Cliched anti-Israel protesters need a rap sheet

While the rest of us working stiffs were just trying to get to the office so we can keep our jobs and pay our ever-mounting bills, a group of privileged radicals were blocking nearly every artery in and out of Manhattan during Monday rush hour.

For a few hours, it was unnecessary havoc in the Big Apple.

Chains of anti-Israel agitators squatted in front of bridges and tunnels bringing traffic to a standstill, trapping commuters.

The chaos caused stonewalled New Yorkers to lean on their horns, creating a city-wide symphony of frustration.

Police arrested 325 demonstrators in the so-called “Shut it down for Palestine” debacle, many of them masked to obscure their faces and fend off personal and professional consequences.

However, once their names were shared, the list unsurprisingly, read like an open casting call for Portlandia, the reality show. Or Dancing With the Democratic Socialists of America.”

Susan Saradon attended the protests that shut down the tunnels and bridges because “no one is free until everyone is free.” Writers Against the War on Gaza/ X
Pro Palestinian protesters shut down the Brooklyn Bridge during a coordinated effort to shut down Manhattan traffic. Steven Hirsch

A paint-by-numbers band of over-educated members of the lecturing class. Suspects so usual, it’s painfully embarrassing.

There were a Fulbright scholar, Ivy league grads, multiple NYU graduate students, a poet who identifies as nonbinary, a filmmaker for HBO and Netflix — and out-of-town protesters who gave cops home addresses in Georgia and Florida.

But what about a gender and sexuality teacher, who lives in a $1.2m Prospect Heights condo, you ask? Let’s meet Ann Holder, a veteran protester who teaches at Pratt.

Artist Eli Coplan, whose parents own millions of dollars in real estate, was busted for participating in the coordinated protests. Eli Coplan / Instagram

Then there’s Eli Coplan, a 31-year-old artist whose work has been shown in the Whitney. His parents have a multimillion dollar real estate portfolio in Colorado and California, and he enjoys dressing as Marie Antoinette, at least according to his Instagram.

For a little Hollywood razzle-dazzle, wealthy Oscar winner Susan Sarandon cheered on her fellow activists.

No cliche left unturned. A perfect protester bingo card.

Anti-Israel protesters blocking the Manhattan entrance of the Brooklyn bridge are arrested. AFP via Getty Images

I guess the union electricians weren’t able to join on account of having to actually show up for work. If they ever made it there.

In other words, the only time these peoples’ hands have gotten dirty was when they plunged them into concrete-filled tires, so cops would have trouble cuffing them.

Naye Idriss, a 25-year-old NYU grad student with a degree from Columbia, was also hauled in. She marked the October 7 massacre by addressing a crowd in Times Square the next day to say it was “the beginning of our victory.”

That was after she used her NYU library mailroom job to write “f–k” over the word Israel on a discarded Israeli mailbag. That’s what an Ivy League degree teaches you.

Poet and PhD candidate, Nora Laine Herzog identifies as nonbinary. LinkedIn

Ilana Cruger-Zaken of South Salem in Westchester took time from her busy schedule of studying the Judeo-Neo Aramaic dialects of northeastern Kurdistan at NYU, to partake in the mass disruption that was organized by six radical anti-Israel groups.

The scholar of the esoteric bragged on Instagram, “And we’ll do it again.”

Cruger-Zaken is right because the prosecution-averse DA’s office in all likelihood will give them hugs and high fives.

For shutting down the city and endangering everyone within miles, they were issued desk appearance tickets for disorderly conduct charges. Released without bail, and an open invitation to offend over and over.

Ilana Cruger-Zaken, a grad student at NYU studying Judeo-Neo Aramaic dialects of north-eastern Kurdistan bragged on instagram that the protesters will “do it again.”

This is just the latest stunt for these self-absorbed anti-Israel agitators.

They have blocked travelers’ entry to JFK, barricaded the Manhattan Bridge on Thanksgiving weekend and violently attempted to shut down the Rockefeller Center tree lighting.

This time, their aim was to create similar conditions to life in Gaza and make us New Yorkers understand what it’s like to live under a blockade. Of course, it only pissed people.

The lone hero of the day was the man who got out of his car to shove some protesters, screaming that he had to get his daughter in Brooklyn, adding that they were breaking the law.

Sunita Viswanath, once honored by the Obama White House, was also arrested in the coordinated protests. ZUMAPRESS.com

His act of defiance made us collectively cheer. At least, that trademark gritty New York fighting spirit still lives.

Thankfully it didn’t escalate into real violence. But that’s clearly how this will end: in tears, injury or death. Someone is going to get hurt, and both protesters and authorities will be scratching their heads.

Give these guys something to hang next to their fancy college degrees: a mug shot and a criminal rap sheet.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Nearly half of Americans believe Trump should suspend 2024 campaign: poll

Almost half of Americans surveyed in a new poll believe that former President Donald Trump should suspend his presidential campaign as a result of his indictment related to a 2016 hush money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels. 

Trump, 76, was arraigned in a Manhattan courtroom last week on 34 felony charges of falsifying business records. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s case against the 45th president centers on an alleged scheme to orchestrate illegal “catch and kill” payments in an attempt to suppress negative stories about him during the 2016 presidential election that continued while he was in office. 

An ABC News/Ipsos poll released on Sunday found that 48% of Americans think Trump should suspend his White House bid following the indictment.

In comparison, when asked the same question before Trump’s arraignment, 43% said the former president should halt his campaign. 

The more recent poll also found that 53% believe Trump’s actions were intentionally illegal. 


Almost half of people surveyed believe Trump should suspend his presidential campaign.
REUTERS

Only 20% of respondents said that they think Trump did nothing wrong. 

Eleven percent answered that while they think he acted improperly, it was not intentionally illegal.

With the indictment now unsealed, 52% of respondents view the charges as serious, an increase of 2 percentage points from last week, while 39% do not view the 34 felony counts as serious. 


Trump faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.
AP

In the post-arraignment poll, 45% of Americans believe that Trump should be charged with a crime, an increase of 5 percentage points from last week, and 32% said the ex-commander-in-chief shouldn’t face charges.

Trump and numerous Republican lawmakers have accused Bragg’s case of being politically motivated, a claim which 47% of those polled agree with. Only 32% said politics did not play a role in the decision to charge Trump. 


Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg is accusing Trump of orchestrating illegal “catch and kill” payments in an attempt to suppress negative stories about him during the 2016 presidential election.
AP

The ABC News/Ipsos poll surveyed 566 US adults and was conducted between April 6 and April 7. It has a margin of error of 4.4 percentage points.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Al Sharpton celebrates Trump indictment as ‘spiritual’ payback

Rev. Al Sharpton on Tuesday celebrated a Manhattan grand jury’s indictment against former President Donald Trump as a sort of “spiritual” payback for his White House policies and his call for the death penalty for the “Central Park Five.” 

The activist and MSNBC host made the claim at a New York University forum on Tuesday, according to the Washington Times, where he also called it “ironic” that Trump, 76, was indicted on the 55th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and that the criminal case against him is being handled by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who is black.

“I’m always looking for the spiritual interpretation of something. And I think it’s very ironic that on … the 55th anniversary of Dr. King’s assassination, that the president that tried to turn back a lot of what King did is going to be arraigned in Manhattan Supreme Court by a Black DA,” Sharpton said at the event, held before Trump’s arraignment.

 “I’m thinking of Dr. King as the first Black Manhattan DA will deliver us justice and bring criminal charges against President Trump,” he added. 


Rev. Al Sharpton celebrated former President Trump’s indictment as a “spiritual” payback for his White House policies.
G.N.Miller/NYPost

Sharpton, founder and president of the National Action Network, also suggested that 45th president’s indictment is “justice” for a full-page newspaper ad taken out by Trump in 1989 that called for five black and Hispanic teenagers wrongfully accused of raping a white woman in Central Park to be executed. 

The five accused, known as the “Central Park 5,” were later exonerated. 

“I’m thinking of the Exonerated 5, who were not just victims of a criminal justice system that did not protect them, but also of vitriol and hate spewed by men like Trump,” Sharpton said. “But today we see progress with the arc of history bending towards justice, just as Dr. King said. While we celebrate this moment of justice on the anniversary of King’s assassination, we have to remember the work is not done.”


Sharpton also noted that Trump was indicted on the 55th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Sharpton also noted that Trump — who was charged in New York for falsifying business records in regard to hush money payments — is being investigated in Georgia by a black district attorney, Fani Willis, for his alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in the Peach State.

“You might say the arc of justice is long, but it bends towards [justice] and I think that that often comes full circle,” Sharpton added.


Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg brought 34 charges against the former president.
J Mayer/Shutterstock

Sharpton’s comments on Tuesday echoed a statement he released last week on the day the grand jury voted in favor of indicting the former commander-in-chief.

“All I can say is, what goes around comes around,” Sharpton said in a statement.

“It’s not lost on those of us who were there in 1989 that Donald Trump will likely walk into the same courthouse where the Exonerated 5 were falsely convicted for a crime they did not commit,” he said.


Trump is also being investigated in Georgia by a black district attorney for his alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election results.
POOL/AFP via Getty Images

“Let’s not forget that it was Donald Trump who took out full-page ads calling for these five Black and Brown young men to get the death penalty,” the activist added.

“This is the same man who’s now calling for violence when he has to go through the same system. The same man will have to stand up in a courtroom and see firsthand what the criminal justice system is like.”

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Trump rips Manhattan DA in primetime speech after arrest

PALM BEACH, Fla. — Former President Donald Trump ranted against his unprecedented arrest and arraignment Tuesday night, telling supporters at Mar-a-Lago: “We have to save our country.”

“The only crime that I’ve committed is to fearlessly defend our nation from those who seek to destroy it,” the 76-year-old said hours after pleading not guilty to 34 felony charges of falsifying business records in connection with hush-money payments made ahead of the 2016 presidential election to two women alleging extramarital affairs with him.

Trump has repeatedly called the case part of a long-running Democratic “witch hunt” against him. His former fixer and lawyer Michael Cohen is expected to be the star witness for prosecutors working under Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

Trump sat stone-faced in court Tuesday afternoon as he became the first former president in US history to face criminal charges.


Former President Donald Trump ranted against his unprecedented arrest and arraignment telling supporters at Mar-a-Lago: “We have to save our country.”
Getty Images

He did not speak to the throngs of reporters outside the courtroom in Lower Manhattan, saving his vitriol for primetime.

Judge Juan Manuel Merchan declined to issue a gag order during the arraignment, but warned Trump to “refrain from making statements likely to incite violence or create civil unrest.”

The 45th president, who was not subject to the indignity of being placed in handcuffs or posing for a mugshot, arrived in his former hometown on Monday afternoon and spent the night at Trump Tower.

Shortly after 1 p.m. Tuesday, he left his flagship Midtown building, fist-pumping and waving to cameras as he entered the court building in lower Manhattan.


Trump claims, “The only crime that I’ve committed is to fearlessly defend our nation from those who seek to destroy it.”
Getty Images

After his arraignment, which lasted just under an hour, Trump was whisked back to LaGuardia Airport and his private Boeing 757 for the short flight back to Florida.

The live wall-to-wall cable news coverage of Trump’s every movement Tuesday recalled the heady days of 2015 and 2016, which propelled his stunning run to the Republican nomination and his upset win over Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Prosecutors say Trump falsified business records to boost his presidential campaign when he described the payments to porn star Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal as legal expenses.

The charges typically are misdemeanors with two-year statutes of limitation, but Bragg secured the indictment of Trump by arguing that the payments of $130,000 to Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, and McDougal for $150,000 via a National Enquirer “catch and kill” contract were in furtherance of federal campaign finance law violations.

Candidates for office are allowed to spend unlimited amounts of money, but the funds were paid initially by Cohen, who would have exceeded the federal contribution limit if he was using his own money.

Cohen in 2018 pleaded guilty to unrelated tax evasion charges and to making unlawful campaign contributions by brokering the payments. Trump at the time said Cohen was admitting to non-existent crimes to curry favor with authorities.

Bragg said at a press conference after Trump’s arraignment that “we cannot and will not normalize serious criminal conduct” — even though the progressive prosecutor has taken heat for downgrading more than half of felony cases to misdemeanors.

Prosecutors want the case brought to trial in January 2024, which would coincide with the initial Republican presidential primaries.

The next hearing is set for Dec. 4.

The criminal case has returned Trump to the limelight and driven a surge in donations, Republican endorsements and polling support to his campaign.

Shortly after the arraignment, the former president’s campaign announced it had raised more than $10 million since the indictment was filed March 30.

Meanwhile, a Reuters/Ipsos Republican presidential primary poll conducted March 31-April 3 — after news broke that Trump would be indicted —found that Trump’s support increased to 48% from 44% two-and-a-half weeks earlier.

“The shameful arrest of President Trump is an unprecedented and chilling chapter in the Left’s weaponization of the justice system against their leading political opponent,” fourth-ranked House Republican Elise Stefanik of New York said in a statement.

“President Trump continues to skyrocket in the polls, and just like with the Russia hoax and both sham impeachments, President Trump will defeat this latest witch-hunt, defeat Joe Biden, and will be sworn in as President of the United States of America in January 2025.”

Former Attorney General William Barr, who has clashed with Trump in the past, said in a Fox News interview Tuesday afternoon that Bragg had brought what “appears to be just a pathetically weak case.”

“I think it’ll be largely a legal judgment as to whether there’s really probable cause to believe that this falsification of records was done to defraud anybody,” Barr said.

“And second, whether or not [it] involves the campaign finance law … I don’t think it does.”

The case also drew significant international commentary.

El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele tweeted, “Think what you want about former President Trump and the reasons he’s being indicted. But just imagine if this happened in any other country, where a government arrested the main opposition candidate. The United States ability to use ‘democracy’ as foreign policy is gone.”

House Republican-led committees, meanwhile, are demanding information from Bragg’s office, including on whether the local DA was cooperating with Biden administration officials to target the president’s political opponent — as some Trump allies urge Republican prosecutors to use the precedent to bring charges against Biden.

Trump allies have focused in part on the fact that Bragg hired former Biden Justice Department attorney Matthew Colangelo in December to help lead the Trump investigation.

The Justice Department previously chose not to prosecute Trump on the underlying campaign-finance charge following its failure in 2012 to convict former Sen. John Edwards (D-NC), who used more than $1 million in donations to his 2008 presidential campaign to conceal his relationship and love child with campaign videographer Rielle Hunter.

Trump could face additional criminal charges in a trio of other investigations — one in Georgia into his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election there, and two federal probes overseen by special counsel Jack Smith; one into Trump’s actions ahead of the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol riot, and another into his possible mishandling of classified records after leaving office.

Biden also faces a federal investigation of his handling of classified records after he left the vice presidency.

Special counsel Robert Hur is investigating whether Biden or anyone in his orbit illegally mishandled records found at his Wilmington home and former DC office.

First son Hunter Biden, meanwhile, is under federal investigation by the US attorney’s office in Delaware for possible tax fraud, money laundering, illegal foreign lobbying and lying about his drug use on a gun-purchase form.

The first son wrote in documents retrieved from his former laptop that he paid as much as “half” of his income to his dad, whom he involved in many of his overseas relationship while he was vice president.

This is a developing story; refresh the page for updates.



Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Trump sends out fundraising appeal hours before his arraignment

Former President Donald Trump ​​blasted out a fundraising appeal to his supporters ahead of his arraignment Tuesday, decrying the “loss of justice in America” and saying that he will be “out of commission” for a while. 

Addressing the email to “Patriot,” the 76-year-old Trump said, “today, we mourn the loss of justice in America.”

​”​Today is the day that a ruling political party ARRESTS its leading opponent for having committed NO CRIME​,” the email from the former president’s Make America Great Again campaign proclaimed. 

“As I will be out of commission for the next few hours, I want to take this moment to THANK YOU for all of your support​,” it continued. 

Trump added that he was “blown away” by the money, support and prayers he has received since Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg announced the indictment March 30. 

Since then, the 45th president has raised more than $8 million, including $4 million in the first 24 hours after charges were filed.


Donald Trump, speaking at a rally in Waco, Texas, on March 25, sent out a last-minute fundraising appeal before his scheduled arraignment on Tuesday.
Getty Images

​Trump has spent the past ​two weeks blasting Bragg’s investigation as a “political persecution” while soliciting donations from his MAGA supporters. 

The former president, ​who spent the night in New York after flying up from his Mar-a-Lago resort on Monday, also said, “it’s sad to see what’s happening – not for myself – but for our country.​ ​This is not the America you and I once knew.​”​​

He claimed the US was turning into a “Marxist Third World country that ​CRIMINALIZES dissent and IMPRISONS its political opposition​.​”​

However, Trump also implored his supporters, “do NOT lose hope in America​.”


Donald Trump’s supporters gather Tuesday outside the courthouse in lower Manhattan where the former president will appear for his arraignment.
Getty Images

“​We are a nation that declared its independence from the world’s biggest empire, won two world wars, and landed the first man on the moon. Resilience is in our blood​,” he said, adding that “we will prevail once again and WIN the White House in 2024.”​

Thanking ​his backers for their support, Trump asked: “If you can chip in, please make a contribution peacefully to SAVE AMERICA​.”​​

He signed off on the email with “Your favorite President Donald J. Trump.”​​

The email also contained a small provision.

“​(But if you’re doing poorly due to Biden’s policies, please ignore the donation request. Take care of yourself! We will soon Make America Great Again and our economy will come ROARING BACK!)​”



Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Mike Pence blasts ‘political prosecution’ of Donald Trump

Former Vice President Mike Pence offered a sharp rebuke of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s decision to indict former President Trump.

“It’s clear to the overwhelming majority of the American people that this is nothing short of a political prosecution being affected by a Manhattan DA who literally campaigned on bringing charges against one particular American,” Pence said Friday at the National Review Institute in Washington.

“That should be offensive to every American, left, right and center. Every American deserves equal treatment under the law and I believe the American people will see this for what it is,” Pence said — dismissing Trump’s alleged transgression as a “campaign finance issue.”

On Thursday evening, Bragg issued a 34-count indictment of Trump. While believed to center around hush-money payments made to porn star Stormy Daniels to buy her silence about an affair she claims she had with Trump in 2006, which he denies, multiple reports said the charges include at least one felony.


Former Vice President Mike Pence blasted Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s indictment of former President Trump.
Getty Images

Pence publicly broke with the president over his demands that he not certify the 2020 presidential results.
EPA

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg indicted Trump on Thursday evening.
Derek French/Shutterstock

Though Pence spent four years as one of Trump’s most loyal lieutenants, he publicly broke with the president over Trump’s demands that he not certify the 2020 presidential results.

During deadly riots on Jan. 6, 2021, Trump supporters were heard shouting, “Hang Mike Pence!” The former veep has since spoken out against his former boss and said Trump’s behavior on Jan. 6 was “wrong” and “endangered my family.”



Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Manhattan DA Bragg tells office they will not be intimidated after Trump calls for protests

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg sent an email to his staff Saturday saying he would not “tolerate attempts to intimidate our office” after Donald Trump put out a rallying cry to his supporters ahead of his possible arrest.

The progressive DA’s memo comes hours after former President Donald Trump blasted Bragg’s office as “CORRUPT AND POLITICAL” and urged his followers to protests his arrest, which Trump predicted would be on Tuesday.

“Our law enforcement partners will ensure that any specific or credible threats against the office will be fully investigated and that the proper safeguards are in place so all 1,600 of us have a secure work environment,” Bragg told his office, according to a leaked email, obtained by journalist Breanna Morello.

“In the meantime, as with all of our investigations, we will continue to apply the law evenly and fairly and speak openly only when appropriate,” Bragg wrote. “We do not tolerate attempts to intimidate our office or threaten the rule of law in New York.”


Bragg emailed his staff Saturday night assuring them all threats against his office would be investigated.
Getty Images

On Saturday morning, Trump took to his Truth Social platform to announce that he will be arrested on Tuesday.

”THE FAR & AWAY LEADING REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE & FORMER PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, WILL BE ARRESTED ON TUESDAY OF NEXT WEEK. PROTEST, TAKE OUR NATION BACK!” he roared in an all caps.

“THEY’RE KILLING OUR NATION AS WE SIT BACK & WATCH. WE MUST SAVE AMERICA!PROTEST, PROTEST, PROTEST!!!.” he wrote in a follow-up message.

Trump is facing possible indictment over a $130,000 hush money payment he allegedly made to porn star Stormy Daniels in 2016. 


Trump announced Saturday that he will be arrested on Tuesday.
AP

Daniels claims she had an affair with Trump in 2006, which Trump has repeatedly denied.

Trump would become the first president in US history to ever face criminal charges after leaving office if he is indicted.

Former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and other Democrats denounced Trump’s calls to protest his arrest as “reckless.”

“The former president’s announcement this morning is reckless: doing so to keep himself in the news & to foment unrest among his supporters,” Pelosi tweeted. “He cannot hide from his violations of the law, disrespect for our elections and incitements to violence.”

Trump’s “goal is acts of violence in his name,” California Rep. Eric Swalwell echoed. “And we must be prepared to protect against it.”

Trump’s former attorney and fixer Michael Cohen, who served three years in prison after pleading guilty to violating federal campaign finance laws in connection to the payments in 2018,  told The Post on Saturday that Trump’s Post is “eerily similar” to his battle cry prior to the January 6th insurrection; including calling for protest. 

“By doing so, Donald is hoping to rile his base, witness another violent clash on his behalf and profit from it by soliciting contributions.”

Many Republicans have jumped to Trump’s defense, including Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy who called for an “immediate” congressional investigation into a “politically motivated prosecution.”

“Here we go again — an outrageous abuse of power by a radical DA who lets violent criminals walk as he pursues political vengeance against President Trump,” McCarthy posted.



Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

How farebeating ‘tears the social fabric’

MTA chief Janno Lieber is entirely right: Farebeating “tears at the social fabric,” wreaking damage far beyond the mere theft.

Not that the thefts don’t add up: The practice cost the cash-strapped MTA an estimated $500 million last year. But it’s the more insidious impact that Lieber flagged to The Post editorial board Tuesday.

First, it makes flouting the law these individuals’ first act on entering the transit system, putting them in a frame of mind to act out more. That can go all the way up to terrorizing and assaulting others, both fellow passengers and MTA workers.

Or as Mayor Eric Adams puts it: “If we start saying it’s all right for you to jump the turnstile, we are creating an environment where any and everything goes.”

More, just seeing others getting away with it tells everyone else that law and order are out the window in the transit system. Worse, it encourages others to break the rules: Why be a sucker?

The practice soared during the pandemic and is still far above pre-2020 levels, but the key moment came in 2017, when then-Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance announced an end to prosecuting the crime, a policy other DAs then copied and Vance successor Alvin Bragg continues. Vance argued that a $2.75 offense isn’t worth the prosecutorial resources, blithely ignoring the far larger social costs of tolerating it.


Farebeating rose during the pandemic and is still far above pre-2020 levels.
Paul Martinka; MTA Chair Janno Lieber

In fact, he was appeasing the left, which pretends it’s a “crime of poverty,” as if the fare was out of anyone’s reach. (Bragg has even less excuse, since low-income New Yorkers now qualify for half-price rides.)

And knowing the cases won’t get prosecuted discourages cops from enforcing the law at all. Yet arresting these perps often nabs serious criminals. Last October, for example, a farebeating stop wound up catching a repeat offender linked to a slashing on the 1 train earlier that month. As Lieber then noted, “Overwhelmingly, the criminals are farebeaters.”

Indeed, police who stop farebeaters regularly find them carrying illegal guns.

In fact, the city’s huge turnaround on crime began back in the 1990s when then-Transit Police Chief Bill Bratton started a high-profile, systematic crackdown on farebeating. New York City sure could use the same again today.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Hochul’s questioning charges against McDonald’s ‘ax man’ is political theater

Yes, Gov. Kathy Hochul is questioning the handling of McDonald’s “ax-man” Michael Palacios. But it’s to try to blur the ugly fact that his instant release without bail highlights her own public-safety failures as Election Day nears.

Palacios walked free after Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office lowered felony criminal-mischief charges to a misdemeanor and dropped menacing charges altogether. Then, on Monday, after video of him threatening customers with an ax and destroying property went viral along with news of his release, Hochul played damage control.

“We’re actually asking what the thought process was,” she said, because officials had “the discretion” to file “bail-eligible” charges.

First: Yes, Bragg’s decision was outrageous — but typical. The moment he took office in January, he made clear his main goal was to keep criminals out of jail, and he’s repeatedly declined to seek the toughest possible charges and penalties. Yet Hochul has refused to use her power to remove him for fear of upsetting perp-coddling progressives.

Second: As ex-prosecutor Jim Quinn explained in The Post, even if Bragg hadn’t reduced the charges, “Palacios STILL would have been released without bail,” thanks to New York’s disastrous bail laws. “Everything that Palacios is seen doing on that video,” he noted, “from smashing plate glass partitions, breaking tables, chopping his hatchet into walls and waving it at patrons, is a non-bailable offense.”

Palacios walked free after Bragg lowered his felony criminal-mischief charges to a misdemeanor and dropped menacing charges.
Kevin C. Downs for The New York Post

The laws require judges to release, bail-free, all accused criminals except those charged with the most horrendous crimes. New York judges, unlike those in every other state, can’t consider defendants’ threats to public safety — or their criminal records or risk of reoffending.

Alas, Hochul lacks the backbone to shame pro-crime Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie and Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins into fixing the statutes. Instead, she pretends they’re fine and shifts all the blame to judges and prosecutors like Bragg.

Her governor’s-race foe Rep. Lee Zeldin, by contrast, vows to fire Bragg and fix the laws.

And ground-level Democratic leaders, from Mayor Eric Adams to Freeport Mayor Robert Kennedy, want the laws fixed too. It’s “about the safety of our residents,” said Kennedy in joining a bipartisan call from Long Island officials.

Rather than do something about outrages like the bail-free release of ax-wielding madmen, Hochul opts to lie. She’s a pathetic excuse for a leader.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Mother of Hason Correa rips DA Alvin Bragg for giving plea deals

A mother whose Army vet son was stabbed to death in Harlem in 2018 ripped Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg in an open letter over his decision to offer plea deals to two defendants in the case. 

Madeline Brame, who sent the letter to Bragg and Gov. Kathy Hochul, claims the DA didn’t communicate with her before offering the deals, which let one of the defendants off on time served

“You violated my rights as a crime victim to be fully informed, and to be heard,” Brame wrote in the letter sent Thursday.

“Why would you dismiss murder charges against half of the participants, when the murder and their roles were caught on video?” 

Brame’s son Hason Correa, a then-35-year-old married dad of three, was allegedly beaten and stabbed to death in October 2018 by a group of assailants — Travis Stewart, Mary Saunders and her two brothers, James and Chris Saunders. 

Madeline Brame, mother of murdered Afghanistan veteran Hason Correa, criticized Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg in an open letter.
Steven Hirsch
Hason Correa was killed in a stabbing four years ago.
Family Photo

At the time, authorities alleged that Mary, 41, had punched and kicked Correa before trying to pin him down while her brothers stabbed him and then chased after him when he attempted to escape

However, during a March court hearing, Bragg’s prosecutors said they didn’t think they could prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Mary had intended to kill Correa, or that she knew her brother had a knife. 

As part of her plea agreement, Mary pleaded guilty to a downgraded charge of felony assault and was allowed to go free on time served after she spent a year in jail as the case played out in court. 

Brame claims Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg violated her rights as a victim.
Getty Images

Stewart was permitted to plead guilty to attempted gang assault, and is slated to be sentenced to seven years behind bars on June 29 under a deal with Bragg’s office.

Brame slammed Bragg’s team, saying prosecutors didn’t consult with her before downgrading the charges. She also lamented that she couldn’t be present for Mary’s plea deal hearing to deliver a victim impact statement because it was scheduled on the day of her brother’s funeral. 

“You and your office chose to not meaningfully consult our family that you were going to dismiss the murder charges against two of the people… until after you agreed to that deal with the attorneys representing the defendants,” Brame wrote in the missive. 

“Why did you not want the Judge to hear our voice? Why did you not want the public to hear what our family thought about the dismissal of murder charges against two individuals who, the prior administration and homicide prosecutors said, were clearly responsible?” 

While the grieving mom didn’t get the opportunity to speak during the plea deal hearing where Mary was sentenced, prosecutors there noted that Brame was “not in agreement with this disposition.” 

Brame claims Bragg didn’t communicate with her before offering plea deals.
Steven Hirsch

“[Brame] is opposed to it and believes Ms. Saunders should be prosecuted for murder … and should be remanded,” Assistant District Attorney Dafna Yoran said during the hearing. 

A spokesperson for the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office pointed to past comments prosecutors made in court but noted both James and Chris Saunders are being held without bail and will face trial for Correa’s murder in the coming months.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Exit mobile version