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Audio – Cops looks for gunman who shot 27-year-old after argument

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NEW YORK (WCBS 880) — Police say a 27-year-old was injured when a gunman opened fire into a Brooklyn restaurant early Thursday morning.

The incident happened on Dec. 3 at around 7 a.m. inside at a restaurant located on Duryea Place in the Flatbush section of the borough.

According to the NYPD, the gunman and the 27-year-old victim had gotten into a verbal dispute inside the restaurant prior to the shooting.

It’s unclear if the gunman left and then returned, but video shows the unidentified shooter open the front door of the restaurant and fire at least one round into the eatery.

Police say the 27-year-old victim was struck in the torso and was transported to NYC Health & Hospitals/Kings County, where he was treated and released.

No other injuries were reported in connection to the shooting.

The gunman fled the scene to parts unknown. He is described as a dark-skinned male in his 20s, with a medium build and facial hair. He was last seen wearing dark-colored hooded sweater, light-colored sweatpants and dark-colored sneakers.

Anyone with information in regard to this incident is asked to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). The public can also submit their tips by logging onto the CrimeStoppers website at WWW.NYPDCRIMESTOPPERS.COM or on Twitter @NYPDTips.

Stay informed, stay connected — follow WCBS 880 on Facebook and Twitter. Download the RADIO.COM app + favorite WCBS 880 for breaking news, traffic and weather alerts.


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Audio – Brooklyn clinic says it returned COVID-19 vaccines amid probe

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from Bruce Golding – New York Post.

Brooklyn clinic says it returned COVID-19 vaccines amid probe


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Brooklyn clinics face criminal probe over unauthorized COVID-19 vaccines

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A Brooklyn-based health care company said Sunday that it “proactively returned” its remaining stash of COVID-19 vaccines amid a criminal probe into allegations the doses were fraudulently obtained and diverted.

In a prepared statement, ParCare Community Health Network also insisted it followed all proper procedures to get the Moderna vaccines and was approved to administer the shots by both the state Department of Health and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The company said it “provided the documentation regarding the proper receipt of the vaccines to the NYS DOH.”

“In an effort to fully cooperate with NYS DOH, ParCare has proactively returned its vaccines pending the Department’s review,” according to the statement.

“We are confident the end result of that review will show that ParCare at all times exerted best efforts to comply with all NYS DOH requirements and will allow us to continue to achieve our number one goal of providing these critical vaccines to the New Yorkers who need them most.”

A company spokesperson said ParCare had administered 869 of 2,300 doses it received through an order placed by the DOH, and had handed over the remainder to the state.

A copy of a packing slip provided to The Post shows the vaccines were shipped directly to ParCare in Monroe, N.Y., from a McKesson pharmaceutical-supply warehouse in Shepherdsville, Ky.

The Moderna vaccine is designed to be administered in two doses 28 days apart.

ParCare said, “We will do everything in our power to make sure that the state understands that our patients are our priority and that everyone receives their second dose accordingly.”

On Saturday, state Health Department Commissioner Howard Zucker said the New York State Police was investigating allegations that ParCare “may have fraudulently obtained COVID-19 vaccine, transferred it to facilities in other parts of the state in violation of state guidelines and diverted it to members of the public.”

Zucker’s statement said the investigation involved ParCare’s clinic in Orange County, which is one of six it operates.

The others are located in Brooklyn and Manhattan.

New York state guidelines call for the first round of vaccines to go to front-line health care workers and residents of long-term care facilities.

ParCare CEO Gary Schlesinger reportedly told BoroPark24 website that the company was giving shots to people who were “either a healthcare worker, are over 60 or have underlying conditions.”

A since-removed photo on Twitter, posted by the Rabbinical Alliance of America on Tuesday, showed Schlesinger receiving one of the highly coveted shots himself.

The state DOH didn’t immediately return a request for comment.


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1 Woman Is Killed and 6 Others Are Wounded in Brooklyn Mass Shooting

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The party appeared to be a continuation of an earlier gathering for a “Sweet 16” celebration that had been broken up around 7 p.m.

1 Woman Is Killed and 6 Others Are Wounded in Brooklyn Mass Shooting

The young people who gathered for a party in a Brooklyn apartment building on Sunday night appeared to be in a festive mood, neighbors said. Revelers spilled out of apartments on the third and fourth floors, into hallways and out onto the sidewalk.

But shortly after 11 p.m., the celebration in Bedford-Stuyvesant was overtaken by violence and chaos. At least two people opened fire, leaving one woman dead and six others injured, including a 14-year-old girl, police said.

The episode came amid a surge in violence in New York City this year. Shootings have doubled compared with last year, with at least 1,660 incidents, and murders have risen by about 37 percent, to about 400.

The toll includes several mass shootings: Six people were shot in the Prospect Lefferts Garden neighborhood of Brooklyn in October, and five people, including a 6-year-old boy and his mother, were shot during a Carnival celebration in September.

“We’re seeing a tremendous uptick that has us concerned,” Assistant Chief Judith Harrison, who oversees the police department’s Brooklyn North command, said at an overnight news conference about the shooting.

It was not clear what led to the shooting on Sunday night, though police officials have suggested that it might be connected to a separate, earlier shooting that took place after a “Sweet 16” party in East New York.

A police official on Monday identified the woman who was killed as Daijyonna Long, 20.

A man who left the apartment building on Monday said that Ms. Long had been visiting from Virginia, where she was a college student, to attend the party. The man, who declined to give his name, said Ms. Long was “an innocent bystander.” He carried a bag of what he said were Ms. Long’s clothes.

In a news report from last week about traveling during the pandemic, Ms. Long told a television station in Virginia, WRIC, that she was planning on visiting Brooklyn to attend a relative’s birthday and for Thanksgiving.

“It’s probably just going to be like small relatives, not a big, big party or anything,” she said in the interview. “I feel pretty confident. Yeah, I just wear my mask, stay six feet, use sanitizer all the time, and I guess I’ll be just fine.”

Relatives of Ms. Long could not immediately be reached for comment on Monday afternoon.

The party in Bedford-Stuyvesant, which took place at 15 Albany Avenue, appeared to be a continuation of the earlier “Sweet 16” celebration at a party hall that had been broken up around 7 p.m., the police said.

New York Today: Compelling daily stories, transit news and a glimpse at the lighter side of life in the city.

After that party dispersed on Sunday, a 17-year-old boy who had attended was shot in the leg a block and a half from the hall, the police said. He was expected to survive.

The police believe two gunmen arrived at the Albany Avenue building at around 11 p.m. and opened fire outside the front entrance. They then walked into the lobby and continued firing as they walked upstairs to the third floor, the police said.

The victims included a 16-year-old boy, who was hit in the torso and was in critical condition at Kings County Hospital Center, and a 15-year-old boy, who was shot in the leg and was in stable condition at Maimonides Medical Center, the police said.

The 14-year-old girl was struck in the buttocks and was rushed to Maimonides, where she was in stable condition.

Three others were wounded but were expected to survive: an 18-year-old woman shot in the leg, an 18-year-old man also struck in the leg and a 19-year-old man hit in the torso, the police said.

Deputy Chief Michael Kemper, who oversees the detective bureau in Brooklyn North, said during a news conference that the shooting in Bedford-Stuyvesant could be a “retaliatory shooting” or a continuation of the shooting in East New York.

Borough President Eric Adams of Brooklyn said that the Bedford-Stuyvesant shooting stemmed from a dispute that began at the East New York party hall.

“A beef that started in East New York spilled over here,” he said.

One resident of 15 Albany Avenue, Fred Waller, said he was returning to his apartment on the second floor at around 11 p.m., when he saw two people arguing in front of the building among a larger group of about 75 people.

Mr. Waller said he also saw people partying inside the building. After he entered his apartment, he said he heard about a dozen gunshots ring out. He stayed hidden inside his apartment for a few minutes before looking out and spotting a young man with gunshot wounds slumped on the stairs as partygoers streamed out of the building.

“This is out of control,” Mr. Waller said of the violence outside his door.

A woman who was leaving the building on Monday morning said she was at a party on the fourth floor when a skirmish among a separate group of partygoers erupted on the third floor. She said she heard five shots.

“I don’t know who was shooting,” said the woman, who did not want to be identified for safety reasons.

James Wilson, who has lived across the street for a decade, said he came home around 10:30 p.m. and saw a crowd of around 30 young people in front of 15 Albany.

The people he saw appeared to be happy and having fun, Mr. Wilson said. He added, however, that the building has previously been the site of disruptive parties.

Ashley Southall contributed reporting and Kitty Bennett contributed research.


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Hundreds Of Bodies Of COVID-19 Victims Lying In Freezer Trailers In Brooklyn; City Struggling To Find Next Of Kin – CBS New York

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NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) — The bodies of hundreds of people who died from COVID-19 during the first wave of the pandemic remain unclaimed by their families.

The city’s morgue could not hold them all.

About 650 bodies lie inside freezer trailers on Pier 39 in Sunset Park, Brooklyn – a backlog of lives taken away by the coronavirus as it spread rapidly in the spring, CBS2’s Hazel Sanchez reported Monday.

The city is cautiously bracing for a second wave.

“We haven’t seen some of those particular warning signs yet,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “Thank god, but we are very, very vigilant. But, we’ll make sure medical examiner is ready either way.”

The medical examiner’s office has a task force assigned to identify bodies and another team to track down next of kin. However, they’re struggling to find the families of some 230 people.

FLASHBACK: Coronavirus Update: If NYC Cemeteries Get Filled, Could Temporary Burials Happen On Hart Island?

Relatives of others have been found, but can’t afford a proper burial yet.

“We’re trying to work with each and every family of those we lost during that situation, to make sure that they can have the kind of services they want to have at the right time,” de Blasio said.

CBS2 received the following statement from Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Barbara Sampson:

“Supporting families and helping facilitate respectful final arrangements for individuals who passed at the height of the pandemic reflects the core mission of the Office of Chief Medical Examiner.

As we continue to utilize medical, scientific, and forensic expertise to help answer vital questions around the effects of illness, we recognize that this ongoing work has served as a nationwide example in part because of the hard work and dedication of our family outreach staff in helping families navigate these unprecedented circumstances.”

Joe Aievoli, whose family owns six funeral homes, said no one, including himself, was prepared for the COVID-19 death toll.

“I rented several refrigerated trailers,” Aievoli said. “Even though we had someone in our custody, it would sometimes take three or four weeks before we can have availability at a cemetery or a crematory.”

MORE: Staten Island Funeral Home Owner A ‘Godsend’ For Families When New York’s Coronavirus Death Toll Skyrocketed

Aievoli said most funeral homes were able to catch up by the end of June. He feels for the city, which is still trying to find families and help them make arrangements for loved ones.

“Don’t want to inter someone without exhausting all the avenues of trying to find next of kins and, who knows, there can be next of kins that also fell victim to the pandemic,” he said.

Aievoli said he tries his best to help families find the most affordable way to respectfully lay their loves ones to rest.

Families can choose a free burial on Hart Island.

The medical examiner’s office said it will continue operating the storage facility in Brooklyn at least until the pandemic is declared over.

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NYC’s COVID checkpoints are back: Cops will be out ‘in force’ at bridges, crossings and bus stations

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New York City‘s COVID-19 checkpoints are back with police out ‘in force’ at bridges, crossings and bus stations to question Thanksgiving travelers from out of state. 

Sheriff Joseph Fucito announced the measures in a joint press conference with Mayor Bill de Blasio Tuesday. 

Fucito said: ‘Sheriff teams will be out in-force as the holidays approach. There will be vehicle checkpoints at key bridges and crossings throughout New York City. 

‘They will also be conducting checkpoints at curbside drop off bus stops – so, out-of-state buses coming into New York City, when they drop off at the curb, they will be met by sheriff teams.’ 

<a href=”http://DailyMail.com” rel=”nofollow”>DailyMail.com</a> has contacted the Mayor’s office for exact details on which bridges and crossings officers will be based at. 

Checkpoints first went up in August with photos taken by <a href=”http://DailyMail.com” rel=”nofollow”>DailyMail.com</a> then showing sheriff’s officers at the Goethals Bridge toll plaza between New Jersey and Staten Island. The sheriff’s department scanned plates and pulled people over.

New York City's COVID-19 checkpoints are back with police out 'in force' at bridges, crossings and bus stations to question Thanksgiving travelers from out of state. The George Washington Bridge is pictured linking New York and New Jersey. DailyMail.com has contacted the Mayor's office for exact details on which bridges and crossings officers will be based at

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New York City’s COVID-19 checkpoints are back with police out ‘in force’ at bridges, crossings and bus stations to question Thanksgiving travelers from out of state. The George Washington Bridge is pictured linking New York and New Jersey. <a href=”http://DailyMail.com” rel=”nofollow”>DailyMail.com</a> has contacted the Mayor’s office for exact details on which bridges and crossings officers will be based at

Vehicles enter Manhattan, New York, through the Lincoln Tunnel. Travelers into New York state are required to have a negative test before arriving and then again four days into their trip. If that’s negative, they can stop quarantining

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Vehicles enter Manhattan, New York, through the Lincoln Tunnel. Travelers into New York state are required to have a negative test before arriving and then again four days into their trip. If that’s negative, they can stop quarantining

Thanksgiving travellers in Penn station on Tuesday. They are required to fill out forms coming into the city at airports, Penn Station and the Port Authority Bus Terminal

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Thanksgiving travellers in Penn station on Tuesday. They are required to fill out forms coming into the city at airports, Penn Station and the Port Authority Bus Terminal

Travelers into New York state are required to have a negative test before arriving and then again four days into their trip. If that’s negative, they can stop quarantining. 

Cuomo announced the changes last month saying travelers from all non-neighboring states arriving without proof of a negative test won’t be stopped from entering the state, but will be required to quarantine for 14 days. 

They are also required to fill out forms coming into the city at airports, Penn Station and the Port Authority Bus Terminal. 

The rules don’t apply to neighboring states and New Yorkers who are out-of-state for less than 24 hours only need to take a coronavirus test within four days of returning to the state. 

Sheriff Joseph Fucito, pictured, announced the measures in a joint press conference with Mayor Bill de Blasio Tuesday

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De Blasio, pictured, said Tuesday the city has a seven-day positive test rate of 3.17 per cent

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Sheriff Joseph Fucito, left, announced the measures in a joint press conference with Mayor Bill de Blasio, right, Tuesday. De Blasio said the city has a seven-day positive test rate of 3.17%

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De Blasio to fine travelers who do not have a negative test

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About 1 million Americans a day packed airports and planes over the weekend even as coronavirus deaths surged across the U.S. and public health experts begged people to stay home and avoid big Thanksgiving gatherings. 

De Blasio said Tuesday the city has a seven-day positive test rate of 3.17 per cent amid a worrying uptick in cases that saw public schools closed to in person learning last week. The city has a seven-day average of 1,476 new cases. 

New York state has averaged nearly 5,500 new cases per day over the past seven days. 

Test and trace tests will also be out in the city to help travelers with the rules, authorities said. 

The Goethals Bridge toll linking New York to New Jersey is pictured in August

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The Goethals Bridge toll linking New York to New Jersey is pictured in August

A Department of Health checkpoint at Port Authority Bus Station in August.

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A Department of Health checkpoint at Port Authority Bus Station in August. 

COVID checkpoints are set up at Penn Station and Port Authority

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De Blasio said Tuesday: ‘We’re going to make sure that people are reminded constantly throughout this whole holiday season that if you travel there are very clear rules that you have to follow.

‘You’re going to see the presence of the city of New York when you travel, particularly through our Sheriff’s Office, you’re going to see that there are really clear rules to be followed and they will be enforced.’ 

Those who violate the rules face a fine of $2,000, he added.            

Last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urged Americans not to travel or spend the holiday with people outside their household.

New cases of the virus in the U.S. have rocketed to all-time highs, averaging more than 170,000 per day, and deaths have soared to over 1,500 a day, the highest level since the spring. 

The virus is blamed for more than a quarter-million deaths in the U.S. and over 12 million confirmed infections. 

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De Blasio Strips Control of Virus Tracing From Health Department

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New York City will soon assemble an army of more than 1,000 disease detectives to trace the contacts of every person who tests positive for the coronavirus, an approach seen as crucial to quelling the outbreak and paving the way to reopen the hobbled city.

But that effort will not be led by the city’s renowned Health Department, which for decades has conducted contact tracing for diseases such as tuberculosis, H.I.V. and Ebola.

Instead, in a sharp departure from current and past practice, the city is going to put the vast new public health apparatus in the hands of its public hospital system, Health and Hospitals, city officials acknowledged on Thursday night after being approached by The New York Times about the changes.

The decision, which Mayor Bill de Blasio announced at his daily briefing on Friday, puzzled current and former health officials, who questioned the wisdom of changing what has worked before, especially during a pandemic.

The department conducted tracing of coronavirus cases at the start of the outbreak, and had been doing so again recently, in preparation for the city’s expansion.

Dr. Mary T. Bassett, a former city health commissioner under Mr. de Blasio and now the director of the FXB Center for Health and Human Rights at Harvard University, said that the three key elements of handling the coronavirus — testing, tracing and quarantine — have long been performed by the Health Department.

“These are core functions of public health agencies around the world, including New York City, which has decades of experience,” Dr. Bassett said in an email. “To confront Covid-19, it makes sense to build on this expertise.”

The move also angered some within the ranks of the Health Department, which has been at odds with Mr. de Blasio since the early days of the outbreak, when top officials in the department clashed with City Hall over the timing of school closures and public health messaging.

In announcing the move Friday morning, the mayor said, “Everything at Health and Hospitals has been based on speed and intensity and precision, and they’ve done an amazing job.”

Dr. Mitchell Katz, the head of Health and Hospitals, said that the move was made because his agency, a public benefit corporation rather than a city department, could more quickly hire contact tracers and enter into contracts for testing and other needed services.

The Morning: Make sense of the day’s news and ideas. David Leonhardt and Times journalists guide you through what’s happening — and why it matters.

His agency, he said, would also oversee the hotels for housing people who could not quarantine at home, as well as some coronavirus testing.

But he said the tracing itself would be supervised by a team of roughly 50 Health Department experts who will be detailed to Health and Hospitals to run the operation.

“So we’ll be able to have the best of both worlds,” he said. “We’ll be able to have the people who are used to supervising this kind of work still doing the supervision of it. But we’ll be able to hire as quickly as possible and get as many tests done” as possible.

The city’s public hospital system struggled with budgetary shortfalls even before the coronavirus outbreak sent thousands of sick and dying patients into its 11 hospitals. Their emergency rooms have been the front lines of the crisis, as doctors and nurses faced a wave of patients at facilities including Elmhurst Hospital in Queens and Woodhull Hospital in Brooklyn. Staff members died, even some who did not work directly with patients.

A spokeswoman for Mr. de Blasio declined to comment about any dissatisfaction expressed by Health Department officials and declined to make the city health commissioner, Dr. Oxiris Barbot, available to discuss the matter.

Contact tracing is one part of an accepted strategy for responding to disease outbreaks, and it is now at the center of a national discussion of how and when to begin allowing economic activity to restart. State officials included the number of contact tracers working in a region as one key metric for determining when businesses in that region would able to reopen.

Mr. de Blasio, in recent days, has talked repeatedly about the large new public health system that will be needed to contain the virus as the number of new cases recedes. Officials have said the efforts are essential to reviving the city’s economic life.

“You’re talking about tens of thousands of people who will be tested daily,” the mayor said in an interview on MSNBC on Sunday. “You’re talking about a tracing apparatus that, anyone who is tested positive, we ask them, we interview them: who they’ve been close with in recent days, who they’ve come in contact with.”

Before the shift, hiring was being conducted by the nonprofit Fund for Public Health in New York City in partnership with the Health Department; salaries for contact tracers started at $57,000 a year. Thousands had already applied.

Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, the former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and former New York City health commissioner, said that the city’s Health Department is the “greatest in the world” and that “if any health department can excel at contact tracing, New York City can.”

David Harvey, executive director of the National Coalition of STD Directors, a membership organization of health officials who deal with contact tracing to limit the spread of sexually transmitted diseases, said that while there was a “role for the health care delivery system to coordinate with the health department,” the group was concerned that the mayor’s decision might slow the implementation of contract tracing in the city.

“New York is leading the nation as the epicenter of this epidemic and it is a leader of the nation,” Mr. Harvey added. “We are worried about anything that delays the rollout of an expanded contact tracing program.”

The Health Department has the authority to issue quarantine orders in New York City. Such orders are likely to be an important part of the program, which would not only involve getting in touch with people who have had close contact with an infected person, but also getting those contacts to quarantine themselves, either at home or, possibly, in a city-funded hotel.

During the Ebola outbreak early in Mr. de Blasio’s first term, the Health Department created a telephone center to track potential contacts.

As the rapid spread of infections overwhelmed the system in late March and April, the city largely stopped doing contact tracing on confirmed Covid-19 cases. In recent weeks, health workers have been doing a few case investigations to prepare to ramp up the system, and they plan to restart tracing on a broad scale once hundreds of new people have been hired.

Yet the city has never tried to trace a disease as commonplace in the population as Covid-19, Dr. Shama Ahuja, who oversees tuberculosis contact tracing for the Health Department, said in an interview last week.

“It is like tracing the flu,” she said. “The level of this effort is unprecedented.”

Sharon Otterman contributed reporting.


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Макрон прокомментировал окончание боевых действий в Карабахе – РИА Новости, 13.11.2020

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Макрон прокомментировал окончание боевых действий в Карабахе – РИА Новости, 13.11.2020

МОСКВА, 13 ноя – РИА Новости. Президент Франции Эммануэль Макрон в телефонном разговоре с армянским премьер-министром Николом Пашиняном выразил удовлетворение окончанием боевых действий в Нагорном Карабахе и подтвердил готовность к поиску приемлемого для всех сторон решения по урегулированию конфликта, сообщил Елисейский дворец.
“Президент выразил удовлетворение окончанием боевых действий, он напомнил о своих дружеских чувствах к Армении и ее народу и своей готовности к выстраиванию политического решения, справедливого, долгосрочного и приемлемого для всех сторон в Нагорном Карабахе”, – говорится в коммюнике.
Макрон также сообщил Пашиняну о проведенной в четверг встрече для организации усилий по оказанию гуманитарной помощи со стороны Франции.

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NYC SHOOTINGS: Off-duty cop wounds armed carjacker in Brooklyn – AUDIO NEWS

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The scene of a police-involved shooting in Canarsie, Brooklyn on Nov. 11, 2020. | Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

NYC SHOOTINGS: Off-duty cop wounds armed carjacker in Brooklyn

A would-be carjacker armed with two guns picked the wrong victim to rob at gunpoint in Brooklyn early Wednesday morning, after he was shot by an off-duty police officer, police officials said.

Chief of Detectives Rodney Harrison held an impromptu press conference at 5:30 a.m. at the site of the shooting, at East 87th Street and Foster Avenue, across the street from the Brooklyn Terminal Market in Canarsie, Brooklyn.

That’s where the suspect approached the 28-year-old male officer in his white Mercedes Benz and knocked on the window with a firearm, according to Harrison.

“Our member of the service pulled his vehicle away from the suspect and exited the car,” Harrison said.  “At this time the suspect fired at least one round, barely missing the officer. The off-duty officer returned fire and struck the suspect in the chest.”

Harrison said the suspect, whose identity was withheld, was taken to Brookdale Hospital in serious condition. Two guns and a knife were recovered at the scene, Harrison said as a detective held up photos of the weapons.

The identity of the officer or his command has not yet been revealed, but officials say the shooting was “justified.” He was not injured in the exchange of gunfire.

Other shooting incidents

Only one other shooting occurred overnight after the previous night saw eight people shot, including one woman killed in a domestic shooting.

The one other shooting occurred at 1:30 a.m. where a 29-year-old man was shot in the back after a dispute in front of 250 West 131st Street in Harlem.

Officers from the 32nd Precinct said the victim was taken to Harlem Hospital in stable condition, but he has been yet “uncooperative with investigators.”

Detectives make shooting arrests

Meanwhile, a 33-year-old Brooklyn man is under arrest for the Oct. 28 shooting death of a 34-year-old man in East New York.

Detectives from the 73rd Precinct and PSA3 arrested Umajestice McKensie, 33, of Wortman Avenue in connection with the murder of Marvin Carroway, 34, of Sutter Avenue. McKensie is also being charged with possession of a loaded firearm.

Officials say that McKensie shot Carroway inside the lobby of 335 Sutter Avenue, the Hughes Houses, a NYCHA development in Brownsville, Brooklyn. The motive for the shooting was not immediately known, but at the time, police believed the shooting to be gang related.

In an unrelated arrest, detectives from the 73rd Precinct arrested a 49-year-old Brooklyn man for the shooting death of his 45-year-old girlfriend in front of her home in Brownsville early Tuesday morning.

Detectives are charging Leroy Worrell, 49, of New Lots Avenue, with the shooting death of Kimberly Grant, 45, 0f Chester Street.

Police say Worrell shot Grant in the chest and groin in front of her home early Tuesday morning after an argument in the street. Police were on the seen in seconds and were able to arrest Worrell nearby after he allegedly tossed the murder weapon under a car on Livonia Avenue near Rockaway Avenue.

Grant later died at Brookdale Hospital from her wounds. Worrell is being charged with murder and possession of  a firearm.

Police seek information

The NYPD released video of a man sought in connection with a non-fatal shooting in East Flatbush on Oct. 23.

Detectives from the 67th Precinct say that at 11:20 p.m. a 34-year-old man was shot in the hand after a parking dispute at the intersection of Clarendon Road and Kings Highway in East Flatbush.

The assailant parked and exited a black Audi Q5, pulled a handgun and shot the victim, a 34-year-old male who was a passenger in a four-door sedan. The victim was in stable condition  SUNY Downstate Medical Center.

A video of the unidentified assailant shows him inside of a restaurant located at 5814 Clarendon Road, shortly before the incident.

In the second incident, police are seeking the identity of a gunman who shot and killed a 28-year-old man in Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn on Nov. 8.

Investigators from the 77th Precinct say at 7:23 p.m. that night, the victim was shot in the torso and leg at the corner of Ralph Avenue and Lincoln Place. Police found the victim lying in front of 578 Ralph Avenue and he was rushed to Brookdale Hospital, but could not be saved.

The victim was identified as Eryk Ford, 28, of Saint John’s Place.

Police provided a video of the alleged assailant near the shooting scene.

Anyone with information in regard to this incident or any of the other shootings is asked to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). You can also submit tips online … 


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The Brooklyn Bridge: Brooklyn Paper: City waiting on reopening schools in COVID-19 red zones, mayor says | Brooklyn Classifieds – bklynclassifieds.com

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Schools located in recently established red or orange COVID cluster zones in Brooklyn and Queens might have to wait until the end of the week before they can reopen, Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Monday. 

On Friday, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced that select schools in red and orange zones could reopen if they abide by a set of testing protocols for all returning students and staffers. Schools in the two state-designated zones have been shut down for weeks as officials try to knock down positive coronavirus cases in neighborhoods experiencing upticks of the virus. 

Students and staffers must test negative for the virus before setting foot back in a school. Once a school reopens, administrators must randomly test 25 percent of all students and staff every week and isolate those that test positive. 

On Monday, de Blasio said that the city is waiting on upcoming changes to Brooklyn and Queens cluster zone designations before making any plans on how to handle school reopenings. Zone changes are expected to come from the state later this week, he added. 

Restrictions have mostly been lifted in Queens now that all of the borough’s red and orange zones have reached low enough positivity rates to become yellow zones. Private and parochial schools in red and orange zones are allowed to reopen if they follow the state’s testing guidelines. But public schools in Brooklyn’s red zone which includes the neighborhoods of Borough Park and Midwood are still subject to restrictions.

In addition, 21 out of the city’s 1,600 public schools have closed for a two-week period due to multiple cases of the virus. 

“The first question is what is going to happen with the red zones in Brooklyn,” de Blasio said. “We are watching the numbers very carefully, the state is going to make that decision but by the numbers, I think it’s fair to say that you could well see some changes to those red zones by the course of this week.” 

The COVID positivity rate in the Brooklyn red zone was 5.07 percent on Sunday, Nov. 1, according to state data released Sunday. City Hall reported that the number of new cases of the virus across the five boroughs based on a seven-day average was 593, well above the city’s threshold of 550 for the third consecutive day in a row. 

City officials reported that the number of New Yorkers testing positive for the virus reached 2.08 percent and that the city’s overall positivity rate passed on a seven-day average is 1.81 percent. Officials also said on Monday that 80 people were admitted to a hospital with suspected COVID-19. 

“We are assessing the rules, we are assessing that timeline and then we are going to make a decision in the next couple of days,” de Blasio added.

This story first appeared on AMNY.com.

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The post Brooklyn Paper: City waiting on reopening schools in COVID-19 red zones, mayor says first appeared on The Brooklyn Bridge.

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