Tag Archives: NYPD

NYPD plans to use GPS bottles to combat pill bandits

Police in New York City plan to combat the theft of painkillers and other highly addictive prescription medicines by asking pharmacies around the city to hide fake pill bottles fitted with GPS devices amid the legitimate supplies on their shelves.

The New York Police Department believes the so-called “bait bottles” could help investigators track stolen drugs and locate suspects.

Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly is expected to unveil the plan Tuesday at a La Quinta, Calif., conference on health issues hosted by former President Bill Clinton‘s foundation.

In prepared remarks provided in advance of his appearance, Kelly says the initiative was prompted by a spate of high-profile crimes associated with the thriving black market for prescription drugs, including the slaying of four people on Long Island during a pharmacy holdup in 2011. He also cites the case of a retired NYPD officer who, after retiring with an injury and getting hooked on painkillers, began robbing drug stores at gunpoint.

Prescription drug abuse “can serve as a gateway to criminal activities, especially among young people,” the commissioner says. “When pills become too expensive, addicts are known to resort to cheaper drugs such as heroin and cocaine. They turn to crime to support their habit.”

The NYPD has begun creating a database of the roughly 6,000 pharmacies in the New York City area with plans to have officers visit them and recommend security measures like better alarm systems and lighting of storage areas. Kelly says it also will ask them to stock the GPS bottles containing fake oxycodone.

“In the event of a robbery or theft, we’ll be able to track the bottle, which may lead us to stash locations across the city,” he says.

There have been similar attempts to track prescription drugs on a limited basis but the NUYPD claims this would be the first widespread effort.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

NYPD looks to GPS bottles to combat pill bandits

The New York Police Department wants pharmacies in and around the city to fight prescription drug thefts by stocking pill bottles fitted with GPS tracking chips.

Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly is expected to unveil the project Tuesday at a California conference on health issues hosted by former President Bill Clinton‘s foundation.

In prepared remarks provided in advance of his appearance, Kelly says the NYPD is concerned about a growing potential for crimes related to the black market for painkillers and other highly addictive prescription drugs.

He says the NYPD is proposing to distribute so-called GPS bottles for pharmacists to hide on their shelves with legitimate supplies. That way, if there’s a robbery or burglary, police would be able to track the loot.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

NYPD: Man in custody in fatal Manhattan fire

A man is in custody on suspicion of intentionally starting a fatal five-alarm fire Thursday in a New York City apartment building as part of a domestic dispute with his child’s mother, authorities said.

Charges are pending against the unidentified 45-year-old suspect, who lived in the now fire-gutted five-story building at 41 Spring St. in the fashionable Soho district of Manhattan, according to police spokesman Paul Browne.

Witnesses saw the suspect start the fire in a second floor hallway at about 6:40 p.m. after a domestic dispute with the woman, Browne said. He said the woman and the child are accounted for.

One person was killed in the fire. Browne said the unidentified victim was apparently not part of the dispute and was found on the third floor fire escape burned beyond recognition.

An off-duty firefighter from Los Angeles, who was dining in the area, spotted the flames and ran over to the building where he was confronted by the suspect who wouldn’t let him into the building, Browne said.

The suspect also fought with a police officer and New York City firefighters who were trying to enter the building. The suspect was treated at a hospital for bruises and a police officer was treated for a broken hand, Browne said.

About 200 firefighters responded to the blaze, which quickly spread to the upper floors and through the roof, according to FDNY Chief of Operations James Esposito.

Esposito said firefighters had to use the rear fire escape and portable ladders because the heavy fire had burned away the stairways.

“We had an extraordinary amount of fire,” said Esposito. “The fire encompassed all the walls and all the floors.”

Esposito said the fire completely gutted the inside of the building and at least nine people, including seven firefighters, suffered minor injuries. It was declared under control at 9:20 p.m.

“It’s essentially destroyed and it’s not going to be livable for quite some time,” Esposito said of the building.

A neighbor who lives two buildings down from the fire, Juliet Gentile, 35, said she was home and smelled smoke. She said she went up to her roof and saw the flames.

“As soon as I saw that I got to get out of here,” said Gentile. “It was coming right out. The whole thing was in flames.”

The American Red Cross said their disasters responders were at the scene to provide emergency housing, blankets, mental health support and other forms of assistance.

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Associated Press writers Tom McElroy and Tom Hays contributed to this report.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Judge: NYPD must halt suspicion-less Bronx stops

A federal judge has ordered New York City police to stop making trespass stops outside certain privately owned buildings in the Bronx without reasonable suspicion.

Manhattan Judge Shira Scheindlin made the ruling Tuesday as an interim order before a trial on a lawsuit filed against the city.

The judge says it is not enough for a police officer to have a non-specific suspicion or hunch about a person to perform a stop and frisk.

The case is one of three lawsuits challenging the police department’s stop and frisk practices.

The case Scheindlin ruled on is the narrowest of the three. It deals with legal issues raised after the city first adopted a stop and frisk law in 1964.

The city did not immediately comment.

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Staten Island education committee votes to arm school guards

A Staten Island education committee voted last night to demand that the city’s schools be guarded by gun-toting lawmen, in a desperate bid to beef up security in the wake of the Newtown, Conn., massacre.

The Communication Education Council for District 31 last night approved the high-caliber proposal with a vote of 9-1.

The council called for the Department of Education to hire 300 to 500 retired NYPD cops to rove 1,750 city schools in all boroughs and install buzzer-entry systems with video and “panic buttons” at main entrances.

The vote doesn’t have any binding effect on the DOE — which has made it clear that it does not want armed guards in schools. But the vote showed the amount of support the idea of armed guards — put forth last month by NRA boss Wayne LaPierre — has in some parts of the Big Apple.

“I just want my daughters to be safe in school,” said Aaron Bogad, 44, whose three daughters attend PS 5. “If the kids will be safer, retired officers with guns might be the answer. Would I be 100 percent against it? If it kept my kids safe . . . no.”

Sal Farino, 47, believes guns should be in the classroom — and not just in the hands of cops, but of teachers.

“I think all the teachers should have guns,” he sad. “If crazy people knew teachers had guns, they would think twice about their actions.

“And to have trained officers with guns would be awesome. They should wear them in plain view. This way, the kids feel safe.”

Click for more from the New York Post.

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Judge orders NYPD to stop making suspicion-less trespass stops in Bronx

A federal judge has ordered the New York City Police Department to stop making trespass stops outside certain privately owned Bronx buildings without reasonable suspicion.

Manhattan Judge Shira Scheindlin made the ruling Tuesday as an interim order prior to a trial on a lawsuit filed against the city.

The judge said it is not enough for a police officer to have a non-specific suspicion or hunch about a person to perform a stop and frisk.

The case is one of three lawsuits challenging the police department’s stop and frisk practices.

The case Scheindlin ruled on is the narrowest of the three. It deals with legal issues raised after the city first adopted a stop and frisk law in 1964.

The city did not immediately comment.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Inmates using newspaper's gun owner map to threaten guards, sheriff says

Law enforcement officials from a New York region where a local paper published a map identifying gun owners say prisoners are using the information to intimidate guards.

Rockland County Sheriff Louis Falco, who spoke at a news conference flanked by other county officials, said the Journal News‘ decision to post an online map of names and addresses of handgun owners Dec. 23 has put law enforcement officers in danger.

“They have inmates coming up to them and telling them exactly where they live. That’s not acceptable to me,” Falco said, according to Newsday.

Robert Riley, an officer with the White Plains Police Department and president of its Patrolman’s Benevolent Association, agreed.

“You have guys who work in New York City who live up here. Now their names and addresses are out there, too,” he said adding that there are 8,000 active and retired NYPD officers currently living in Rockland County.

Local lawmakers also say that they intend to introduce legislation that prevents information about legal gun owners from being released to the public.

The newspaper published the online map last month alongside an article titled, “The gun owner next door: What you don’t know about the weapons in your neighborhood.” The map included the names and addresses of pistol permit holders in Westchester and Rockland counties obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request.

While the paper ostensibly sought to make a point about gun proliferation in the wake of the school shooting in Newtown, Conn., the effort may have backfired. A blogger reacted with a map showing where key editorial staffers live, and some outraged groups have called for a boycott of parent company Gannett’s national advertisers. Ironically, the newspaper has now stationed armed guards outside at least one of its offices.

Click here for more from Newsday

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Feds charge New Jersey man for offering $5G to 'cannibal cop' to abduct woman

The feds charged a New Jersey man today with offering $5,000 to NYPD “cannibal cop” Gilberto Valle to kidnap and deliver a woman so he could rape and kill her.

Michael Vanhise, 22, of Trenton, NJ, admitted sending emails in which he and Valle discussed the abduction and Vanhise tried to knock down the price after Valle sent him a photo of the intended victim, court papers allege.

A Manhattan federal court complaint includes the following exchange between the two, which allegedly took place on Feb. 28.

Vanhise: “I definitely want her and how much again, I’m sorry to ask but I don’t remember.”

Valle: “$5,000 and she is all yours.”

Vanhise: “Could we do 4?”

Valle: “I am putting my neck on the line here. If something goes wrong some somehow, I am in deep s–t. $5,000 and you need to make sure that she is not found. She will definitely make the news.”

Vanhise also admitted sending other emails to two other, unidentified people, “about kidnapping, raping and murdering women and children,” according to the complaint.

Click for more from the New York Post.

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Times Square packed with security for New Year's

When revelers pack Times Square for the annual New Year‘s eve celebration on Monday night, police will observe a tradition of their own: giving them lots of company.

Each year, the New York Police Department assigns thousands of extra patrols to festivities — in ways seen and unseen — to control the crowd and watch for any signs of trouble. Hundreds of thousands of people from all over the world are expected to pack into the bow-tie stretch of streets in Midtown Manhattan to see the crystal ball drop and ring in 2013.

“We think it’s the safest place in the world on New Year‘s Eve,” Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly told The Associated Press ahead of the holiday.

Security in Times Square has become an obsession for the NYPD in the post-9/11 world, especially since the botched attempted car bombing there in the summer of 2010. More recently, details emerged in another case in Florida saying that one suspect considered Times Square as a potential target.

Times Square is an iconic location that draws a significant number of people every day,” Kelly said. “New Year‘s Eve is the apex of that, so we have to plan accordingly.”

Kelly stressed that there are no specific terror threats related to a celebration televised across the globe. But believing that the so-called “Crossroads of the World” is always in the crosshairs of would-be terrorists, the nation’s largest police department has turned securing the event into a science.

Hotels are a particular concern. The department has worked closely with managers, urging them to guard against anyone who might seek to check into a guest room and use it to launch a sniper or other type of attack.

“We ask them to monitor people coming into the hotels very closely,” Kelly said.

In terms of crowd control, police noticed last year that revelers starting flocking to Times Square earlier in the day to hear rehearsals of performers scheduled for various telecasts.

“At one o’clock in the afternoon, there was a significant crowd,” Kelly said. “It was really packed with people.”

So this year, the department will adjust by posting more officers on the streets before nightfall, the commissioner said.

Along with the army of additional uniformed officers, police will use barriers to prevent overcrowding and for checkpoints to inspect vehicles, enforce a ban on alcohol and check handbags. Visitors will see bomb-sniffing dogs and heavily armed counter-terrorism teams. Rooftop patrols and NYPD helicopters will keep an eye on the crowd as well.

Other plainclothes officers are assigned to blend into the crowd. Many officers will be wearing palm-size radiation detectors designed to give off a signal if they detect evidence of a dirty bomb, an explosive intended to spread panic by creating a radioactive cloud.

The bomb squad and another unit specializing in chemical and biological threats will sweep hotels, theaters, construction sites and parking garages. They also will patrol the sprawling Times Square subway station.

The NYPD also will rely on a network of thousands of closed-circuit security cameras carpeting the roughly 1.7 square miles south of Canal Street, the subway system and parts of Midtown Manhattan.

Another annual practice: Sealing manhole covers and removing mailboxes to prevent anyone from using them to conceal an explosive or other device.

In 2010, Faisal Shahzad left a Nissan Pathfinder outfitted with a crude, homemade propane-and-gasoline bomb on a block teeming with tourists. The explosive malfunctioned, but the near-miss spread a wave of fear across the city. Authorities say Shahzad was backed by the Pakistani Taliban,

Shahzad was arrested and, after a guilty plea, sentenced to life in prison. But he warned, “Brace yourselves, because the war with Muslims has just begun.”

Source: Fox US News

Woman in custody in NYC subway shoving death

A woman is in custody in the death of a man who was shoved in front of a speeding subway train, and she “made statements implicating herself,” New York City police said Saturday.

Detectives questioned her but aren’t releasing the 31-year-old suspect’s name until she is formally charged, NYPD spokesman Paul Browne said in a brief statement. Among other things, investigators were arranging for witnesses to positively identify the woman in custody as the attacker, police said.

Sunando Sen, a 46-year-old Queens resident who was born in India and ran a printing shop, died Thursday night when a woman who had been muttering to herself on a train platform in Queens suddenly knocked him on the tracks as a train entered the station.

The woman fled after the attack. Police released security camera video showing her running from the station.

The attack was the second time this month that someone was pushed to their death in a New York City subway station. A homeless man was arrested in early December and accused of shoving a man in front of a train in Times Square. He is awaiting trial, and claimed he acted in self-defense.

Further details on how police managed to identify the suspect in Sen’s death were not immediately available.

Investigators had been following up on tips from people who had seen the security video and were checking homeless shelters and psychiatric units in an attempt to identify the woman.

It was unclear whether she had any connection to Sen. Witnesses told police the two hadn’t interacted on the platform as they both waited for the train.

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Information from: New York Post, http://www.nypost.com

Source: Fox US News

LA victim in execution-style NYC murder reportedly involved in shipping drugs

The victim in the execution-style murder in midtown Manhattan was involved in shipping drugs, sources tell The New York Post.

Brandon Woodard, 31, was allegedly summoned to the city by his associates after multiple packages failed to arrive, sources tell the New York Post.

New York News | NYC Breaking News

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said Thursday police hadn’t determined why Woodard was targeted, and police would not confirm to FoxNews.com whether a suspect had been identified.

Authorities had questioned and released a man in their custody related to the murder. Authorities reportedly believe he is a friend of the gunman.

The gun used to kill Woodard was also used in a Queens shooting in 2009, police are investigating whether there is a link between the two shootings.

Police are also examining the three phones Woodard was carrying with him.

In a photo released by the NYPD, Woodard is seen staring at a phone, as the gunman can be seen reaching into his jacket behind an unsuspecting Woodard.

Woodard reportedly walked past his killer’s getaway car seconds before his murder, and it is believed someone in the car pointed Woodard out to his murderer.

Woodard then received either a text message or a phone call and headed back toward the car, sources tell the New York Post.

On Wednesday, police located the getaway car, and believe a woman may have rented the car.

Woodard, who is the father of a 4-year-old girl and a law school student, was known as a promoter. Friends have said he was known to live a “batman-like” lifestyle.

Sandra Wellington, Woodard’s mother, told reporters, “I’m suffering right now.”

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The Associated Press contributed to this report.

NYPD releases security photo in shooting of LA man

A security camera photo shows a man pulling a weapon from his pocket moments before police say he shot a Los Angeles man in midtown Manhattan.

The NYPD released the photo Tuesday amid a manhunt for the unidentified suspect in the execution-style slaying.

The photo shows the gunman walking up behind Brandon Lincoln Woodard on Monday before shooting him in the head. The shooter then slipped into a waiting Lincoln sedan and fled.

The killing occurred on West 58th Street near the Time Warner Center.

Police said the 31-year-old Woodward had prior arrests in Los Angeles but had no other details about his background.

His family said he graduated from Loyola Marymount University in 2003 and had attended Whittier Law School in California.
Source: Fox US News

Veteran NYPD officer convicted of manslaughter

A New York City police officer has been convicted of manslaughter in the death of a pedestrian three years ago.

Detective Kevin Spellman struck and killed 66-year-old Drana Nikac on Oct. 30, 2009 while driving in the Bronx.

He faces 15 years in prison when he’s sentenced on Feb. 15. He recently retired from the NYPD after 22 years on the force.

During the trial, the jury heard testimony that Spellman’s blood alcohol level was nearly three times the legal limit.

His lawyer said the manslaughter charge didn’t require the jury to find him guilty of DWI.
Source: Fox US News

New York man admits to murdering 3 women, including 2 in 1993

A New York man with a long history of violence against women has admitted to three murders, including two nearly 20 years ago, authorities said.

The New York Post reports that Lucius Crawford, 60, appeared Wednesday in Mount Vernon City Court and was ordered held without bail on a second-degree murder charge for killing a woman cops found stabbed to death in his home.

Crawford will also be charged separately with killing two women in 1993, one in the Bronx and the other in Yonkers, N.Y.

NYPD and Yonkers detectives found Crawford’s latest victim after visiting his basement apartment Tuesday to ask about the cold killings. They found the unidentified 41-year-old woman dead of nine stab wounds to her chest, police said. The woman had been seen alive earlier in the day, sources told the newspaper.

Police said Tuesday’s killing was the latest in Crawford’s 40-year history of violence against women, which began in 1973 with a series of stabbings in his hometown of Charleston, S.C. He was paroled from Sing Sing Prison in 2008 after serving 13 years for the attempted murder of a Yonkers woman.

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