Tag Archives: brownsville

To Serve & Terrorize: Notorious NYPD Sergeant Is Sued AGAIN For Catastrophic Raid

Source: Spencer Platt / Getty One New York Resident Gives A Chilling Account Another moment of police terror reportedly went down in New York last year, and now a resident of the city is taking action. According to New York Daily News , a Brooklyn cop, who’s been accused of years of civil rights violations and false arrests, is once again being sued for excessive conduct. Evelyn Gonzalez, 51, who works as a security guard is accusing Sgt. David (Bellethead) Grieco of carrying out an early-morning raid at her Brownsville apartment, then arresting her and a family friend Tray Stroman, 27, on trumped-up charges that were dropped before they even got a chance to appear before a judge. Gozalez has filed a notice of claim and according to their lawyer, if a settlement is not agreed upon, they will file a lawsuit in state court alleging wrongful arrest. The whole incident went down shortly after 7 a.m. on April 13, 2018 when Gonzalez was asleep in her room and Stroman, who works in a barbershop, was resting on the couch. Emergency Service cops tried to bust through the front door so one of Gonzalez’s four children, Joseph Cordova, 24, left from his bed to open it. That’s when police rushed in with Grieco and other officers having their guns drawn, according to Gonzalez and Stroman. Neither Gonzalez nor Storman have ever been arrested, however Cordova has been arrested ten times, including two cases that are still pending for possession of a knife and for possession of drugs. He was convicted in 2014 for weapons possession, for which he received five years probation. Cordova, who isn’t apart of the lawsuit, and his mother believe the raid was part of an ongoing attempt to harass Cordova, considering that past charges against him didn’t stick. The cops allegedly swept through the apartment, flipped a living room table, and broke two televisions AND a humidifier that Gonzalez needs for her asthma. The cops also allegedly rampaged through the kitchen, dumping coffee and oatmeal on the floor. “They even ate my bananas,” Gonzalez said. Stroman, who posts rap videos online, went on to say the cops plugged their phones into a speaker and listened to his music. “I’m like, ‘Is this a warrant for music?” Stroman said. “I was lost.” It’s not clear if the cops even had a warrant to search the apartment. Gonzalez said when she asked, the cop tried to use a restaurant flyer to pass as a warrant. Gonzalez and Stroman said Grieco continually asked about guns and drugs, indicating the cops were tipped off. However, no guns or narcotics were found. The police only focused on one marijuana joint in the living room and two in a bedroom. Cordova admitted that he does smoke marijuana. The nightmare continued after the raid when Gonzalez said that she, Cordova and Stroman were handcuffed and taken into custody. Gonzalez said she and Stroman spent around 18 hours in custody and she said the police didn’t even give her access to her medicine. When they finally got out, The Brooklyn District Attorney’s office declined to prosecute them. Cordova was charged with marijuana possession and possession of a forged credit card, but the case was adjourned and dismissed soon after. Gonzalez says when she got home, $800 was missing from a jacket in her closet – money she said she was saving for her two granddaughters. On top of all this, Gonzalez’s Brownsville apartment is covered by the 73rd Precinct, but they were taken to the 67th Precinct where Grieco is assigned. No one has yet to explain why Grieco was carrying out a raid in a precinct he wasn’t even assigned to, although investigations do often cross precinct lines. Grieco, 48, has a long history of being an ain’t sh** officer, including searching two homes without a warrant and being involved in a 2013 75th Precinct investigation. The anti-crime unit at the time was accused of illegal apartment searches and the theft of jewelry and thousands of dollars, according to court papers, Internal Affair docs and police sources. Over the years, Grieco has been the defendant in 29 lawsuits. But yet… This man is still on the force. Gonzalez’s and Stroman’s lawyer Joel Berger said, “For this cowboy to still be on the force is outrageous. He should have been terminated years ago. The fact that he hasn’t been is really indicative of the travesty the NYPD discipline system is.” Grieco is currently a sergeant who was one of NYPD’s top overtime earners in 2017. His $73,000 of extra pay upped his salary to $190,000 and last year he made $164,700. Out of the 29 lawsuits against Grieco, 16 of them were settled, costing the city more than half-million dollars.

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To Serve & Terrorize: Notorious NYPD Sergeant Is Sued AGAIN For Catastrophic Raid

Ubisoft Shares More Details About ‘The Division 2’ Beta, Will Feature Endgame Content

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Source: Ubisoft/The Division 2 If you’re already excited about the upcoming The Division 2 beta these latest details as to what to expect when it kicks off next month should get you even more geeked. Ubisoft revealed the release date for the beta as well as a new trailer for The Division 2 about two weeks ago. Today (Jan. 30), we learn precisely what we will get hands-on with when the private preview of the game goes live. Those who pre-ordered the game or registered to participate will get to experience a relatively sizeable amount of the game including endgame content surprisingly. Private beta preload begins Feb 6 at 1am PT and when it officially starts Feb 7 at 1am PT players will be able to explore a”transformed” Washington D.C. after establishing a base in the White House. Agents can unlock skills, weapons and upgrade to a level cap of seven while venturing into the post-disease ravaged settings you will also experience: Two main missions, available in Story, Normal and Hard Mode Five side missions and additional activities in the open world Unique PvPvE gameplay in one of the three new Dark Zones Organized PvP gameplay in one Conflict mode, Skirmish As mentioned above we will also be getting our first glimpse of the new endgame content as well which will feature one Invaded Mission and three endgame specializations. Ubisoft points out you will not be able to access the content until Feb 8am PT. Tom Clancy’s The Division 2 hits shelves worldwide on March 15, 2019, on Xbox One, PlayStation 4 , and Windows PC. You can get a glimpse of what the Beta that runs from Feb 7-10 will have to offer in the trailer below. — Photo: Ubisoft/ The Division 2

Ubisoft Shares More Details About ‘The Division 2’ Beta, Will Feature Endgame Content

Tekashi 6ix9ine Dropped Dime In Chief Keef Shooting Case, Allegedly

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Source: PYMCA / Getty Word is Tekashi 6ix9ine is already dropping dime on his former associates. A few members of the Brownsville rapper’s entourage have been charged with shooting at Chief Keef.  According to TMZ ,  Kintea McKenzie ,  Anthony Ellison  and  Denard Butler  have indicted in crimes that all share a connection to Tekashi69. Reportedly, McKenzie, who also goes by Kooda B, was indicted soon after Tekashi spoke to investigators, and he was tagged as the shooter in the incident that occurred in Times Square last June. No one was injured, but afterwards footage was revealed of Tekashi essentially putting a $30K bounty on Chief Keef’s cousin, Tadoe . However, according to the authorities, McKenzie was paid $10K to shoot Sosa, but fortunately for the Chicago rapper he missed. McKenzie is still on the lam. Currently, Ellison is in custody for allegedly kidnapping Tekashi (seriously, back in July 2018 ) while Butler got picked up by ATF just today (Jan. 30). Tekashi has been in the clink since November and is facing federal racketeering charges. Considering the Brownsville rapper was an admitted troll and truly not ’bout that life, expect him to keep singing. Otherwise, he’s looking at 32 years to life in prison . — Photo: Getty

Tekashi 6ix9ine Dropped Dime In Chief Keef Shooting Case, Allegedly

M.O.P Talk New Album “Sparta”, Identity Theft And Twitter [EXCLUSIVE]

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Billy Danze and Lil’ Fame , better known as the Mash Out Posse, M.O.P. are back with their ninth album Sparta . Their latest collection is produced entirely by the Snowgoons and is filled with that signature fight music we’ve come to expect from Brownsville’s finest. Take a Tour of Brooklyn In the first part of their interview with TheUrbandaily MOP talk about Sparta , having their identities stolen online and why they are the realest dudes on #Blacktwitter. On the new track “No Mercy” Fame spits, “We don’t social network f*ck a twitter,” but Danze is on there “all day.”  Follow them… BILLY DANZE (@BILLDANZEMOP) FAME MOP (@FAMEMOP) on Twitter

M.O.P Talk New Album “Sparta”, Identity Theft And Twitter [EXCLUSIVE]

Jesus Take The Wheel: 2 Killed, 15 Wounded Overnight In Three New York City Borroughs

New York’s gotta chill, man! Bullets flew across New York City late Saturday and early Sunday, as vicious gunfire left two men dead and 15 people injured in Brooklyn, Queens and Harlem. Seven separate shootings bloodied Brooklyn alone, including fatal fights in Brownsville and East New York, where a 22-year-old Queens father died. Anthony McRae, 22, was gunned down about 4:45 a.m. Sunday in front of the Hamzah Deli and Grocery on Rockaway Ave., police said. He was shot at least four times and cops are reviewing deli surveillance tapes, but do not have any suspects in custody yet. Around midnight, three young teens were also shot in Marine Park, Brooklyn during a spat over a 16-year-old’s bike. Three people were injured, one critically. Less than half an hour later, a shooting at a Prospect-Lefferts Gardens house party left five people wounded. Two men who were denied entrance to the gathering, unloaded about 12:15 a.m. into the crowd of revelers gathered outside 349 Fenimore Street, an eye witness said. In Brownsville, a 45-year-old man was shot multiple times and died near his home late Saturday night. Jerry Armstrong, 45, was found with several gun shot wounds on 95th Street about 11 p.m. Saturday. Two additional shootings left two men wounded in Brooklyn, as did a pair of shootings in Queens. One person was also wounded in Harlem. SMDH. Time for another Hip-Hop campaign against violence. Source

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Jesus Take The Wheel: 2 Killed, 15 Wounded Overnight In Three New York City Borroughs

Brownsville, Texas Bans Plastic Bags

photo via flickr My home state of California couldn’t do it, but border town Brownsville, TX, has taken action and banned plastic bags. The ban goes into effect January 5. Shoppers who forget their reusable bags can buy plastic bags for an extra buck. Pharmacies, hardware stores and dry cleaners are exempt. Plastic bags are a petroleum product and can take over 1,000 years to biodegrade. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Brownsville, Texas Bans Plastic Bags

A Frisking ‘Frenzy’ in NYC, But Only New York Times Reporters Seem to Care

Reporters Ray Rivera, Al Baker, and Janet Roberts combined on a front-page Monday New York Times story questioning the frequency of “stop-and-frisk” policing by the NYPD in high-crime sections of the Brownsville neighborhood in Brooklyn: ” A Few Blocks, 4 Years, 52,000 Police Stops .” The text box: “Frisk Tactic Draws Questions Where It Is Used Most.” It’s a quasi-followup to an overheated May 13 front-page Times story which focused more on the racial aspect of frisking: ” City Minorities More Likely To Be Frisked — Increase in Police Stops Fuels Intense Debate .” The shoe leather analysis of that story was performed by the hard-left Center for Constitutional Rights, which the Times identified only as “a nonprofit civil and human rights organization.” Monday’s story also relied on research from the unlabeled leftists of CCR. Yet the paper’s reporters seem more worried about the frisking “frenzy” than do the residents of the crime-ridden neighborhoods that were the alleged victims of excessive stops and searches. When night falls, police officers blanket some eight odd blocks of Brownsville, Brooklyn…The officers stop people they think might be carrying guns; they stop and question people who merely enter the public housing project buildings without a key; they ask for identification from, and run warrant checks on, young people halted for riding bicycles on the sidewalk. One night, 20 officers surrounded a man outside the Brownsville Houses after he would not let an officer smell the contents of his orange juice container. Between January 2006 and March 2010, the police made nearly 52,000 stops on these blocks and in these buildings, according to a New York Times analysis of data provided by the Police Department and two organizations, the Center for Constitutional Rights and the New York Civil Liberties Union. In each of those encounters, officers logged the names of those stopped — whether they were arrested or not — into a police database that the police say is valuable in helping solve future crimes. These encounters amounted to nearly one stop a year for every one of the 14,000 residents of these blocks. In some instances, people were stopped because the police said they fit the description of a suspect. But the data show that fewer than 9 percent of stops were made based on “fit description.” Far more — nearly 26,000 times — the police listed either “furtive movement,” a catch-all category that critics say can mean anything, or “other” as the only reason for the stop. Many of the stops, the data show, were driven by the police’s ability to enforce seemingly minor violations of rules governing who can come and go in the city’s public housing. …. There are, to be sure, plenty of reasons for the police to be out in force in this section of Brooklyn, and plenty of reasons for residents to want them there. Murders, shootings and drug dealing have historically made this one of the worst crime corridors in the city. The Times issues one sentence perilously similar to its infamously naive headline from 1997, which saw a paradox where there was none: ” Crime Keeps on Falling, But Prisons Keep on Filling .” As if the two trends are unrelated. But now, in an era of lower crime rates, both in this part of Brooklyn and across the city, questions are swirling over what is emerging as a central tool in the crime fight, one intended to give officers the power to engage anyone they reasonably suspect has committed a crime or is about to. Couldn’t one explanation for the “era of lower crime rates” be more assertive police work like stop-and-frisk? Certainly, some say that the New York Police Department has so far failed to convincingly link the explosion in the numbers of stops with crime suppression. And some, from academics to the residents of these streets in Brooklyn, believe the stops could have a corrosive effect, alienating young and old alike in a community that has long had a tenuous relationship with the police. …. To many residents here, care is exactly what is not being used. To them, the flood of young officers who roam the community each day are not equipped to make the subtle judgments required to tell one young man in low-hanging jeans concealing a weapon from another young man wearing similar clothes on his way to school. …. The data show the initiative is conducted aggressively, sometimes in what can seem like a frenzy. During one month — January 2007 — the police executed an average of 61 stops a day. The high number of stops in this part of Brooklyn can be explained in part by the fact that police can use violations of city Housing Authority rules to justify stops. For instance, the Housing Authority, which oversees public housing developments, forbids people from being in their buildings unless they live there or are visiting someone. …. Many residents say they philosophically embrace the police presence. They say they know too well how the violence around them — the drugs and gangs — can swallow up young people. Yet the day-to-day interactions with officers can seem so arbitrary that many residents say they often come away from encounters with officers feeling violated, degraded and resentful. Near the very end the Times allowed this detail, which put an additional damper on the significance of its prominent front-page journalism: The Times, for this article, interviewed 12 current or former officers who had worked in this part of Brooklyn in the last five years, and all defended the necessity of the stop-and-frisks.

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A Frisking ‘Frenzy’ in NYC, But Only New York Times Reporters Seem to Care

The News As IT Happens » Blog Archive » lakers riot 2010 june 17

The Los Angeles Lakers ‘ victory against the Boston Celtics in the NBA final brought boisterous celebrations across Los Angeles — mostly peaceful but with some tense moments. Crowds smashed windows at Pico Boulevard … NBA Finals: Lakers edge Celtics in Game 7 , win 16th title – Brownsville Herald. LOS ANGELES (AP) — Purple and gold confetti raining down upon him, Kobe Bryant hopped up on the scorer’s table, shook his fists and extended five fingers. When he hopped down, …

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The News As IT Happens » Blog Archive » lakers riot 2010 june 17