Baby-faced suspect stabs, bites teen in NYC subway melee over vaping: cops

The city’s latest subway crimes include a teenager being bitten and stabbed by a baby-faced suspect when the victim confronted a group of people vaping on a Brooklyn platform, cops say.

Two days earlier, a trio of creeps also mugged a 21-year-old man of his cell phone as he waited for an F train in Queens, authorities said. 

The bitten 19-year-old victim had been waiting for a C train at Pennsylvania Avenue in East New York around 2:45 p.m. Wednesday when he clashed with six people who were vaping nearby, authorities said. 

The young-looking suspect, shown in surveillance images released by the NYPD on Sunday night, then knifed the victim in the torso and bit him on the forearm, cops said. 

A surveillance photo shows the baby-faced suspect in the attack on a 19-year-old victim inside the Pennsylvania Avenue station.
NYPD

The victim was taken to Interfaith Medical Center, where he was listed in stable condition. 

Photos show the assailant wearing a black jacket over a red hoodie and black pants. 

Last month, three creeps mugged a man of his phone in Queens, authorities said. 

Video shows a trio mugging a 21-year-old man as he waited for an F train at Parsons Boulevard.
Video shows a trio mugging a 21-year-old man as he waited for an F train at Parsons Boulevard.
DCPI

That victim was standing on the platform at the Parsons Boulevard station in Jamaica Hills around 8 a.m. Nov. 21 when the group surrounded him, punched him in the face and grabbed his phone, video released by the NYPD shows. 

The victim refused medical attention, cops said. 

Police are still looking to track down the suspects. 

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Bronx mom Dimone Fleming charged after 2 children found dead

The mother of two young boys whose bodies were found in the bathtub of their Bronx home has been charged with murder in their stabbing deaths — after she shared a quote on Facebook about wanting kids to know they’re always safe at home.

Dimone Fleming, 22, was charged at the 46th Precinct late Sunday with two counts each of murder, intention to commit murder and murder: depraved indifference to a person less than 11-years-old.

Her sons – 11-month-old Octavius Canada and 3-year-old DeShawn Fleming – were found dead Saturday night in their apartment at a homeless shelter at 246 Echo Place in Mount Hope.

The boys each had “multiple stab wounds” to the neck and torso, Deputy Chief Louis Deceglie told reporters.

Just hours before the boys were found, Fleming shared a quote on social media about parents wanting to protect their children.

Dimone Fleming shared a post on Facebook about how children should feel safe at home.
Facebook / Alonzo Southerland

“I want my children to always know … if the relationship ain’t working COME HOME! If the bills become overwhelming COME HOME! If you feel unsafe COME HOME! If something don’t feel right COME HOME!” the post, originally written by another Facebook user and shared by the mom Saturday morning, said.

“I want my kids to always know they can come home … I never believed in the saying ‘they 18 they grown,’” the post continues.

DeShawn Fleming and Octavius Canada were found dead in a bathtub.

Fleming had been taken into custody as a person of interest before the children were found after cops responded to the apartment on a report of a woman “acting irrationally” and igniting things in the kitchen.

She was found naked on the third floor, police said.

However, cops didn’t notice the slain boys buried under a pile of clothes in the bathtub when they took her away.

The young victims had “multiple stab wounds” to their necks and torsos, Deputy Chief Louis Deceglie said.

A neighbor had told police that the kids’ dad had them, authorities said.

Police returned to the shelter about 8 p.m. after a 911 call from the frantic dad, Columbus Canada, 31, who found his sons’ lifeless bodies.

On Sunday, law enforcement sources told The Post that Fleming may have killed her sons because she believed they were possessed.

“She made statements about the devil — unusual statements,” a police source said.

Mourners gather at a memorial for the slain young brothers outside a Bronx shelter.

In an earlier Facebook post, the mom also chillingly wrote:  “It’s only one true God and I repent from all wrong doings and negative influence. Leaving all things that’s no longer serves me…… Thank you for your mercy.”

The woman was previously investigated by the Administration for Children’s Services after DeShawn was born, according to sources, who said she was suspected of improperly caring for the boy.

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Kathy Hochul turns over turkey distribution to Democratic Party

Fowl play!

Gov. Kathy Hochul has farmed out the task of distributing thousands of turkeys to the state Democratic Party after deciding that the Thanksgiving tradition violates new ethics rules.

Last November, Hochul traveled across the state to personally participate in the annual turkey giveaway to the needy and noted the birds were donated by corporations and non-profits.

Some of last year’s donors included Amazon, Coca-Cola, MetLife, Geico, the Golub Family Foundation, UJA-Federation of New York and the China General Chamber of Commerce.

Hochul’s counsel, however, recently determined that the turkeys could be considered inappropriate gifts under new state ethics rules.

Instead, the state Democratic Party was asked to buy the turkeys and help distribute them, according to the Albany Times Union.

Republican Party officials were scratching their heads over Hochul’s move of turning turkey distribution into a partisan event.

Gov. Kathy Hochul has farmed out the task of distributing thousands of turkeys to the state Democratic Party.
XAVIER GARCIA
Last year, Hochul traveled across the state to participate in the annual turkey giveaway.
Robert Miller

“It doesn’t pass the smell test. Why hand off turkey distribution to the Democratic Party? If you’re going to that route, why not make it bipartisan,” said state Republican Party spokeswoman Jessica Proud.

She also said it’s laughable for Hochul — who has accepted tens of millions of dollars in campaign donations from entities and fat cats with business before the state and has been criticized for issuing a no-bid, $637 million emergency contract to a fundraiser to provide COVID-19 tests — to consider donations of turkeys a conflict.

“Hochul is worried about turkeys? She might want to take a look at the no-bid contracts,” Proud said.

Turkeys could be considered inappropriate gifts under new state ethics rules, according to Hochul’s counsel.
Getty Images/iStockphoto

NYC Council Republican Minority Leader Joseph Borelli said, “This is not the caper state ethics officials think it is. We should be happy that companies are donating turkeys to the poor. We shouldn’t impede people from giving out free turkeys.”

Hochul’s office declined to comment.

But state Democratic Party chairman Jay Jacobs confirmed to the Times Union, “The governor had asked us to put together the money and we purchased 4,000 turkeys.”

Minority Leader Joseph Borelli spoke out about the turkey matter.
J.C.Rice

“We’ve been distributing them. It’s been basically downstate this year because it was such a short window when we found out. We didn’t find out until two or three days ago.”

He noted that Democratic lawmakers volunteer in the handout of turkeys.

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Suspect in Queens triple homicide reveals grisly details on slays: sources

The Queens man accused of fatally stabbing three female relatives provided grisly details of the triple slaying while being grilled by NYPD detectives in Virginia — and now awaits extradition to the Big Apple, law-enforcement sources said Monday.

Jabari Burrell, 22, waived his Miranda Rights and gave cops specific details on how he killed each of his victims, including a 65-year-old woman who died futilely trying to shield her wheelchair-bound 26-year-old stepdaughter, sources said.

Burrell allegedly stole the older woman’s 2004 Toyota Sienna after the Springfield Garden murders Friday and drove to Virginia, where he was nabbed Sunday when the vehicle ran out of gas on I-95.

An NYPD spokesman said police have begun the process to bring Burrell back to Queens.

“He’s waiting to be extradited, and charges remain pending at this point,” the rep said.

A representative for the Queens District Attorney’s Office said Burrell is facing three counts each of first-degree and second-degree murder and will also be charged with criminal possession of a weapon.

Burrell is accused of fatally stabbing Hyacinth Brown-Johnson, 65, her 47-year-old daughter, Latoya Gordon — who is the suspect’s aunt — and Brown-Johnson’s stepdaughter, Patrice Johnson, cops said.

Police said three women were stabbed to death in their Queens home Friday.
Brigitte Stelzer
Hyacinth Brown-Johnson, 65, was stabbed to death trying to shield her disabled stepdaughter, 26-year-old Patrice Johnson, from their attacker.
hyacinth.johnson.98/Facebook

Sources said the deadly rampage erupted after Burrell was smoking marijuana in the house and got into an argument — then snapped and turned on the women.

An alert was put out for the suspect after the crime, and Virginia State Police arrested him when his car conked out on the highway and notified the NYPD.

A rep for the Virginia State Police Department referred all questions about the case to the NYPD.

Three women were stabbed to death Friday at this 182nd Street home in Queens.
Brigitte Stelzer

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Watch man ‘having the time of his life’ smoking crack on subway

This straphanger is going off the rails.

A man caught on video smoking what appears to be crack on a city subway train has social media abuzz and New Yorkers fired up.

“Oh man!” shouts the wired, bug-eyed passenger after lighting up and sucking on a glass pipe.

“Check him out, y’all. He having the time of his life!” observes the video-taker in the 23-second clip shot aboard an uptown 4 train last month.

The pepped-up passenger — wearing a blue surgical mask around his forehead — then spins around, stands against the subway doors and shouts, “Ayo, damn man!”

A peeved passenger with a buzzcut stares straight ahead during the floor show while others put some distance between themselves and the apparent crackhead.

“That shouldn’t be happening on the train. It’s just crazy,” said Mine Bah, a 23-year-old rapper and Bronx Community College student who posted the October video to his Instagram Malcolmx_2 last month. The Brooklyn man told The Post a pal recorded the incident and he posted it from the phone. The post has over 38,000 likes.

Zonked out subway straphanger caught smoking crack and having “the time of his life,” as shared to instagram.
malcolmx___2/Instagram

Joked lady__d88: “My guy [buzzcut man] just sitting next to him breathing it in too trying to catch a hit 😭😭😭.”

“This was non-existent before the 2020 lockdowns. Now it happens daily,” replied Ministry of Otaku.

Activist Jason Curtis Anderson tweeted the video on Thursday, snarking, “Is smoking crack on the subway even a crime anymore?”



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NYC man Matthew Fertig running to raise money for gun reform

He’s running for their lives.

Brooklyn man Matthew Fertig is raising money for the gun reform advocacy group Everytown for Gun Safety by running 120 miles this weekend, from Manhattan to Montauk. 

The long-distance runner told the Hamptons weekly Dan’s Papers that the herculean equivalent of 4-and-a-half marathons on Saturday and Sunday is a response to the Parkland, Florida, shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2018, where deranged gunman Nikolas Cruz killed 17 people.

A Brooklyn resident, Matthew Fertig, is raising money for the gun reform advocacy group Everytown for Gun Safety.
Matthew Sam Fertig/Facebook
Fertig is making the long journey from Manhattan to Montauk.
Gofundme

“I was a senior in high school when the Parkland shooting happened and know several people that lost friends and family that day,” the 22-year-old said. “Sadly, four years later, we have made little progress in the fight to prevent gun violence and mass shootings in this country.” 

Fertig has raised more than $6,400 of the $15,000 goal on a GoFundMe page as of early Saturday afternoon. He said more than 10 people have signed up to run at least one leg of the journey with him.

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Principal and cronies secretly demand steep rent from Dominican teachers

Bilingual teachers brought from the Dominican Republic to work in New York City public schools have been treated like indentured servants by educators acting as their slumlords, The Post has learned.

Bronx principal Emmanuel Polanco and a group of fellow Department of Education administrators have put nearly a dozen teachers recruited from the DR in an apparently illegal boarding house in The Bronx — and charge the instructors $1,450 each month for the privilege, multiple sources say.

Polanco and his associates threaten to say “adios” to anyone who doesn’t go along, several teachers told The Post.

“If you leave, you might get in trouble,” teacher Rafael De Paula, 39, said the recruits were warned. “You can leave, but if you go, you go back to the Dominican Republic.”

Bronx principal Emmanuel Polanco, along with fellow DOE administrators has put a dozen teachers from the DR in an apparently illegal boarding house in the Bronx.
Richard Harbus

Several teachers who balked at the terms or insisted on finding their own housing — including one who wanted to live with his brother in NYC – were terminated and sent packing, their colleagues said. Others fear they may lose their J-1 visas, which allow foreigners to work or study in the US if they disobey.

“It’s a big embarrassment,” said a DOE insider informed of the lucrative scheme. “It also has the potential to damage the relationship between New York City and the DR if they don’t do right by these teachers.”

Since most of the newcomers lost their jobs in the DR when they joined the DOE program, they can’t afford to be expelled because they support families left behind.

“Right now, if I went back to the Dominican Republic, the only thing that I would find there, other than my family, is financial problems,” said Neylin Puello, 31, who teaches aviation at JHS 80 along with other recruits — where Polanco is their boss.

“Right now, if I went back to the Dominican Republic, the only thing that I would find there, other than my family, is financial problems,” said teacher recruit Neylin Puello.
J.C.Rice

Under city rules, a financial relationship between a superior and subordinate, including the leasing of property, is prohibited.

Polanco, 39, was quietly ousted from the Norwood middle school and “reassigned pending resolution of a personal matter,” District 10 Superintendent Maribel Torres-Hulla said in a Nov. 2 email to families.

The Special Commissioner of Investigation for city schools said it is “aware of, and looking into,” the matter.

The rentals are run by Polanco and a group of DOE administrators, the Association of Dominican-American Supervisors and Administrators, known as ADASA NY. 

Polanco, described by the teachers as their main contact, is the past president and current first vice president. Treasurer Daniel Calcaño, a DOE administrator in the Bronx, collects the payments, they said.

Polanco and the other administrators have been charging the instructors $1,450 each month, according to multiple sources.

“There is no organization in our public schools that means more to me than ADASA,” Chancellor David Banks gushed at a September 15 press conference announcing the recruitment of 25  teachers to help with the influx of Spanish-speaking migrants. Echoing Mayor Adams’ mantra, he added,  “ADASA gets stuff done.”

But a Post investigation found ADASA could be stuffing its pockets.

Ying Qing Li of Fox River Grove, Ill., bought the duplex in July for $810,000 as an investment, she said. Her agent, Elsa Ni, said the house was leased to ADASA, which pays $6,900 a month for both units. Ni understood the building would house teachers from the DR but said she had no idea how many would move in.

ADASA charges 10 teachers $1,450 a month, and one $1,300, each for single rooms, the teachers said. The $15,800 in rent collected would net a monthly profit of $8,900. Another Bronx building run by ADASA houses eight teachers, and a third is rented by three teachers, sources said.

Puello said he is charged $1,300 a month, not $1,450 like the others because his room is the smallest, furnished only with a full-sized bed, a  dresser, and a wall-mounted TV.

Four male teachers occupy the third floor of the building, sharing a kitchen and full bathroom. Seven female teachers rent rooms on the first floor and second floors. They also share a kitchen and bathroom, the tenants said.

Four male teachers occupy the third floor, sharing a kitchen and a bathroom.
J.C.Rice

Each rented room has door locks, they said. Housing lawyers and the city Department of Buildings said that would constitute a single-room occupancy, or SRO, which is illegal in NYC — and possibly dangerous in an emergency — unless previously approved. The building has no record of preexisting SRO units, said DOB spokesman Andrew Rudansky, adding that officials would inspect the premises and possibly issue a vacate order.

The Dominican teachers said they get roughly $1,800 after taxes and other deductions in twice-monthly DOE paychecks. They are paid as substitutes — roughly $199.27 per day — pending NY state certification. Long-term subs may earn slightly more and get some sick or vacation days.

Several teachers who spoke to the Post fumed at the rental cost. “We know we can get it cheaper somewhere else,” Puello said. “I have to support myself and my family at home. I’m working for rent.” 

The teachers were first assured they could bring their families, but “at the last minute,” were told to come alone for the first year or so. Puello said. Missing his five-year-old daughter’s birthday this month “was the hardest thing ever.”

Puello (left) said he is charged $1,300 a month because his room is the smallest, furnished only with a full-sized bed, a dresser, and a wall-mounted TV.
J.C.Rice

DOE officials did not respond to a request for comment. Socorro Diaz, the director of English-language instruction in the Bronx and ADASA president, also did not reply.

A spokeswoman for the state Attorney General’s office said the “charitable organization” has failed to register or file the required financial records. The agency wrote to ADASA last week, asking it to comply.

Polanco refused to speak with a reporter.

Craig DiFolco, a spokesman for the principals’ union, CSA, had no comment on the rentals, but said of Polanco, “Our union will vigorously enforce his due process rights as well as defend him against any false or unsubstantiated allegations.”



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Time to ditch Trump, GOP Rep-elect Mike Lawler says

The face of a mini-Red Wave in New York on Election Day says it’s time for the Republican Party to ditch former President Donald Trump and back another candidate for the White House in 2024.

“I would certainly like to see the party move forward. There are a lot of rising stars,” congressman-elect Mike Lawler — who rocked the political world by defeating Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee chairman, told The Post Thursday.

“Gov. Ron DeSantis has energized voters in the state of Florida. It’s always good to have new voices,” added Lawler, an assemblyman who will represent the Hudson Valley’s 17th District in congress.

The GOP in New York picked up four House seats, including NY-17, increasing from 7 to 11 and that is being credited with potentially giving Republicans the margin to narrowly regain the House majority.

A former executive director of the state Republican Party, Lawler’s abandonment of Trump in his native New York is sure to raise eyebrows as GOP officials and voters nationally debate whether it’s better to have a fresh face at the top of the ticket in 2024 or Trump, a polarizing figure who has a large devoted following.

Republican Congressman-elect Mike Lawler said he would like to see the party “move forward” from former President Donald Trump.
Douglas Healey
Lawler’s comments come ahead of Trump’s “very big announcement” next week that is expected to be about running in 2024.
Ron Sachs – CNP / MEGA

Lawler’s comments come as Trump is being advised to delay next week’s much-hyped “very big announcement” — during which is he expected to kickoff a White House run for the third straight cycle.

“I’ll be advising him that he move his announcement until after the Georgia [Senate] runoff [Dec. 6],” former Trump adviser Jason Miller said. “Georgia needs to be the focus of every Republican in the country right now.”

Kayleigh McEnany, a former White House press secretary in the Trump administration, also said on Fox News the former president should put his announcement on “pause” until Georgia is sorted out.

Lawler flipped the Hudson Valley seat to Republican after defeating Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney.
Douglas Healey

Trump’s onetime lawyer and personal friend Rudy Giuliani told The Post Thursday he had urged the former president not to announce another White House bid until after midterms, but insisted that Trump has what it takes to win again — and was the most charismatic and appealing GOP candidate since Ronald Reagan.

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NY Election Day 2022 live updates: Hochul-Zeldin governor race, other races


The increasingly tight race between Gov. Kathy Hochul and challenger Lee Zeldin has most New York voters focused on the top of the ticket — but they could also play a key role in deciding the balance of power in the House of Representatives. Nine of the races in New York’s 26 congressional districts are described as competitive by…

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Early voting in NYC anemic for Hochul until Clintons, VP Harris arrival

Turnout during the nine days of early voting in overwhelmingly Democratic New York City was light — and experts say the lack of early enthusiasm could portend trouble for incumbent Gov. Kathy Hochul.

Hochul, who was forced to call in the cavalry — Bill and Hillary Clinton and President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris — in a bid to wake up slumbering New York Democrats the past week is in the political fight of her life against surging Republican challenger Lee Zeldin.

A total of 432,634 voters turned out early in the five boroughs even as both public and internal polls have showed a very tight race.

“The lack of enthusiasm for the Hochul campaign is validated by these mediocre [early voting] numbers,” said political consultant Hank Sheinkopf.

“Zeldin has a higher possibility of winning based on these numbers.”

One Democratic strategist said of the turnout, “This race is a jump ball.”

Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks during her “Get Out The Vote” rally at Sarah Lawrence College in Yonkers, New York.
Ron Adar/Shutterstock

New York City’s cumulative turnout by the seventh day of early voting, Friday, stood at just 33.7% of the early turnout when compared to the presidential election in 2020.

Breaking the alarm glass seems to have worked a little — as turnout across the five boroughs picked up a bit over the weekend.

By the time early voting had ended on Sunday, the turnout had jumped five percentage points — still just 38.6% of the 2020 turnout when 1.19 million people voted early in the fiercely contested 2020 presidential election between President Biden and former President Donald Trump.

Hochul brought out President Biden to try and energize voters ahead of Election Day.
Steve Sands/NewYorkNewswire/Baue

Early turnout was dreadful in heavily Democrat The Bronx, where only 39,069 residents voted — just 3,000 more votes than cast in GOP-led Staten Island, which has just about a third of The Bronx’s population.

Brooklyn registered 135,239 votes, followed by Manhattan with 133,618, Queens with 88,840, the Bronx with 39,069 and Staten Island with 35,868.

Zeldin told The Post Monday that turnout and enthusiasm for Hochul is light in many of the city’s Democratic strongholds while he’s generating enthusiastic support.

“It’s a big issue for Hochul, I don’t know if she’s gonna be able to recover from this tomorrow. The turnout in certain areas where she was expecting a higher turnout just wasn’t there,” Zeldin said.

“Zeldin has a higher possibility of winning based on these numbers.”
AFP via Getty Images

“We’ve seen the enthusiasm gap for awhile — it’s shown themselves in different respects. While she was rallying a few days ago with Hillary Clinton and Kamala Harris, we had 10 times as many people showing up at a rally in the capital region. There’s clearly a big energy gap and enthusiasm gap between the two campaigns.

“She just didn’t get the numbers that she needed from some of these boroughs. There are certain groups inside of the boroughs that just didn’t show up. And we’re not seeing anything today that is lighting a fuse amongst those people who had just not shown up.”

State Conservative Party chairman Jerry Kassar said that by contrast, the early voter turnout rate was stronger in Zeldin’s base in Long Island’s Nassau and Suffolk counties than in Democratic-leaning New York City where Hochul needs to run up the score.

But State Democratic Party chairman Jay Jacobs, a key Hochul adviser, insisted the turnout was good for Hochul and the Democratic ticket.

Jacobs said New York City typically accounts for about a third of the vote in statewide elections. He said it was at 27% of the early vote total and was hopeful to at least hit that mark during the final vote on Tuesday.

A total of 432,634 voters turned out early in the five boroughs.
AP

“We feel very good. We’ll see what happens when the polls close on Tuesday,” Jacobs said.

Sources said government workers and black voters historically tend to vote on Election Day, which could boost the turnout for Hochul. But many Republican-leaning voters also prefer to vote on Election Day.

Hochul and the Democratic ticket do have a big advantage when it comes to absentee ballots, a Post review of state and city election data reveals.

The state Board of Elections reported that 62% or 349,087 of the 564,318 absentee ballots requested by voters statewide were from registered Democrats. Only 20% or 111,744 were requested by Republicans and 17% or 96,288 were requested by independents.

Of the 327,886 absentee ballots returned thus far, 200,243 were from Democrats, 72,495 from Republicans and 50,604 from independents.

The overwhelming number of absentee ballots requested in New York City were from Democrats — 171,188 of 219,228.

Thus far, 83,582 of the 102,923 paper ballots received by the local elections board were from Democrats.

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