Intact families help keep our kids safe from predators

As parents, we are vigilant about our children’s proximity to danger as we presume the worst must always come from outside our homes.

We believe predators can only reach as far as our doorsteps because we would never knowingly let a wolf into our henhouse.

But the deterioration of the nuclear family and marriage in America has created a major vulnerability for our children.

The wolves of the world exploit our familial disconnection by providing an illusion of a loving relationship to gain access beyond our doorsteps.

One of these wolves, 28-year-old Tyresse Minter, allegedly devoured the life of his stepson, 15-year-old Corde Scott, after a suspected argument in their Westchester Square apartment in The Bronx.

Minter, who was released from prison on parole just a month before Scott’s death, allegedly put his stepson in a chokehold, cutting off his oxygen supply, and proceeded to wrap his legs around Scott while holding his neck until he lost consciousness.

Despite the heinous nature of the child’s strangulation, Judge Naita Semaj released Minter immediately after his arraignment Wednesday, though he was on parole for a felony-assault conviction.

After The Post put Scott on its Thursday cover, Gov. Kathy Hochul stepped in.


Tyresse Minter, 28, allegedly strangled his stepson, Corde Scott, 15, to death after a suspected argument.
Tyrese Minter./Facebook

“My top priority is public safety. Earlier today, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision issued a warrant for Tyresse Minter, and he is now in custody,” Hochul said Thursday.

“DOCCS is initiating the parole revocation process due to his indictment for criminal negligent homicide and manslaughter.”

We’ve neglected to understand how our children’s proximity to danger coincides with the solidity of our family structure — it’s the most important risk factor for child abuse.

The American perspective of family has been tainted by the selfishness of whatever benefits the adults at a given moment rather than what can benefit our children for a lifetime.


Gov. Kathy Hochul
Gov. Kathy Hochul issued a statement that “the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision issued a warrant for Tyresse Minter, and he is now in custody.”
Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

We tell each other our children are resilient and adaptable to rationalize choosing familial dysfunction through divorce to chase potential romance instead of chasing our children’s needs.

Though we are adults, we often act like whimsical children, pursuing our sexual desires and never questioning if the quality of our sexual partners is on par with the quality of parental figures our children need.

Our children are the ones who suffer from our choices the most, as their primary advocates for safety and prosperity have unintentionally become the ones who relocate that danger directly into their homes.


After The Post’s Thursday cover, New York’s governor stepped up.
New York Post

The statistics are clear: Children are 40 times as likely to be sexually or physically abused if their parent finds a new partner than if they live with their biological parents.

And even more tragic, they are nearly 50 times more likely to die of inflicted injuries living in a home with unrelated adults than children who live with their biological parents.

Children living without either parent (foster children) are 10 times more likely to be sexually abused than children living with both biological parents.

Kids who live with a single parent who has a live-in partner are at the highest risk: They’re 20 times more likely to be sexual-abuse victims than children living with both biological parents.

The American nuclear family is rapidly decaying, and opportunistic vultures have long been circling our children patiently waiting to feast on their innocence.

The list of children who have been murdered by their parent’s partners is disturbingly long.

Eight-year old Sophia Mason of Merced, Calif., was allegedly murdered by her mother’s boyfriend; police found her lifeless body battered from long-term abuse and malnourishment in a bathtub.

Houston 5-year-old Samuel Olson was allegedly murdered by his father’s girlfriend; his body was found in a black tote with a lid secured by zip ties.

We had a hand in the downfall as nearly a quarter of America’s children are growing up in single-parent homes — the most in the world.

But if we have the power to destroy, we have the power to rebuild.

The reconstruction of our homes will only help to save a child like Corde Scott from becoming another tragic victim and statistic.

If we’re going to make America great again, it has to start from within our own homes.

Adam B. Coleman is the author of “Black Victim to Black Victor” and founder of Wrong Speak Publishing. Follow him on Substack: adambcoleman.substack.com.

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Stepfather indicted for choking teen stepson to death released by Bronx judge

A stepfather charged with strangling his 15-year-old stepson to death was freed by a Bronx judge on Wednesday — despite a request by prosecutors that he be remanded.

Tyresse Minter, 28, was indicted for criminal negligent homicide and manslaughter last week for allegedly fatally choking his teen stepson Corde Scott on Jan. 23, the Bronx District Attorney’s Office announced.

Minter was arraigned on Wednesday in Bronx Criminal Court before notoriously lenient Judge Naiti Semaj, who ordered he be released, even though the DA’s office asked he remain locked up ahead of his trial, prosecutors said.

According to investigators, Minter — who was on parole after being released from prison a month earlier — got into an argument with Scott in the Parkchester home.


Minter has been charged with homicide in the death of his 15-year-old stepson, Corde Scott.

Minter allegedly put his stepson in a chokehold, cutting off his oxygen supply, prosecutors said. He then allegedly wrapped his legs around Scott and held him until he lost consciousness.

Scott died at the scene. It remains unclear what the two were arguing over.

The stepfather did not call 911 for about 20 minutes after he lost consciousness, prosecutors said.


Scott was choked to death by Minter during an altercation in their Bronx home on Jan. 23.

Minter was on parole for an assault that landed him in prison for three years, state Department of Corrections records show. He was released this past December.

He is scheduled to return to court on June 20.


Bronx Judge Naita Semaj-Williams ordered Minter be released after his arraignment on Wednesday.
YouTube/BronxNet

Semaj, a Democrat who was elected in 2021 after earlier serving in Bronx Civil Court, has a history of cutting loose allegedly violent offenders.

In one case last May, she sparked outrage after she ruled in favor of 16-year-old rapper Camrin Williams, known as “C Blu,” who was accused of shooting and wounding an NYPD officer during a scuffle while he was on probation for a prior gun case.

Semaj ruled the cop had no reason to search the teen during a Jan. 18 incident and Williams’ case was dropped.

Minter’s release comes as Gov. Kathy Hochul is reportedly negotiating with state lawmakers to pass a budget that eliminates a rule requiring judges impose the “least restrictive means” that will ensure defendants return to court.

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NYC DOE staffers sued for unpaid rent for Dominican teachers

A group of city Department of Education administrators is being sued for $24,000 in unpaid rent by the owners of a Bronx house where teachers brought from the Dominican Republic were forced to live.

ADASA, the Association of Dominican-American Supervisors and Administrators, leased a duplex at 1820 Pilgrim Ave., then required five teachers and one woman’s husband to pay $1,350 to $1,450 a month for single rooms while sharing a kitchen and bathroom.

But the DOE administrators running ADASA — now under investigation — have not paid the monthly $8,000 rent since November, landlords Yuping Chen and Yanlai Lin charged in a lawsuit filed in Bronx Housing Court last month.


The ADASA leased required five teachers to pay $1,350 to $1,450 a month for single rooms while sharing a kitchen and bathroom.
J.C.Rice

The DOE administrators running ADASA have not paid the monthly $8,000 rent since November, according to court documents.

As of Jan. 5, ADASA also owed more than $20,000 in rent at 4414 Baychester Ave in The Bronx, where the group made 11 other Dominican teachers live under similar conditions.

A third building where the DOE administrators put Dominican teachers, a co-op on Marion Avenue in The Bronx, was owned by the late mother of Emmanuel Polanco, ADASA’s first vice-president and the principal of MS 80 before he was removed from the school in October. 

In December, city and federal agencies began to investigate complaints that the Dominican teachers were exploited and threatened by ADASA.


A third building in the Bronx where the DOE administrators put Dominican teachers was owned by the late mother of Emmanuel Polanco (pictured) — ADASA’s former vice president.
Richard Harbus

As of Jan. 5, ADASA also owed more than $20,000 in rent at 4414 Baychester Ave in The Bronx, where 11 other Dominican teachers live.
J.C. Rice

Last week, teachers told The Post they have not been informed about the progress of the probe.

All 19 teachers housed by ADASA have since moved out. 

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E-bike battery sparks another huge NYC blaze, guts grocery store and injures 7

An e-bike sparked a massive hours-long blaze that gutted a Bronx grocery store and injured seven people — two seriously — on Sunday, officials said.

An EMS worker and a civilian were seriously hurt when flames broke out around 10:40 a.m. at the Concourse Food Plaza at 2096 Grand Concourse in the West Bronx section, officials said. Five firefighters suffered minor injuries.

The quick-moving fire was blamed on a scooter’s lithium-ion battery and rose to five alarms, requiring over 50 units and more than 200 firefighters to douse it.

Mayor Adams went to the scene and used the incident to call attention to the batteries, which have sparked a slew of recent fires in the city, some of them fatal.

“We have witnessed this over and over again, and that is why we’re going to continue to amplify the message that a simple device like this, this charred scooter, is only a symbol of what is happening behind us and what has continued to take place since early this morning,” Adams said Sunday afternoon. “We’re still fighting the fire because of the type of device the fire started from.” 


An e-bike sparked a massive hours-long blaze that gutted a Bronx grocery store and injured seven people on Sunday, officials said.
Tomas E.Gaston

The fire was blamed on a scooter’s lithium-ion battery, requiring over 50 units and more than 200 firefighters to douse it.
Tomas E.Gaston

Fire Commissioner Laura Kavanagh said the bike caused “extraordinary damage.

“This entire building behind me is completely destroyed,” Kavanagh said. “The roof is caved in. There’s nothing left. And it is all because of this single bike.”

Firefighters could be seen carrying the burnt bike away from the scene.

Fires caused by e-bike batteries killed six people in the city in 2022, officials said. Those blazes were among 219 started by the batteries last year and left another 147 people injured.

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Stricken partner of FDNY EMT Yadira Arroyo recalls how tragic day unfolded

The stricken former partner of slain EMT Yadira Arroyo described in Bronx court Tuesday how a routine day suddenly turned tragic when a deranged man hijacked their ambulance.

Monique Williams recalled to jurors in painful detail how she and Arroyo, a beloved 44-year-old mom of five, were driving to a call involving a pregnant woman when a passing motorist signaled to them that a man was riding on their bumper on White Plains Road about 7 p.m. March 16, 2017.

The FDNY medics pulled over to investigate, and the next thing they knew, 25-year-old suspect Jose Gonzalez had run around and hopped behind the wheel of their emergency vehicle, she said.

“I remember her screaming, ‘Oh hell, no!’ ” Williams said of Arroyo.

“I was trying to pull his hand off the steering wheel,” Williams said in the courtroom — where about 50 EMTs were in the gallery staring down Gonzalez, who was allegedly high on PCP at the time of the crime.

Gonzalez was able to kick the ambulance into gear even as he fought with the two medics, Williams said.

Another witness said the suspect then suddenly backed up the ambulance and hit a car before lurching forward into an intersection. That’s when Arroyo fell, and the emergency vehicle fatally ran her over.


FDNY medic Yadira Arroyo, 44, was fatally mowed down by her hijacked ambulance in 2017.
AP

Williams said she immediately noticed that she no longer heard her pal “Yadi.

“I lost sight of her,” said the former medic, who retired the day of the horror. “When we started to go forward, I felt some tumbling underneath us.”

She found Arroyo lying still on the ground.

“I ran over to her to try to get her up,” Williams said quietly. “She didn’t get up. I stayed there with her. She didn’t move no more, so I just stood there with her.”

Arroyo’s aunt, Ali Acevedo-Hernandez, later told The Post outside court that the emotional account drove her to tears.

“The thing that got to me … was when [Williams] said that she felt something tumbling under the wheels,” Acevedo-Hernandez said. “And I know it was Yadi.”

Acevedo-Hernandez — who said she had to close Arroyo’s eyes at the hospital after she died — added that she wants Gonzalez to pay for what he did.


Jose Gonzalez was allegedly high on PCP when he ran over the mother of five.
New York Post

“I see no remorse,” she said. “I don’t see any pity, I don’t see no repentance. I see nothing. I just see an empty shell of a person. He can’t even take responsibility for what he did.”

At one point during Tuesday’s trial, prosecutors displayed gruesome photo evidence of the ambulance’s blood-splattered driver’s side and smashed driver’s side headlight, prompting the crowd of EMTs there to gasp loudly.


Authorities have charged Gonzalez with manslaughter, robbery and vehicular manslaughter.
Seth Gottfried

The other witness who testified, real-estate agent Demetrius Perez, 43, said that after Arroyo was mowed down, Gonzalez got out of the ambulance and began to fight with the quickly gathering crowd.

“I remember him attempting … to throw a punch, and then the guy grabbed him and threw him to the ground,” Perez said.


The ambulance went through an intersection and struck several cars before it came to a halt.
Christopher Sadowski

Prosecutors have charged Gonzalez with first-degree manslaughter, robbery, vehicular manslaughter and operating a motor vehicle under the influence.

He was declared unfit for trial last year, but health professionals at Mid-Hudson Forensic Psychiatric Center reversed that decision in September.

A surveillance video recording presented by the defense has shown Gonzalez walk up to the driver’s side door, open it and climb in. But an SUV obscured Arroyo falling out before the ambulance started to move.

Louis Montalvo, an EMT who knew Arroyo for nearly two decades, told The Post on Tuesday that “Yadi’s name needs justice.”

“The city needs justice,” Montalvo said. “Her sons need justice. Her family needs justice. We need justice. And we’re not going to stop until justice is brought. We’re going to be here every day.”

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Teen clinging to life after being stabbed in stomach in NYC

A 16-year-old boy was clinging to life after he was stabbed in the stomach in the Bronx on Tuesday afternoon, cops said.

The teenager’s stomach was punctured with an unknown object at West 195th Street and Jerome Avenue around 2:30 p.m., cops said. 

Police were looking for five males who fled on foot south on Jerome Avenue.

A 16-year-old boy was stabbed in the stomach.

The teen was stabbed with an unknown object.


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Police are looking for the suspect.

The victim is in critical condition.


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The victim was taken to Jacobi Hospital in critical condition, according to police.

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Rikers guard punched inmate in face; fellow officers covered it up: indictment

Three city correction officers have been accused of covering up the assault of a Rikers Island inmate by one of their own, prosecutors announced Tuesday.

Carl Williams, 31, Roy Dewar, 58, and Jatan Das, 64, were indicted on charges of official misconduct and multiple counts of falsifying business records, Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark said in a release.

Williams was also slapped with one count of assault for allegedly striking an inmate in the face on Oct. 14, 2021, inside Otis Bantum Correctional Center, the DA’s office said.

Dewar and Das watched the unprovoked attack on surveillance video — but submitted bogus reports that said the inmate was being aggressive to justify the use of force, prosecutors alleged.

“We must hold Correction Officers to a high standard,” Clark said. “Just as the alleged violence will not be tolerated, neither will the coverup, especially in this turbulent time in Rikers Island.”

The DOC did not respond immediately for comment.

The correction officers could not be reached. It was also unclear if the officers had retained legal counsel.

They are due back in court on April 13.

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Three stabbings in NYC kill one, injure two as 2023 begins: NYPD

Three overnight stabbings in the Bronx and Manhattan left one person dead and a man and woman injured, cops said.

A 63-year-old man was fatally stabbed in the chest and a 38-year-old woman was stabbed in the torso in front of 1335 College Avenue in the Bronx at around 4 a.m., cops said.

Both took private transportation to Bronx Lebanon Hospital where the man was pronounced dead, cops said. The woman was in stable condition.

The “victims were involved in a dispute with an unknown individual who stabbed them,” a police spokeswoman said. There was no known motive, she said.

Meanwhile, a man was stabbed in the stomach at East 21st Street and Fifth Avenue in Manhattan’s Flatiron District at around 2:30 a.m., police said.

A 38-year-old woman was stabbed in the torso in front of 1335 College Avenue in the Bronx at around 4 a.m., according to police.

A 63-year-old man was fatally stabbed in the chest early in the morning in the Bronx.


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A man was rushed to a hospital after being stabbed in the stomach in Manhattan’s Flatiron District at around 2:30 a.m., police said.


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He was taken to Bellevue Hospital in stable condition. The suspect, who was wearing a yellow jacket and gray jeans, fled on 21st Street on foot, cops said. There was no known motive.

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One dead, three injured in NYC shooting

One person was killed and three others injured when a gunman opened fire in The Bronx on Wednesday night, sources said.

The four victims were shot at Southern Boulevard and East Tremont Avenue in Crotona at around 6:30 p.m., according to police.

A man was killed and three other injured after a shooting in the Bronx.
Citizen

The 911 caller reported that the shooting happened in front of a chicken shop, though officials erected police tape outside a Gourmet Deli on the corner of the two major streets.

A man was pronounced dead on arrival. The other three victims are expected to survive, sources said.

Police have not disclosed information on the gunman. It was not immediately clear what sparked the shooting.

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2-year-old boy, mother pepper-sprayed on NYC subway platform

An innocent 2-year-old boy and his mother were hospitalized Wednesday after they were pepper-sprayed on a Bronx subway platform, police said.

The baby and his 30-year-old mom were struck by the pepper spray inside the 149th Street-Grand Concourse station by a man who was aiming the chemical at two women he was fighting with, according to cops.

The 2-year-old child and his 30-year-old mother were not the intended targets, police said.
Stephen Yang

The man and two women had been arguing on the northbound 2-4-5 train platform when he whipped out the potent spray.

After missing his intended targets, and instead hitting the boy and his mother, the man fled on a train, police said. The two women also ran off.

The mother and son were rushed to Lincoln Hospital in stable condition.

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