Parents of college student from NJ killed by stray bullet speak out

The grieving family of the New Jersey teen killed by a stray bullet on her Nashville college campus have paid tribute to her “beautiful soul” — with her mom saying that part of her own heart was taken with the loss.

Jillian Ludwig, 18, a freshman at Belmont University, died overnight Thursday, two days after she was first found struck in the back of the head by a round allegedly fired by a career criminal.

“There’s a piece of my heart that was taken from me,” Ludwig’s mom, Jessica, told WKRN-TV.

The slain teen’s dad, Matt, said: “It’s kind of hard to comprehend. She was thriving so well and doing so well in so many ways, in every way.

“For it to all change so suddenly — it’s, it’s hard to, it’s hard to process. It’s impossible to process,” he added.

The family had raced to Vanderbilt University Medical Center when their daughter was at first fighting for her life, before succumbing to her injuries, WSMV reported.

Jillian Ludwig, center, with her parents, Matt and Jessica.
Family Handout

Her aunt Geri Wainwright sent the outlet a text shortly before the family received the horrible news that she had died.

“Jillian has such a beautiful soul,” her aunt Geri Wainwright texted the outlet shortly before news of her niece’s death was announced.

“Her smile lights up any room and she is loved by everyone lucky enough to know her,” she wrote.

Jillian Ludwig was an accomplished musician who regularly gigged in her native New Jersey.
Facebook / Jillian Ludwig

“Jillian is fierce. She lives every day with passion. Her fearlessness, spontaneity, love of laughter, kindness and compassion make her irreplaceable to our family. Losing her would forever change the fabric of our lives,” Wainwright wrote at the time.

“We sent our girl into the world to do amazing things. Given the opportunity, she would have. So we have to ask, why was this man free?” she continued.

“What kind of world do we live in where it’s not safe to take a walk near your college dorm in broad daylight? How could someone so carelessly dim the light of a star destined to shine so bright?” the aunt added.

Ludwig was struck by a stray bullet as she walked near her Nashville campus.
Metro Nashville Police Department

Ludwig, a graduate of Wall High School in New Jersey, was an “accomplished student, musician, and vocalist,” she said.

“She chose to study Music Business at Belmont University. She loved the short time she’s spent at Belmont. She loves her life, her friends, parents and her younger brothers, Shane & Trevor,” Wainwright added.

On Thursday, the Wall Township Committee sent a letter to the community, remembering Ludwig and offering mental health resources, according to WKRN.

“We are incredibly saddened to hear about the tragic and untimely passing of Jillian Ludwig. Jillian was an exceptional young leader within our community,” it wrote.

“She graced us with her beautiful voice to sing the National Anthem at many township community events. Jillian was a member of the Young Women’s Leadership Committee of Wall Township and was the recipient of the 2023 Women’s Leadership Committee Scholarship Award,” the local committee said.

Ludwig performed at venues around her New Jersey community, playing bass and guitar along with singing during the Asbury Park Porch Fest and Red Bank in New Jersey, The Tennessean reported.

Her first show was more than two years ago, when she performed at The Saint in Asbury Park with her band Arcadia.  

Accused shooter Shaquille Taylor.
Metro Nashville Police Department

Ludwig was shot about 2:30 p.m. Tuesday while walking at Edgehill Community Memorial Gardens Park in Nashville.

Shaquille Taylor, 29, allegedly opened fire on a car from a public housing complex across the street — striking her as she walked on a track, police said.

Surveillance video and witnesses led cops to the suspected gunman, who admitted to firing shots, police said. He has been charged over previous shootings — but was released from custody earlier this year after being deemed incompetent to stand trial.

The suspect was accused of giving the gun to another person after Tuesday’s shooting, The Tennessean reported, citing court records. His girlfriend also told investigators that he admitted to her that he was involved in a shooting, according to police records cited by the paper.

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Mike Trout teaming up with Tiger Woods for New Jersey golf course

Mike Trout is teaming with Tiger Woods to build Trout National – The Reserve, a championship golf course near where Trout grew up in southern New Jersey.

Woods’ golf course architecture firm, TGR Design, will design the course, which is set to open in 2025 in Vineland, N.J. Trout, the Los Angeles Angels’ three-time MVP outfielder, and his wife, Jessica, live in the region in the offseason.

“It’s pretty incredible having a chance to own your own golf course,” Trout said, per Sports Illustrated. “Getting Tiger to design it is crazy. If you had told me before that this would happen one day, I would have said you are crazy. It’s more than I ever thought possible.”

Trout told Sports Illustrated that he and Jessica talked about owning a golf course, pre-pandemic, and the idea evolved through the years as he met with a local developer. Eventually, Trout’s brother contacted TGR Design, and a partnership was born.


Mike Trout
Getty Images

Tiger Woods
Getty Images

“My favorite golfer growing up obviously was Tiger,” Trout, 31, told Sports Illustrated. “I thought it would be pretty cool to reach out. We reached out, got a positive vibe when we mentioned it and got his team down to the site. Once Tiger’s team came down to the site, they loved it. It’s surreal. I mean, it’s friggin’ Tiger!

“We talk now. I’m starting to get to know him. I talk to him over the telephone. It’s pretty crazy.”


Mike Trout of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim plays golf in left field with his teammates
Getty Images

The course property also will include a practice range, clubhouse, restaurant, lodging and even a wedding chapel.

The price of the project has not been disclosed.



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Princeton student Larry Fife Giberson charged for role in Jan. 6 Capitol riot

A Princeton University student was arrested Tuesday for allegedly engaging in a “violent assault” against police officers outside the US Capitol Building during the Jan. 6, 2021 riot.

Ivy Leaguer Larry Fife Giberson was seen on footage near the front of a mob of law breakers trying to push their way inside the federal building, according to the US Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia.

Giberson cheered as Capitol police were pepper sprayed and screamed “drag them out!” at least three times at a tunnel leading to the building, federal prosecutors said.

The 21-year-old from Manahawkin, New Jersey, was taken into custody more than two years after the riot after images of him caught on tape at the Capitol matched photos found on Instagram and the elite school’s website, an FBI agent’s affidavit states.

Giberson and others got into an ugly confrontation with cops guarding the Lower West Terrace tunnel entrance as they attempted to force their way into the building by coordinating a “heave-ho” shove against the police line, the feds said.


A New Jersey man has been arrested on felony and misdemeanor charges for his actions during the breach of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
United States Department of Justice

One officer was crushed between a door and shield held by a rioter with Giberson right at the front of the mob, prosecutors alleged.

Shortly after, Giberson then rushed the tunnel entryway and waved for more rioters to join him before returning to the tunnel to take part in another round of coordinated pushing against the police line, the US Attorney’s Office said.

Police officers were eventually able to gain – at least temporarily – control of the tunnel and clear everyone, including Giberson out, prosecutors said.


Larry Fife Giberson was identified as one of many in the crowd on Jan. 6.
United States Department of Justice

But rioters kept battling officers at the access point and Giberson stood nearby and cheered after rioters dragged one officer into the crowd, the feds said. He also watched as other officers were ruthlessly assaulted, according to prosecutors.

At one point, he allegedly tried to start a “drag them out!” chant but no one else joined in.

Gibersion was charged with civil disorder, a felony, and other related misdemeanors.


The images of the suspect were matched with photos found on Princeton’s website, the feds said.
United States Department of Justice

He was in the tunnel for roughly an hour, according to an affidavit.

Giberson is currently enrolled as an undergrad at Princeton, a school spokesperson said.

He sported a “Make America Great Again” hat and wore a Trump flag around his neck at the time of the mob violence that disrupted the joint session of Congress for certifying President Biden’s win over former President Trump, according to the affidavit.


He’s accused of pushing toward a police line of officers guarding an entrance to the Capitol.
United States Department of Justice

It’s unclear if Giberson attended the “Stop the Steal” rally where Trump spoke in the waning days of his presidency.

Giberson was arrested in DC Tuesday and later released by a judge after an initial hearing.

About 1,000 people have been arrested for their role in the Capitol riot so far. 

With Post wires

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Paulsboro, NJ victims warn East Palestine, Ohio train residents

Prepare for a long legal battle.

That’s what victims of a 2012 toxic train derailment in Paulsboro, New Jersey are warning residents of East Palestine — as the tiny Ohio town continues to grapple with a devastating spill that leaked the same harmful chemical as the disaster a decade earlier.

News of last month’s freight train derailment in East Palestine quickly triggered traumatic memories for those in Paulsboro where residents were exposed to a cloud of vinyl chloride after 180,000 pounds leaked from a ruptured Conrail-owned tanker car.

The victims, including some who are still struggling with health woes they say are linked to the chemical exposure, are now urging those in Ohio — where 1.1 million pounds of vinyl chloride leaked following a derailment — to seek out legal advice so they can’t be ripped off by rail company, Norfolk Southern, when it comes to possible compensation.

“My heart goes out to those people,” Cassandra Clark, 54, told The Post this week.They have every right to be afraid of what’s going on.”


Walt Stevenson and his wife Irma were exposed to the toxic fumes in Paulsboro, New Jersey in 2012 because they live just 50 yards from where the train derailed.
Joe Lamberti for NY Post

“Make sure you’ve got lawyers, because I’m telling you, I don’t think they [Norfolk Southern] really care,” she continued. “We had a class action lawsuit, but you don’t really get anything from it. I can’t even remember the amount, but it was book money for my daughter for the first semester. It was nothing.”

In the aftermath of the Paulsboro ordeal, multiple class action lawsuits were filed on behalf of first responders and the hundreds of local residents who lived or worked near the site of the Nov. 30, 2012 derailment.

But some residents claim the rail company paid them off with “chump change” compensation to prevent them from seeking more cash if they developed serious health ailments down the line, including cancers.


Cassandra Clark, 54, said her young son had bouts of unexplained vomiting and diarrhea in the aftermath of the 2012 derailment.
Joe Lamberti for NY Post

“People signed letters to get money, but they waived all their rights,” said Paulsboro mayor Gary Stevenson, who was the deputy fire chief in 2012 when the derailment occurred.

“My advice to the [Ohio] residents is understand what you’re singing. You might be signing your life and health away if you do that.” 

Exposure to vinyl chloride – a carcinogenic – has already been linked to liver, brain and lung cancers, according to the National Cancer Institute.

The mayor, who lived less than 100 yards from where the train derailed, said he hadn’t heard of anyone being diagnosed with cancer and blaming it on the Paulsboro incident.


Residents in Paulsboro, NJ were exposed to a cloud of vinyl chloride after it leaked from a ruptured a Conrail-owned tanker car when it derailed on Nov. 30, 2012.
AP

Still, he said he gets regular medical testing because of his exposure and the unknown long-term health effects which could take many years to emerge.

“I went to a Philadelphia doctor for years after that, and he said, ‘Gary, you won’t see illness right away. It might take 20 years.’ It’s the same thing as people who work with asbestos and get mesothelioma years later,” Stevenson said.

“Up this point I’ve gotten blood tests regularly for my liver count. My numbers are good. But he said that would happen.” 

In East Palestine, residents have raised fears about the safety of the air and drinking water after officials carried out a controlled burn of vinyl chloride and other toxic materials in the wake of the Feb. 3 derailment.

The burn, which officials said was to avoid an explosion, sent plumes of smoke into the air and contaminated at least 4,500 cubic yards of soil and 1.5 million gallons of water, Northfolk Southern said on Monday.  

Stevenson said he knows the feeling of fear all too well.


In the aftermath, multiple class action lawsuits were filed on behalf of first responders and the hundreds of local residents who lived or worked near the Paulsboro site.
AP

“And trust me, the stigma will stay around. People say, ‘It’s still in the air, it’s still in the water, it’s still in the ground.’ Believe me, that stigma will stick around for quite a few years, I know that for a fact,” he said.

Mom-of-two Jacqui Benjamin is convinced her sons — Julian, now 15, and Dorian, now 10 — suffer from ongoing respiratory issues after breathing in the toxic fumes the day of the derailment.

“When the train derailed, this mist of chemicals engulfed all of Paulsboro and everybody breathed that in,” the 39-year-old recalled.

“When it happened, they both were vomiting like crazy. The next week it was the wheezing. We went outside, which we shouldn’t have done, and everyone but I developed asthma.”

She said her eldest still needs an inhaler if he exercises or overexerts himself.

The mom recalled getting compensation from the rail company, but described it as nothing more than “chump change” and a “slap in the face.”

“There’s a connection and it doesn’t want to be acknowledged that these kids have respiratory issues because of the chemicals. It’s just horrible,” she said.

“It’s sad that this is continuing to happen. I feel bad for them [in Ohio] because I know the trauma that the chemicals bring to a family. We experienced that and it’s the kids I’m worried about.”

Kristen Pickel said her late husband, Ronald Morris, who died in a motorcycle crash two years ago, suffered a deluge of ailments after driving through the chemical fog the day of the derailment.

“He was driving through Paulsboro to get to a job and he couldn’t see. It just overcame the vehicle. He was in the fog until he could get out of it,” Pickel, 50, said.

“It affected everything — his body, his state of mind. He wasn’t the same after.  He was very sick, kept going back and forth to the emergency room. He went through bouts of depression. Every morning he would throw up. He started drinking.”


Irma Stevenson and her husband Walt still live 50 yards from where the train derailed more than a decade ago.
Joe Lamberti for NY Post

She said the symptoms started immediately – and then the anxiety of “what’s going to happen to me?” set in.

“Doctors denied there was anything seriously wrong with him,” Pickel said.

Of the East Palestine ordeal, Pickel warned residents there that it would be “life changing.”

“These people are seriously going to have a long road because it’s not good. They just burned that stuff and let everyone breathe it in,” she said. “And if any of them try to sue, they’re going to get nothing. That’s what happened to us — we sued and we lost, because Conrail has powerful lawyers.”

Cassandra Clark’s son, who was only five or six at the time, had vomiting and diarrhea in the aftermath of the derailment.

“I remember it like it was yesterday. My son had been outside playing before school, and that particular day he got really sick,” she said. “It was really bad. He had never done that ever before or again. We hadn’t even heard about the train derailment yet, so we didn’t know what was going on.

“My daughter had walked to school, and had walked through the fumes. When she came home she just slept all day long, just slept, which was very out of character for her.”

Her son later developed hypothyroidism, which caused substantial weight gain and required medication — and Clarke suspects the toxic chemicals are the cause because thyroid trouble doesn’t run in her family. 

“It was a scary time. Of course you’re thinking the worst. Your son develops a thyroid problem and you’re like, where did this come from?” she said.

“You question whether this is something that’s going to reappear later in life. I think about my daughter — is something going to go wrong when it’s time to have children? You think about all that.” 


The Feb. 3 derailment in East Palestine, Ohio has sparked fears about the safety of water and air in the area.
AP

The mayor’s parents, Irma and Walt Stevenson, live 50 yards from where the train derailed.

Irma, 83, said trains would come by their house regularly and they never thought twice about what they were actually carrying prior to the incident.

“I was a nurse and I knew about chemicals, but I didn’t understand what the vinyl chloride was. I didn’t know what it was doing to my town,” Irma said.

“Being a nurse, I asked about possible health outcomes — brain cancer, liver cancer. How much did we breathe in that day? We were right here. My husband was in the fog, and it looked like the fog was coming up from the ground. Was this going to shorten our lives?”

She called on the federal government to crack down on regulating the rail industry in the wake of East Palestine, adding that the latest incident “breaks my heart.”

“The rail is supposed to have regulations, but are they followed? Are they fortifying the tank cars? Are they really doing inspections on the tracks? We had all these politicians coming promising to pass laws for this, for that. None of it happened,” Irma said.

 

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New Jersey water park at American Dream Mall closes after helicopter display injures four

Four people were injured when a decorative helicopter figurine came crashing down into a pool full of children inside New Jersey’s American Dream mall Sunday.

One person was rushed to the hospital and three others were treated on the scene after the large display came crashing down from the ceiling of the DreamWorks Water Park inside the East Rutherford mall around 3 p.m., officials said.

The water park was evacuated and police are investigating the terrifying incident.

None of the victims suffered life-threatening injuries. Authorities have not released the ages of the injured, but the park-goers said the helicopter was hung from a wire above a kiddy pool area.

The section of the water park where the display fell is called “The Penguins Frozen Fun Zone” and is designed for toddlers, according to the American Dream website.


The helicopter figurine crashed into “The Penguins Frozen Fun Zone” inside American Dream mall Sunday.
@Sangelitoz/Twitter

Visitors enjoying the water park said they heard a crash and then screams from both parents and kids as people began panicking.

“A large helicopter display fell on to a kiddy pool and slide area! Chaos soon after,” Angel Sanchez tweeted alongside photos of the downed copter. “The sound was scary then the screaming from parents and kids.”

Mall officials closed the park for the rest of the day and said it would remain closed Monday.


One person was rushed to the hospital and three others were treated on the scene after the scary incident.
@Sangelitoz/Twitter

“The safety of our guests is our highest priority. We will conduct a thorough investigation into this incident to ensure the park meets all safety regulations as required,” American Dream officials said in a statement to NJ.com.

With Post wires.



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Ex-Atlantic City cop shoots Erin Gatier in murder-suicide

A former New Jersey cop barged into his ex-girlfriend’s home and shot her dead before killing himself, according to a local prosecutor’s office.

The horrifying murder-suicide was discovered Monday when authorities found the bodies of retired Atlantic City police officer William Beattie and his ex Erin Gatier inside her home during a welfare check, the Gloucester County Prosecutor’s Office said Tuesday night, according to reports.

Beattie got inside the South Jersey home where he fatally shot the mother of two and then himself, the prosecutor’s office said, the Press of Atlantic City reported. Both were 47.

A co-worker of Gatier from several years ago said Gatier told him Beattie was a problem.

“She did admit to me that he was problematic, that he was a very controlling person and wouldn’t let her talk to anyone he thought might be sort of a threat to him,” former co-worker Matt Greenberg, of Pennsylvania, told the newspaper.

Gatier was warmly remembered by friends following her tragic death.
Matt Greenberg/Facebook

“It was an abusive relationship, not physically, but more mentally.”

Beattie had to retire from the force more than a decade ago due to an “accidental disability,” state records reportedly indicate.

The former police officer retired more than a decade ago.
Rone Funeral Service

The Press reported a GoFundMe page started by friends to raise money for Gatier’s funeral costs said losing her would leave the world “less bright.”

“Erin left behind two beautiful children that are tasked with unthinkable decisions and expenses,” the post stated. 

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Two Jersey Shore fishermen have close encounter with humpback whale

A father and son out fishing off the Jersey Shore got the shock of a lifetime – and it wasn’t reeling in a huge catch.

Zach Piller and his dad had a close call with an enormous humpback whale last week when the ocean creature brushed up against their boat where the two had set sail to fish for bass.

“Oh sh–! Oh sh–! oh sh–!” Piller screamed as the massive marine mammal emerged from the water, according to video he captured of the moment.

Their boat could be seen swaying back and forth during the wild encounter on Wednesday.

The Pillers had spotted sharks and dolphins earlier in the day — and got footage of the whale after Zach started recording his old man reeling in a catch.  

Dad Doug Piller can be seen holding his fishing rod tightly in the immediate aftermath of the incredible spectacle.

Zach Piller and his dad had a close call with an enormous humpback whale last week.
Zach Piller
Their boat could be seen swaying back and forth during the wild encounter.
Zach Piller

Piller held onto the fish and “wasn’t fazed at all,” his son told Storyful. Neither was injured.

Anglers aren’t allowed within 100 yards of a whale, but when a whale approaches their boat, they should put the engine in neutral until the whale goes by, according to the Asbury Park Press, citing the NOAA. 

Humpback whales can weigh up to 40 tons, according to the NOAA.

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Tenants say luxe Jersey City building floods, is a ‘nightmare’

For Jordan Mendelson, 28, living in a luxury building with a rooftop swimming pool, private gym, floor-to-ceiling views of Manhattan, the Hudson River and Statue of Liberty all within a stone’s throw away from New York City sounded like a dream when she got the keys to her $3,600-per-month two-bedroom apartment in September 2020. But six months later, it became a living nightmare. 

In March of 2021, Mendelson, an attorney, got a frantic call from her fiancé while she was at the hair salon saying the elevator in their 49-story building in Jersey City — 70 Greene — had flooded. 

“There was water pouring down in the elevator. We ended up having to climb up 72 flights of stairs,” Mendelson, who lives on the 36th floor, told The Post. She said it took her 40 minutes to hike up to her apartment, where she found her cat scurrying in fright, amidst no power and a leaky ceiling. 

Slow and stalled elevators have been an ongoing issue, Jordan Mendelson said.
Stefano Giovannini

“We hadn’t experienced anything like this,” she said, noting a pipe bursting in the building. The same thing happened, she said, in April 2022, and once again – and at its worst – earlier this month. That time it was so bad that hordes of residents had to relocate to nearby hotels for four days, sources told The Post. 

According to the listing portal Rent, Jersey City is now the most expensive US city to live in, but those living in 70 Greene say it’s hardly a luxurious life. More than 260 of the building’s residents have been sounding off in a community chat about the building’s management — publicly owned real estate company Equity Residential, which owns numerous waterfront properties in Jersey City, as well as New York City, D.C., Boston, San Francisco and others. Some of the gripes include maintenance staff unable to turn off the building’s water during the most recent floods, which reportedly led to a 9-month pregnant woman falling down a flight of stairs as she tried to exit the building. Other complaints include leaks causing property damage, elevator and hot water outages.

During the last flood, the elevator dropped 10 floors down before the emergency brake kicked in, one source told The Post. (Equity Residential denied this claim.) More proof and scathing reviews can be found on Google, Yelp and TikTok. 

Some residents took to social media platforms like TikTok to post about the flooded elevator inside 70 Greene in Jersey City.
TikTok

“This building is a complete nightmare. It was duct taped together years ago and its pipes explode every six months,” a Yelp user who goes by John B wrote of 70 Greene.

“The elevators were designed by squirrels and only operate 25% of the time. I don’t care what website tells you its [sic] 5 stars or who in the building says its [sic] a luxury building DO NOT LIVE HERE,” he urged in the one-star review.

Other current residents would agree, particularly after the last flood incident.

“You had to find your way through a dark staircase. Coming down 32 flights of stairs was just impossible. It was complete lockdown for the building,” a 46-year-old resident who has lived in the building for five years and asked to remain anonymous told The Post.

“There was no action plan from Equity until four days after the incident. Imagine just being homeless for four days? You couldn’t get a hotel room because the hotels were packed from residents. The fact that it took four days to come up with a resolution plan is unheard of, especially in a place where rents are exorbitant,” they said.

A flooded hallway after a pipe burst inside 70 Greene.
TIKTOK/@luanamoreira2103

A spokesperson for Equity Residential noted that residents will get reimbursed for hotel stays and property damage. The spokesperson told The Post they were unaware that a pregnant woman fell during the August building flooding.

Another resident, Clarissa Latman, posted a video on TikTok after the last flood showing puddles of water leaking from the elevator’s ceiling, a flooded gym, soiled carpet and residents climbing up flights of stairs as firetrucks appeared to assess the situation outside the building.  

“I have lived here for more than three years, and have experienced a number of dangerous conditions which came to a head after our third major flood due to negligent maintenance of the building’s pipes,” another resident, who asked The Post to remain anonymous out of fear of building retaliation, said. “The building has been giving us the run around, not communicating with us,” said the source, who also claimed 70 Greene was “deleting reviews” all the while upping the rent by as much as 30%. 

Jersey City, often called the invisible sixth borough of New York City, can command an average of $5,500 in rent, according to a report by the listing portal Rent as previously reported by The Post. Mendelson started packing her bags after seeing her own two-bedroom apartment listed for $5,942, up from the $3,600 COVID deal she got in 2020. 

“We ended up chasing them [70 Greene] for a lease renewal and they came back at $4,400, but it was still a $600 increase in one year,” Mendelson said,

Another woman paying close to $3,900 for a one-bedroom, who asked The Post to leave her name out, said she suffered $1,500 in property damage from the most recent flood when leaks from the ceiling on her 15th-floor unit damaged clothing, shoes, bedding and personal items in the apartment she shares with her partner. Luckily, she had renter’s insurance and said the building had offered to pitch in.

A memo posted inside the building notifying residents of a closed amenity space following the flood.
Stefano Giovannini

“Unfortunately we did recently have a pipe burst at 70 Greene which resulted in water damage to a number of apartment units as well as common areas and impacted the regular operation of the elevators,” Equity Residential spokesman Marty McKenna told The Post.

“We have worked with the impacted residents to find other accommodations, which we are paying for. We have also offered rent abatements to the residents. We are working with our contractors to assess the cause of the pipe burst and to make the necessary repairs at 70 Greene.”

Mendelson, however, is wary of such messaging from the management company after all she’s seen. She and her fiancé will be moving next month.

 “It’s not worth it, at the end of the day,” she said.

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