year that ends June 30.
Tax rates for the four property classes are adjusted yearly to comply with state-mandated adjustments of the "share" of taxes imposed on each category.
By law, the Council could have increased the tax share for Class 1 properties (one-, two- and three-family homes) by as much as 5%. Instead, the Council limited the increase to 2% by increasing the tax bite on Class 3 (utilities) and Class 4 (commercial) properties. The taxes on Class 2 properties will go up as well, co-ops by an average of $114 and condos by $207.
Manhattan, NY +Accidental Mail Drop Off+ A motor vehicle accident involving a US Postal Service tractor trailer on West 33th Street and 10th Avenue with the tractor trailer stopping short causing the mail it was carrying to go through the backdoor of the truck ending up all over the street, requesting additional units to assist in picking up the mail.
Brooklyn, NY +Pedestrian Struck+ A motor vehicle accident with a pedestrian that was struck on McDonald Avenue and Avenue "I" Hatzolah responding.
Monmouth County, NJ - Superior Court Judge Alexander D. Lehrer has appointed an alliance formed between Wick Co. and Sitar Co. Oncor International to market a sizable commercial and residential real estate portfolio amassed by indicted real estate developer Solomon Dwek.
The portfolio of nearly 270 properties is valued at more than $400 million and consists of shopping centers, vacant land, residential homes, and office, industrial, multifamily and mixed-use properties primarily in New Jersey's Monmouth and Ocean counties.
According to the court order, approximately 66 of the properties are currently losing money.
Dwek was charged earlier this year by Monmouth County prosecutors with scheming to defraud Pittsburgh-based PNC Bank out of $50 million. He was arrested after misrepresenting himself at two PNC branches, attempting to deposit two $25 million checks drawn from a closed business account.
The bank fraud charge carries a maximum term of 30 years in prison and a maximum fine of $1 million.
The Anti-Semit Mel Gibson has expressed sympathy for the embattled Michael Richards, confiding that "my heart went out to the guy".
Richards was forced to make a public apology after using racist language in Los Angeles two weeks ago.
Earlier this year, Gibson showed similar contrition for anti-semitic remarks made during an arrest on suspicion of drink driving. "I feel really bad for the guy," Gibson said. "He was obviously in a state of stress ... My heart went out to the guy."
When he was asked what the future held in store for Richards, Gibson offered a sage and sad prediction: "They'll probably torture him for a while and then let him go."
Jerusalem, Israel - A 35-year-old haredi man, who is mentally unstable, was arrested for stabbing and lightly wounding in the lower part of his leg an Arab employee in a shop on Rechov Yecheskal in Jerusalem.
The wounded man was evacuated by Hatzolah to Hadassah Hospital in the city for medical treatment.
Lakewood, NJ - Al Peters, the former director of the Lakewood Police Department, wants answers.
At tonight's Township Committee meeting, Peters said he will stand before the five-member panel and demand an explanation for why he was forced out as the department's leader. "My record is impeccable, and I will not let this tarnish my record in any way," Peters said.
Two weeks ago, the retired State Police major was bought out of his $119,000 annual contract, on which seven months remain. The buyout followed a Nov. 8 phone call Peters received from Mayor Meir Lichtenstein, who informed Peters that his days as public safety director were likely num-bered. No reason was provided during that conversation, Peters said.
Peters said he still is waiting for an explanation. "They had no reason to terminate the contract, so legally they had to buy me out. There was no legitimate reason for termination," Peters said.
While the committee has offered no explanation, some members of the Orthodox Jewish community have expressed concerns about the Police Department.
In particular, some residents have expressed dissatisfaction regarding what is perceived as heavy-handed ticketing for parking violations downtown, the handling of the assault of an Orthodox woman last summer and the handling of a confrontation between a Jewish school teacher and a black teenager.
New York, NY - The city comptroller released a report accusing the auto insurance industry of price-gouging.
Comptroller Bill Thompson says the car insurance industry has raised premiums between 2000 and 2005 by nearly 29-percent, raking in 10 and a half billion dollars from premiums in 2005 alone. He also found companies were decreasing payouts for claims by more than 20 percent.
Thompson's report says drivers in the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens are especially hard hit. He says it's not just a matter of customers shopping around for lower rates.
Thompson called on governor-elect Eliot Spitzer to create an Insurance Consumer Advocate office and called for the auto insurers to reduce their premiums by 15 percent or $1.5 billion a year.
Fort Collins, CO - A holiday decorations dispute involving the Christmas tree and the menorah is heating up.
Several religious leaders sent an email to the city council urging them to reconsider a decision made in the summer that said the menorah could not be displayed at the city's public holiday display.
The ruling said the Christmas tree is OK for the city's public holiday display, but the menorah is not.
"I think everyone here is Christian essentially, so a Christmas tree, Santa's workshop and everything associated with it is considered generic, everybody does it," said Rabbi Yerachmiel Gorelick. "But that's really not the case."
Gorelick is trying to include a Menorah in the city's formal holiday display, but the city council said no.
"Our holiday display policy had been a simple secular Christmas tree," said Fort Collins Mayor Doug Hutchinson. "According to our attorney, the tree is secular, the menorah is not," said a spokesman of the Downtown Development Authority.
New York, NY - You could see it all over the city, an unmarked car with emergency lights flashing trying to make it through traffic. But have you ever wondered while you're sitting in gridlock what the emergency was?
One man was caught in an unmarked car in a heck of a hurry. The man's name is Isaac Heschel. His official looking black Crown Victoria is his personal car. However, the lights and sirens he admits he paid someone to install.
Heschel is a rabbi who volunteers his time as a chaplain to the MTA and Port Authority Police, but both agencies said he has no right to have emergency lights, or drive like this.
All this started when a member of law enforcement who wants to remain anonymous took a home video of his driving habits and sent it to the media, and with the tape was a note that claimed Heschel was putting pedestrians and other drivers in danger.
At crosswalks he used lights to move pedestrians along, and if traffic gets too bad he drives the wrong way up a street, when lights and sirens aren't enough at a tie up at the Lincoln Tunnel he gets out and actually moves several traffic cones.
Remember, he is not a cop. He is not going to an emergency. Heschel is actually a 47th Street diamond dealer with some multifaceted perks, like a sweet free parking spot that is always waiting for him. Heschel avoided tickets by using a special parking placards.
"It goes to show us that that we have some vulnerabilities from people who pretend to be official emergency vehicles," former FBI agent William Daly said. "They could be used to transport explosive devices."
Because of his use of lights and sirens, both the MTA and Port Authority Police said that they have decided to part ways with Rabbi Heschel.
Chestnut Ridge, NY - A drunken driver crashed into a utility pole, causing a gas main break that fueled an intense fire on Pinebrook Road and cut power.
No one was hurt in the crash, according to Ramapo police Sgt. Michael DeMeo. But about 2,000 customers were without electricity after work crews cut power to the area.
The car's driver, a 25-year-old Pomona man, is charged with driving while intoxicated, a misdemeanor. He was transported to town jail.
Medford, NJ - Police are searching for a man they say may have tried to lure a 13-year-old girl.
The girl had just gotten off her school bus at Lakewood Avenue when a small white SUV approached her.
The driver, a white man, asked the girl if she'd like a ride. She told him "no," police said. The driver said something else before driving away. The girl did not hear what he said, police said. Police said the driver never stopped his SUV not did he try to grab the girl.
The driver was described as about 17 to 20 years old, tan, with short spikey brown hair and thin build, police said.
Mamaroneck, NY - The village will continue its battle against a local Jewish school seeking to expand its campus in the region's highest court.
Village lawyers are appealing a federal judge's ruling that found the village's zoning board restricted the Westchester Day School's free exercise of religion when it denied the school's plans to build a 44,000-square-foot building on Orienta Point.
Lawyers for both sides are expected to face off in Manhattan at the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals.
The closely watched case tests the constitutionality of a religious land-use law that has gained popularity across the United States in recent years. "Hopefully, this will send a crystal-clear message to the leaders of Mamaroneck and to municipalities across the country that the rights of religious institutions to meet their needs are protected under the constitution," said Stanley Bernstein, the school's executive vice president and one of its lawyers.
The nearly five-year saga began when the Westchester Day School, a yeshiva for about 420 students, sought to build a 44,000-square-foot building on its 26-acre campus in the Orienta section of the village. The building would house classrooms and other small gathering rooms for private instruction and prayer.
Bronxville, NY - A man who tried to extort $60,000 from a rabbi in Queens and threatened to harm him and his family if he didn't pay the money was sentenced to a minimum of five years in prison.
Matthew Gross, 40, of 25 Parkview Ave., Bronxville, claimed to be collecting debts for people with whom the victims had business dealings in prior years.
Gross approached the Rabbi of the Synagogue Adas Yeshurun in Kew Gardens and threatened him. Gross told the rabbi he represented the ex-husband of a secretary who once worked for the rabbi, and for whom the rabbi had helped secure a divorce. The rabbi went to police, who arranged to secretly videotape the next meeting between Gross and the rabbi, during which Gross was recorded slapping the rabbi inside his synagogue and threatening his family with physical harm.
Gross pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree grand larceny in exchange for a sentence of five to 15 years in prison.
Brooklyn, NY - A man has been accused of paying parking ticket fines with somebody else's money.
Daniel Markovitz was busted after using stolen credit cards to pay off 53 parking summonses worth more than $4,700, the city Department of Investigation said.
Some of the tickets belonged to his family and friends, who were duped into believing he had a connection to reduce their fines, the DOI said. "People should be forewarned: If a deal looks too good, it probably is,'' DOI Commissioner Rose Gill Hearn said.
Markovitz, 23, faces up to seven years in prison if convicted of grand larceny, scheme to defraud and identity theft, Hearn said.
The investigation began after the city Department of Finance determined Markovitz might have used stolen credit cards to make payments over the Internet on his own parking tickets, Hearn said. The DOI then determined that he had used three stolen cards to pay off 53 tickets for himself, his friends and relatives, Hearn said.
Although Markovitz told his victims that he could get parking tickets reduced through his connections with the Parking Violations Bureau, he instead took their cash and paid the tickets with the credit cards, and he pocketed more than $2,000, the DOI said.
Even worse, the cost of all the tickets was reinstated by the city.
But Michael Farkas, attorney for Markovitz, said there was more to the case than the DOI version. "We sincerely hope that there is no rush to judgment on this matter as we believe Mr. Markovitz may soon be shown to be a victim in this case himself,'' Farkas said. "We believe there's more to this case that needs to be investigated.''
Seattle, WA - A pregnant Seattle woman who instinctively covered her belly to protect her 17-week-old fetus from a gunman during last summer's deadly Jewish center attack has given birth to that baby.
Dayna Klein, who survived the July 28 rampage at the Jewish Centerof Greater Seattle that killed a colleague, gave birth to Charley Paz Klein at an undisclosed Seattle hospital, her spokesman said. He weighed 5 pounds, 12 ounces.
Police officials have called Klein a hero for saving her baby when she came face to face with the gunman. When the guman pointed his weapon at her, Klein swung her left hand over her belly to protect her fetus. A bullet went through her arm and grazed her thigh before lodging in the carpet.
The spokesman said mother and child are doing well.
Monsey, NY +Fire in Commercial Building+ Fire Department responding to confirmed fire in the elevater shaft at 15 Monsey Blvd Home for Adults.
Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY +Missing Children+ Hatzolah, Shomrim and Chavirim are all involved in a major search for two missing girls since 1600 hours from a special education school, command post is now setting up at Lynch Street & Marcy Avenue.
U/D: 20:26
Search is over, girls have been located.
Brooklyn, NY - A mortgage fraud ring duped home buyers and lenders by falsifying documents and overstating property values, ruining the credit of many people who bought homes in minority neighborhoods, New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer said.
Spitzer sued 11 people, four defendants agreed to settle by paying nearly $1.8 million to help compensate victims, and accepting increased oversight of, or restrictions on, their activities. Spitzer is seeking fines, restitution and other penalties from the other defendants.
According they bought properties at foreclosure sales or "distressed" prices in Brooklyn's Bedford-Stuyvesant, Bushwick, Crown Heights, East Flatbush and East New York neighborhoods, hoping to "flip" them to make quick profits.
Spitzer said the scheme artificially raised home prices in the area, making it harder to buy and sell, and defrauded lenders who made the bad loans.
London - Authorities found small traces of radiation on two British Airways 767 jetliners, as investigators widened their search for clues into the poisoning death of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko.
Secretary John Reid disclosed the search following a meeting with COBRA, the government's emergency committee. Reid said two planes had been tested so far and that another would be tested.
The initial results of the forensic tests had shown very low traces of a radioactive substance onboard two aircraft, British Airways said in a statement. The company added that the investigation is confined to the three planes, which will remain out of service until further notice.
Albany, NY - State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver gave out almost $7.5 million in pork-barrel cash this year, records show.
That makes the Manhattan Democrat tops in the Legislature, which doled out a total of $170 million in the so-called "member item" grants at the discretion of individual legislators without public debate or vote.
Silver's grants included:
* $14,000 to the Council for a Cleaner Chinatown and $35,000 for the Chinatown YMCA.
* Grants totaling $543,000 to the United Jewish Council of the East Side.
* $200,000 to the Metropolitan New York Coordinating Council on Jewish Poverty.
* $265,000 for the Center for Battered Women's Legal Services.
"A lot of things we use the fund for are items that we haven't been able to get done through the budget," a Silver spokeswoman said.
Lakewood, NJ - A town hall-style meeting on several hot-button issues will be held 6 p.m. Wednesday at the municipal building at 231 Third St.
Issues such as Lakewood's muster zone and landlord/tenant concerns will be discussed.
The forum will be hosted by Samuel Z. Brown's Lakewood law firm, which routinely conducts civic awareness seminars in the township.
New York, NY - About 88,230 Big Apple residents were diagnosed with cancer this year and 35,600 died - many from preventable lung and prostate cancers, a new study shows.
The American Cancer Society found that too many people still die from preventable diseases - particularly lung and colon cancers. There are too many smokers, and an alarming number of residents don't get colonoscopy screenings, according to the study. Still, the report noted that overall cancer rates have dropped in the city, mirroring a national trend, thanks to medical advances and better monitoring.
Staten Island had the highest cancer rate in the city from 1999 through 2003 - 191.7 per 100,000 people. But the mortality rate fell 20 percent from a decade ago, the study said.
In Brooklyn 196 residents are diagnosed with cancer each week, and breast cancer accounted for 9.6 percent of cancer deaths this year, the highest such mortality rate in the city. The study estimates 75 Brooklynites per week have died of cancer this year. Despite that, the cancer-death rate in Kings County is 17 percent lower than a decade ago.
In Queens, 68 residents have died each week from cancer in 2006. Nearly one in four deaths in the borough are caused by lung cancer, 12 percent from colon cancer, 9 percent from breast cancer and 5 percent from prostate cancer.
Borough Park, Brooklyn, NY +MVA with Entrapment+ A motor vehicle accident with entrapment on 14th Avenue and 57th Street, Fire Department using the hurst tool for the pinn, ESU and Hatzolah responding.
Roosevelt, NJ - Mayor Elsbeth Battel said she and the Borough Council are "sickened'' by the paint-ball attack on a dorm where Orthodox Jewish high school students were sleeping one week ago today, as was reported on VOS IZ NEIAS.
"We provide our full support and cooperation to the State Police for the prosecution of the perpetrators to the full extent of the law, including the use of hate crime provisions of the state criminal statutes,'' Battel said.
About 70 paint-ball pellets struck the side of the private dwelling used by the Yeshiva Me'on Hatorah on Route 571 (North Rochdale Avenue) to house 10 to 15 students. The students were asleep inside the building at the time of the attack around midnight.
Monsey, NY - Monsey Trails plans to alter its Manhattan bus route to avoid going through side streets and neighborhoods in Monsey.
Under the proposal, buses no longer would begin their service runs by stopping at Francis Place, Ida Road, Rita Avenue and Jill Lane. Instead, riders would have to meet the bus at the corner of Kearsing Parkway and Route 306.
The changes likely would take effect at the end of the year, pending approval from county officials.
Czech Republic - An Israeli firm building a parking lot over a Jewish cemetery in the Czech Republic agreed to raise the structure to protect the graves.
Plaza Centers, which is to build a shopping center and parking lot on the Pilsen site, made the agreement.
Last month, archaeologists discovered several graves on the land, which a local researcher said housed a 15th century Jewish cemetery, they estimate that as many as 50 graves may be located there.
Plaza Centers has had several consultations with the Czech Chief Rabbi Karel Sidon and the London-based Committee for the Preservation of Jewish Cemeteries in Europe, which resulted in a verbal agreement to place the parking lot on cement stilts.
New Paltz, NY - The closure of the Catskill Game Farm last month left three African lions, three mountain lions and a black panther with no new home.
Now, Wildlife Watch in New Paltz has arranged for them to spend their remaining days at the Wildcat Sanctuary in Sandstone, Minn. But the problem is Wildlife Watch needs $25,000 to make this all happen.
The organization needs to raise $5,000 to transport the animals to Minnesota and another $20,000 to erect these local cats a shelter, said Anne Muller, president of Wildlife Watch. "If we do not come up with the money, the sanctuary will not be able to take them," Muller said.
Washington, DC - The FBI is helping the U.S. Park Police and Washington, D.C. police investigate what is described as the discovery of an "anthrax threat letter" and a suspicious package at the Lincoln Memorial.
The incident started when a strange liquid was found in the women's restroom on the property. Authorities would not confirm what the note said or what the substance may have been.
There are no reports of anyone being sick, nor have any ambulances been called.
Virginia - Rabbi's, Imam's and Ministers are staging a "pray-in" demonstration at Reagan Washington National Airport and are demanding an apology from US Airways for barring six Muslims from a Minneapolis to Phoenix flight last week, as was reported by VOS IZ NEIAS.
Crown Heights Brooklyn, NY +Pedestrian Struck+ A motor vehicle accident with a pedestrian that was struck in front of 770 Eastern Parkway, Hatzolah responding Code-1 BLS and ALS.
U/D:
Aided being removed to KCK Hospital.
Flatbush, Brooklyn, NY +MVA with Pin+ A serious motor vehicle accident between five vehicles with a confirmed pin on East 31st Street and Avenue "N" Hatzolah, NYPD and Fire Department are all on the scene puttint the hurst tolls to work.
London - Traces of radiation have been found at two new locations in London after the investigation widened over the poisoning death of a former Russian spy.
Traces of highly radioactive Polonium 210 had already been found at the Millennium Hotel, a branch of the Itsu sushi restaurant and the house of Alexander Litvinenko, who died Thursday of polonium-210 poisoning.
Two new locations - an office block in London's west end and another address in the neighborhood of Mayfair - also showed signs of radioactivity.
Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY +Armed Robbery+ NYPD of the 90th Pct are in pursued of a male black perp that jused robbed a person at gunpoint while leaving Gem Check Cashing on Flushing Avenue between Lee & Warsoff Avenue's, perp fled into the Marcy Projects.
Brooklyn, NY +Serious MVA+ A motor vehicle accident at Kings Highway and Bedford Avenue between a city bus and motor vehicles with a mother and her children injuried has Hatzolah responding with multiple BLS and ALS units and three ambulances all to the scene
U/D: 09:26
Mother transported by EMS, one child in serious condition transported by Hatzolah on a rush, other child also by Hatzolah.
Sderot, Israel +Rockets from Gaza Hit Town+ Rockets from Gaza hit the Israeli town of Sderot despite ceasefire, Emergency units are on the scene.
New York, NY - City Council Speaker Quinn kicked off a five-borough "Community Conversation" in Brooklyn - raising speculation that she's considering a run for mayor.
The speaker has crisscrossed the city talking to communities about hospital closings, universal pre-kindergarten, hunger issues, reforms in the Buildings Department, and the Campaign for Fiscal Equity on behalf of city school kids, all of this is increasing her profile as a mayoral contender in 2009. "There is no question in my mind that someone who is as competent as her and has the leadership skills she has shown should run for higher office," said Councilman Simcha Felder (D-Brooklyn).
But Quinn insists "You can't have good policy if you don't go visit all parts of the city," Quinn (D-Manhattan) said, insisting there's no politics involved in her effort to reach all corners of the Big Apple.
Maura Keaney, one of Quinn's top aides, pointed out that her boss is an organizer who works best by talking directly to those involved. "It's a better learning experience for her than listening to a policy person," she said.
Iraq - One of the fighter jets of the U.S. military has crashed in Iraq with one pilot aboard.
Amberley, OH - A proposal to build a hike-and-bike path along busy Section Road in the southwestern part of the village is sparking a debate between supporters and opponents.
Amberley Village officials rejected the proposal 12 years ago, but at the urging of some residents, the village has pulled the hike/bike path proposal off the shelf and will reconsider it.
The main proponents of the proposal are the village's Orthodox Jews, who don't drive motorized vehicles to synagogue on Shabbas and some Jewish holidays. They say a path along Section Road, which has no sidewalks, would make it safer to walk to their synagogues.
Howard Mayers, an Orthodox Jew, and his wife, Marlene, walk on Section Road to Golf Manor Synagogue. "We also walk at night for recreation," he said. "At night, it's extremely dangerous to walk along Section Road. There have been a few times when the cars came awfully close to us."
Village Council decided to revive the proposal because of society's increasing interest in health and exercise and the influx of young families into Amberley, Mayor Chuck Kamine said.
But Charles and Loraine Wolf, who have lived on Section Road since 1980, oppose it for safety and privacy reasons. Wolf said she's concerned that a path would cause some of the crime in neighboring communities to seep into Amberley. "We feel quite vulnerable," said Wolf. "If a walking path is put in, there will have to be lighting for people walking at night. That will be a further intrusion into our privacy." I think it's a waste of taxpayers' money, some said, the Orthodox Jews who want the path knew Amberley had no sidewalks when they moved to the community.
Vienna, Austria - Vienna police on are questioning a man suspected of smashing the windows of a Jewish school in the Austrian capital using an iron rod.
The man, who gave his name as "Adolf Hitler" was arrested at the Lauder Jewish school after residents alerted police because of the noise, police spokesman Herbert Hutter said. The man's motive was not immediately clear.
In addition to broken windows, glass and other objects were damaged in the school's restrooms, Hutter said.
Israel - A Jewish Agency and Holocaust survivor groups joined forces to demand more money from the Conference of Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
"If money continues to be allocated the way it has been, it will still be sitting in the bank when the last of the Holocaust survivors is gone," they said. "Holocaust survivors are at the end of their lives," "in another 15 years only a very few survivors will remain. We should give them the money they deserve now, while they are still alive, and not wait until it is too late."
In a memorandum they specify that 60 percent of the funds be spent in Israel. "In light of the centrality of the State of Israel... 60% of the funds... will be allocated in Israel and the remainder will be distributed in the rest of the countries of the world."
Rockland County, Sloatsburg, NY +Suspicious Package in Rest Area+ New York State Police and Sheriff Units are on the scene for a suspicious package at the upper level parking lot of the Sloatsburg Rest Area of the New York State Thruway, upper level is closed at this time for investigation.
Washington, DC - There was a small fire at the U-S Naval Observatory where the vice president lives.
D-C Fire officials say it was a small electrical fire in the ceiling of a lab. Firefighters were able to quickly put out the flames, and no one was injured.
The vice president's residence was not affected.
Manhattan, NY +Lincoln Tunnel Closed+ Traffic alert PAPD on the scene reporting of a Greyhound bus on fire inside the Lincoln Tunnel tubes heading into NYC, Fire Department working the scene, fire out but requesting additional ventilation inside the tunnel to clear the smoke.
Tunnel is closed, expect heavy delays.
New Port, FL - A woman missing for nearly two weeks was found dead in the home she shared with family members looking for her, wedged behind a bookcase in her room.
M. Weber, 38, returned home Oct. 28 and greeted her mother, then wasn't seen again. Her family thought she had been kidnapped and contacted authorities. Family members scoured her room for clues but found nothing, though they did notice a strange smell.
But when here sister went into her bedroom and looked behind a bookcase, she saw a foot. Using a flashlight the family saw Weber was wedged upside-down behind the unit. "I'm sleeping in the same house as her for 11 days, looking for her," her mother, Connie Weber, said. "And she's right in the bedroom."
Weber's family thinks she may have been trying to adjust a plug to a television that was behind the bookshelf. Both Weber and her sister had previously adjusted the plug by standing on a bureau next to the shelf and leaning over the top. Her family believes Weber, who was 5-foot-3 and barely 100 pounds, may have fallen headfirst into the space. "She's a little thing," her mother said. "And the bookcase is 6 feet tall and solid. And she couldn't get out."
A spokesman for the Pasco County Sheriff's Office said the death is not suspicious and that Weber appeared to have died because she was unable to breath in that position.
Bnei Brak, Israel +Security Alert at Satmar Viznitz Wedding+ At the Satmar/Viznitz wedding in the lot of Osem on Shomer Street, a suspicious person tried entering the heavily guarded area, but was stopped by security personal they blocked him from entering the property.
A fight broke out between them that's when the suspicious person stabbed the guard in the chest, the aided was taking to the hospital with minor injuries.
Israel - Orthodox Zionis Rabbi Shlomo Aviner, writes and receives an average of no less than 3,000 cellphone text (SMS) messages a month. Almost all are questions of halachha, to which Aviner responds in short, permitted or forbidden, without giving the reason.
The questions vary: Is it permissible to prepare tehina on Shabbat?
Only if it is watery, Aviner responds.
Can I have physical contact with my three-year-old niece?
Up to age nine is the answer.
Can one steal from an Arab, who probably stole one's merchandise?
No, stealing from a thief is prohibited.
Ultra-Orthodox rabbis prohibit the use of SMS even for secular purposes. But Orthodox Zionism adopted it some years ago as a means of direct communication, and Aviner was one of the pioneers. "My phone number is not unlisted," he said. "That's the rabbi's job, to be available. During the war, I received 600 SMS messages a day. A soldier wrote me from inside a Lebanese house in the middle of the battle, asking whether he could use the electricity to recharge his cellphone. I said yes. The next day he wrote me that he had in any case decided to leave NIS 10 in the house."
River Edge, NJ - A shortage of programs and lack of funding make it difficult for parents to find appropriate religious education for children with learning disabilities.
In many cases, families who would have preferred religious school must enroll their child in public school programs instead. But religious educators are expanding their resources and finding new ways to deliver religious studies to special-education students.
A new school for special-needs Orthodox Jewish children recently opened in North Jersey -- giving some parents an alternative to an after-school program run in River Edge.
The Sinai School, an Orthodox Jewish private school for children with learning disabilities, has been a blessing for Laurie Gopin of Bergenfield. The removal of a brain tumor when he was 18-months-old left Gopin's son, Shmuel, now 5, with some communication delays. Gopin and her husband enrolled him in a Bergenfield afternoon public school program last year because the district could address his disability. But the family was still not satisfied; they wanted him to learn about his Orthodox Jewish heritage.
"We wanted him to be in a religious setting, especially because he loves all the religious aspects of school," said Gopin, of Bergenfield. "We felt at this time that a religious program would benefit him and make us feel more comfortable."
Tuition is $27,500 a year at Sinai School. The school also is funded through private donations. It is not eligible for state funding because it is religiously affiliated.
Sinai is the only Jewish private school in Bergen County completely dedicated to children with learning disabilities.
Staten Island, NY +Bridge Closure Traffic Alert+ The Bayonne Bridge is closed in both directions due to a motor vehicle on fire, PD on the scene requesting FD and tow.
U/D: 14:07
PAPD advising all units to keep a safe distance due to live 2 boxes ammunition discharging from inside the trunk of the vehicle.
Harriman, NY - The village has won a big round in its fight to annex 8.5 acres from the Town of Monroe to foster construction of a senior-citizen complex with 189 apartments, near the intersection of Route 17 and 17M and the Silver Maples trailer park.
An appeals-court panel weighing the annexation dispute between Harriman and Monroe has decided that the need to build affordable housing for seniors outweighed the town's preference for commercial development.
Two judges and a lawyer serving on the Appellate Division panel issued a report recommending that the court allow Harriman to annex the property, as requested by New City developer American Senior Communities LLC.
The developer arguing that Harriman could provide services, such as police protection and water, better than Monroe. The village supported the request, but Monroe officials protested that they would lose commercially zoned property that might otherwise attract tax-paying businesses. That sent the matter to the Appellate Division.
A court panel that heard oral arguments in July has rejected the town's commercial concerns, noting that no businesses have wanted the property so far and that the enormous Harriman Commons shopping center is already giving the town a huge influx of rateable's.
Elad, Isral +Fatal MVA+ A very serious accident with fatalities happened near Elad in Israel.
A three car motor vehicle accident on Route 444 killed two men, with one of the vehicles bursting into flames trapping some of the aided, another aided a women was seriously injured, there were also 2 children in one of the vehicles but no word on there condition.
Brooklyn, NY - New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn and Council Member Simcha Felder presented PS 226 Principal Stephen Porter with new American flags at the school at 6006 23rd Avenue in Brooklyn, NY.
The presentation commemorated an initiative by Felder to ensure that all schools in his 44th Council District have American flags in every classroom. “I was shocked to learn that almost every school in my district doesn't have enough American flags,” said Felder. It is an honor to stand here with Speaker Quinn and Principal Porter and assure that all students in my district’s public schools have an American flag to salute each morning, he said.
Quinn stressed, “Simcha Felder asked the schools what they needed,” “and when the schools said they needed flags, he did what he could to deliver them.”
East Rutherford, NJ - Jeffrey Striks has taken a bite of a new niche in the American kosher food market: sports stadiums, and business is so good that he's expanded his company, Strikly Kosher.
His core market is the most observant Jews who follow the laws of kashrut, which restricts what food can be eaten and how it is prepared. But he's also attracting customers who aren't Jewish and perceive that kosher food is healthier. They enjoy his knishes, chicken nuggets and "knockwurst," not the traditional German sausage but a chicken product designed to look like a hot dog.
Striks, 49 a Queens, NY native, offers a dog and a prayer. In the seventh-inning stretch during baseball games and during halftime at football games, Striks coordinates a minyan, a Jewish prayer service that must have at least 10 men. At a recent New York Jets game, about 30 men joined in prayer near a Strikly Kosher stand. "We pray for the team to win," "we want playoff games because we make a lot of money."
Joel Felderman, an observant Jew, said the kosher stadium stands allow him to enjoy games more. He had always eaten before games because he didn't have glatt kosher alternatives in the stadium. "It makes me feel like I'm a real fan," "I can buy a hot dog like everyone else and not compromise my religious beliefs. I can get the total experience."
New York, NY - A new supported scaffold law, goes into effect on November 19, 2006.
To ensure safe and compliant construction throughout all five boroughs, all supported scaffolds 40 feet or higher will require a permit.
In addition, Local Law 52 of 2005 requires individuals who use, erect, maintain, dismantle, repair or modify a supported scaffold to be certified by completing a training program (approved by the Department of Buildings) in scaffold safety.