MICHAEL O. ALLEN

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Drowned Girl’s Dad Asks, Why? By MICHAEL O. ALLEN, Daily News Staff Writer

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nullSunday, May 06, 2001

Wilner Jean Paul held the photograph of his daughter and tried to fathom the rest of his life without her.

“I’m lost. I’m lost,” he said inside his Brooklyn home. “I have to find out the reason Sheila died.”

A day had passed since Sheila Jean Paul, 13, and a 12-year-old classmate drowned in the treacherous waters off Canarsie Beach Park. She and eight other students from Intermediate School 68 on E. 82nd St. played hooky Friday in the 92-degree weather.

“Why didn’t the school call and tell us my daughter was not at school?” asked Jean Paul, a 49-year-old gypsy cab driver. “I still haven’t heard from her school. Nothing.”

A correction officer out fishing with a buddy pulled two boys to safety in his motorboat. Four more were rescued by cops from the currents of Paerdegat Basin, and one boy swam to shore by himself.

Cops found Sheila’s body at the foot of a bridge. They later found the body of Neville Chambers, 12, at the mouth of the basin in the 54-degree water, 500 yards from where they found Sheila’s.

Jean Paul had never been to the place where his daughter drowned, and he had many unanswered questions: Was it a beach? Where was the lifeguard or security?

At Canarsie Beach Park, the children reached the water by walking along a garbage-strewn path girded by wild grass overgrowth, bursting onto an area that would be sandy when the tide is out but deluged by water as high as 8 feet when the tide is in.

Neftali Feliciano, 56, a certified scuba diver who has been fishing in the waters there for more than 20 years, had his rod, line and hook set yesterday.

“This is what they call milky water,” Feliciano said. “I’m a trained, experienced swimmer and I would never swim here. The water is muddy and too filthy. You see a lot of people fishing but you never see anybody in the water swimming.”

At his apartment in a two-family home, Jean Paul stared at photographs of his daughter and cried, talking about how Sheila dreamed of becoming a doctor.

“I just wanted her to be something for her future, something for her life,” he said.

Teach Them to Be The Bravest — Green By MICHAEL O. ALLEN and MICHAEL R. BLOOD, Daily News Staff Writers

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Friday, May 04, 2001

Public Advocate Mark Green urged the city yesterday to establish educational programs for firefighting at two high schools and two community colleges to increase the number of minority group members in the FDNY.

In a city where minority groups now represent the majority of the population, the Fire Department remains overwhelmingly white and male.

Mark Green at yesterday’s press conference on minorities in the FDNY

In a letter to Fire Commissioner Thomas Von Essen, Green, a Democratic mayoral hopeful, released statistics showing that blacks and Latinos make up 7% of the FDNY, as compared with 40% in Los Angeles’ fire department, 29% in Chicago and 30% in Philadelphia.

In 1999, blacks and Latinos accounted for 22% of those who took the firefighter exam and 18% of those who passed.

Green also said more needs to be done to increase the number of women in the department.

Currently, women represent less than 1% of the FDNY workforce.

The city “needs to create a pipeline of qualified minority and women applicants,” he said.

“The best way to permanently change the applicant pool is … to create at least two citywide high schools for fire sciences and a minimum of two fire science programs at CUNY,” Green added.

Mayor Giuliani’s office had no comment. In another development yesterday, about 30 demonstrators rallied outside FDNY headquarters in downtown Brooklyn to oppose firefighter candidate Police Officer Edward McMellon.

A handful of Muslim firefighters and their supporters oppose the possible hiring of McMellon because he was one of four cops who gunned down unarmed African immigrant Amadou Diallo in his Bronx vestibule in February 1999.

“Why does the fire commissioner want to hire McMellon to become a firefighter and save lives after he took my son’s life?” Diallo’s father, Saikou, said at the rally.

The group also demanded that the department hire a Muslim chaplain. FDNY Islamic Society President Kevin James noted that the agency has two Jewish, two Protestant and three Catholic chaplains, but no Muslims.

Playground Site For Lab Irks Nabe By MICHAEL O. ALLEN, Daily News Staff Writer

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Wednesday, May 2, 2001

A plan to build a high school science lab on an elementary school playground in Midwood is drawing fire from some parents.

The Board of Education wants to build the laboratory for Midwood High School students on a portion of the playground used by elementary school students.

“We are outraged, very angry,” said Alice Tillman-Dames, president of the Joint Parents Association at Public Schools 152 and 315, housed in the same building at 2310 Glenwood Road.

“The information came out in dribs and drabs. Nobody told us anything. We were never given a choice whether we want it or not. It’s a done deal.”

Midwood High is across Bedford Ave. from the yard.

But Margie Feinberg, a board spokeswoman, said plans for the $35 million to $40 million facility are only in the design phase, and will cover just a portion of the playground — 18,000 square feet of the 52,000 total.

“When the labs are built, there would still be 34,000 square feet left for a playground. It would be open space for the school as well as for the community.

“It is important to note that because the [state Board of] Regents are requiring a lab component in their exams, we need to provide science labs for students so that they can take the Regents exam and graduate,” Feinberg said.

Tillman-Dames said that answer is misleading because an annex to the elementary school and temporary transportable kindergarten classes take up portions of the yard.

“Pretty soon the children will have only the sidewalk to play on, and they will call that the playground,” she said.

This Saturday, parents plan to hold a community sit-in at the yard from 9:30 a.m. until noon.

Expected to attend is Councilman Lloyd Henry (D-Midwood), who got the Council to allocate $1.15 million to construct a playground with a reading garden as well as basketball, tennis and handball courts, water fountains and a play area for toddlers.

The plan was that the elementary schools would have use of them during the school day and the community at other times.

Community Board 14 Chairman Alvin Berk described the neighborhood as chock-full of competing needs, all of them legitimate.

“And that’s the problem,” he said. “The problem is, very simply, there’s a tremendous, tremendous lack of open space in Community District 14.”

Original Publication Date: 5/2/01

Diallo Kin ‘Refuse to Lose Hope’ By PATRICE O’SHAUGHNESSY, Daily News Staff Writer

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nullSunday, April 29, 2001

Amadou Diallo’s parents expressed anguish yesterday over the Police Department’s exoneration of the four cops who killed their son, and urged supporters to “refuse to lose hope.”

“Whoever said [the cops] have done nothing wrong, they are wrong,” said Diallo’s mother, Kadiatou. “I am saying to Mayor Giuliani the decision is wrong, I am saying to the police commissioner the decision is wrong … let’s make changes to prevent this from happening again.”

Amadou Diallo’s parents speak out at Al Sharpton’s Harlem headquarters.
Kadiatou and Saikou Diallo flanked the Rev. Al Sharpton at his Harlem headquarters to denounce Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik’s decision Friday to put the cops back on the job — without guns or badges, but without punishment — based on the findings of two police panels that deemed the fatal shooting of the unarmed man a mistake.

“They are letting the police go free to kill and kill,” Saikou Diallo said.

Sharpton announced plans to compile a record of incidents of racial profiling, arbitrary stop-and-frisks and other interaction between cops and minority groups to build a civil class-action suit against the NYPD.

He also said the black community will target an unnamed major corporation that supports the police union.

Sharpton derided Fire Commissioner Thomas Von Essen for approving one of the cops, Edward McMellon, as a firefighter candidate and promised to protest at FDNY headquarters in Brooklyn.

“This week we will prepare for a huge visit to the Fire Department,” Sharpton said.

Meanwhile, Giuliani reiterated support for Kerik’s decision.

“The reality of the Diallo case is that it was tragic and horrible,” the mayor said on John Gambling’s WABC radio show.

“A mixed jury of four blacks and eight whites concluded that. As did the Clinton Justice Department, when they decided not to pursue a civil rights case. And that’s what the police panel concluded.

“All these people can’t be wrong. … You have to willing to adjust your attitude in the face of reality.”

With Michael O. Allen

Cyclones: Overnight Sensation By MICHAEL O. ALLEN, Daily News Staff Writer

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nullSunday, April 29, 2001

The line of baseball fans began forming at 7:30 p.m. Friday, growing slowly but steadily, until by Saturday morning it nearly stretched around the mammoth Kings Plaza in Brooklyn.

As they waited, they talked of baseball, of Opening Days past, present and future — the next being the June 25 debut of the Brooklyn Cyclones, the Mets’ new farm team.

Greg Packer, 37, a highway crew worker for the Town of Huntington, L.I., was the first on line. For his trouble, he met Cyclones executive Jeff Wilpon, son of Fred Wilpon, co-owner of the New York Mets. He also got gifts: a Brooklyn Cyclones logo baseball, pennant, hat and T-shirt.

Not far behind were old Brooklyn Dodgers fans Ilene and Myles Seitz.

“He’s the real thing, a Brooklyn Dodgers fan from way back when,” Ilene said of her 63-year-old husband. “It’s his life. He loves it. He got me — not even trying — to love it.”

Born and raised in the East New York section of Brooklyn, the two moved out to White Plains six years ago, although Myles still works in Brooklyn.

“This brings baseball back to Brooklyn, which has been delayed for 43 years, and I welcome it back,” he said.

By early afternoon, more than 2,000 people had shown up. More than 125,000 tickets — about half of the season — were sold.

Several games in the 3,500-seat KeySpan Park, in the shadow of the old Coney Island parachute jump, were sellouts: Opening Day — and all games against the Staten Island Yankees.

SCHOOL BARS ‘SATAN’ KID Officials say he vowed to kill his classmates By CAROLINA GONZALEZ and BRIAN KATES, Daily News Staff Writers

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Wednesday, April 25, 2001

A 10-year-old gifted boy said to call himself “brother of Satan” who has terrorized two Brooklyn schools was barred from classes yesterday, officials said.

The fourth-grader was kept in seclusion yesterday after he allegedly threatened to kill classmates at Public School 236 in Mill Basin — reportedly the second time in a month he had made such a threat.

Schools Chancellor Harold Levy said only that the school district “is making arrangements for alternative instruction” for the boy. A high-placed school official said that the youngster most likely would not be allowed to return to PS 236.

The boy, described as bright and enrolled in the Eagle Program for gifted students, had no prior school disciplinary record, but apparently began to unravel in late March.

On March 28, he was booted from PS 207 in Marine Park after allegedly threatening to kill several children in his class. At that time, one parent said, the boy referred to himself as the “brother of Satan” and warned classmates “not to make me go home and get my father’s gun.”

The parent, whose daughter allegedly was among those threatened, said the boy told classmates that they are “going to be with him in hell.”

At least 50 parents at PS 207 signed a petition demanding that the boy be barred from class. When officers went to the boy’s house, they found a .357 Ruger handgun licensed to his father, police said.

The Daily News is withholding the youngster’s name because of his age. Contacted at their neatly tended Marine Park house, the boy’s parents refused to discuss the case.

It could not be determined whether school officials complied with federal regulations requiring that students who make such threats undergo a psychological evaluation.

Last Thursday, the boy was quietly transferred to PS 236. But his reputation apparently followed him. “Parents were warned through the grapevine that he had been transferred,” said parent Michael Cava.

The fourth-grader had been in his new school only one day when he again threatened to bring a gun to school and kill someone, parents said.

That same day someone circulated a flyer to parents, urging them to keep their kids out of school as long as the child was allowed to attend.

The flyer proclaimed that the 10-year-old had “created a ‘Hit-List’ of children he wanted to ‘Kill’! He described the weapon (gun) he would use for this massacre in great detail. … No one is safe!”

Saul Needle, president of School Board 22, called the flyer “irresponsible,” saying it “inflamed a tense and emotional situation.” The origin of the flyer wasn’t known.

As alarm spread among parents, 317 of the school’s 650 students missed classes on Monday. Yesterday, 100 were absent.

Outside PS 236 yesterday, fifth-grader A.J. Truisi said he had played football with the boy Friday. “He was actually really nice,” A.J. said. “He just got mad and didn’t know how to handle it.”

A.J.’s mother, Christine Truisi, said, “I think a lot of parents bashed a 10-year-old boy without knowing all the facts.”

Most parents, however, were demanding answers. They were fuming that neither District Superintendent John Comer nor Principal Mary Barton attended a meeting Monday night to discuss the issue.

“The depth and the level of frustration in the audience was palpable. Parents were demanding answers,” Needle said.

With Nancie L. Katz
and Michael O. Allen

Tragedy for 2 B’klyn Families: Auto accidents claim 7 By MICHAEL O. ALLEN and PATRICE O’SHAUGHNESSY, Daily News Staff Writers

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Sunday, April 22, 2001

The Stewarts and the Shetmans were two close-knit families living at opposite ends of Brooklyn who apparently never knew each other. One is African-American, the other Jewish immigrants from Ukraine.

Both families believed in being kind neighbors, keeping nice homes and rearing good children. And yesterday, both were left ravaged by car crashes that happened within two hours of each other on Friday night.

Victims of Friday’s tragic crash included Auber Stewart…

City cop Craig Stewart and his brother Cedric grieved in Crown Heights over the loss of their parents, sister, brother and aunt, who died when their minivan crashed into a bus at St. John’s Place and Brooklyn Ave. as they returned from a wake in Harlem.

In Gravesend, Aleksandr Shetman was devastated by the deaths of his only children, 15-year-old Inna and 10-year-old Svetlana, and the critical injuries to his wife, Rima. All three were mowed down when a careening Porsche mounted the curb as they walked on Ocean Parkway about 6:30 p.m..

The light-haired girls were walking with their mother and father after shopping. Inna was a student at Edward R. Murrow High School; Svetlana attended Public School 216.

Shetman, a Manhattan hotel employee who came to the United States about 10 years ago, lived with his wife and daughters and grandparents in a two-family house on E. Second St.

“They spoke Russian, so we would just say hello to each other, but they were very nice people,” said Frances Felice, who lives across the street. “They were such nice, pretty girls. I would see the mother take the little girl to school every day. I feel very sad for them.”

…and her daughter, Lorraine.

The accident occurred when Issac Chehebar, 20, of Avenue T, somehow lost control of a silver Porsche Carrera as he traveled north on Ocean Parkway and jumped the pedestrian median curb. The car struck and killed Inna instantly. Svetlana died yesterday at Coney Island Hospital. Their mother was in critical condition at Lutheran Medical Center.

Anthony Abbate Jr., 15, also was struck by the car and suffered a broken leg.

Chehebar, who tested negative for alcohol, was not immediately charged.

Meanwhile, neighbors of James Stewart, 75; his wife, Auber, 72; their daughter. Lorraine, 49, and son, Melvin, 52, stood stunned on President St., where, on sunny days, James and Auber were a fixture on the bench outside their renovated brick house.

A stoic Cedric Stewart emerged from the home to say the remaining family would “stick together and hang tough.” He described the Stewart clan as “a close-knit family, closer than most.”

Craig Stewart, 42, is an 18-year veteran officer assigned to Brooklyn Central Booking.

The Stewarts and an aunt, Zora Goins, 75, were killed at 8:20 p.m. Friday when the 1996 Dodge minivan Lorraine Stewart was driving sped through a red light and plowed into the side of a city bus.

Several people on the B45 bus suffered minor injuries, police said.

Accident investigators said Lorraine Stewart may have been racing to Kings County Hospital because her mother has a history of heart trouble and may have suffered an attack. An autopsy of Auber Stewart did not confirm that was the case, a spokeswoman for the medical examiner said.

There was no sign the van had mechanical failure, but none of the van’s occupants was wearing a seat belt, police said.

Nathan Perry, 44, who lives next door, called the Stewarts “a family from heaven. They are the type of neighbors you want living next door to you. They are close-knit.”

With Tom Raftery and Suzanne Rozdeba

TB Sidelines B’klyn Teach by MICHAEL O. ALLEN, DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

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Friday, April 20, 2001

Teachers at a Park Slope, Brooklyn, middle school learned yesterday that a colleague who had been out of school for over two weeks was hospitalized with tuberculosis.

Health Department spokeswoman Sandra Mullin confirmed that a member of the staff at Middle School 88 has active tuberculosis but said the risk to anyone else at the school is very low.

Mullin said students will be sent home today with a letter to their parents explaining the situation. People at the school who had contact with the staff will undergo TB screening.

TB infects about 8 million people a year worldwide, and kills 2 million a year.

Health Department officials say New York City’s infection rate of the disease has declined drastically in the past eight years.

He’s Held in Mom’s Slaying By MICHAEL O. ALLEN and JOHN MARZULLI, Daily News Staff Writers

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Saturday, April 14, 2001

Detectives were questioning a 20-year-old man suspected of stabbing his mother to death in an argument in their Brooklyn apartment, police said yesterday.

The son apparently had been given an ultimatum by his mother, Christine Thompson, 44, to “straighten out his act” or leave home, a police source said.

Neighbors in the building on Lincoln Place in Prospect Heights heard loud music, arguing and crashing objects coming from the victim’s fifth-floor apartment during the night and predawn hours.

Downstairs tenant Naoko Ozaki, 25, said she called the building superintendent when water began pouring from her ceiling about 8 a.m.

When the super, Cresencio Alvarez, went to check out the problem in Thompson’s apartment, he heard her screaming for help and called 911.

“The police kicked the door down,” Alvarez said. “I saw only the leg. She was lying in the hallway. The blood was everywhere — on the wall and on the floor. I saw bloody footprints.”

Thompson, a guard, was rushed to New York Methodist Hospital, where she was pronounced dead from stab wounds.

The son, who works at a Manhattan Kmart, showed up at the apartment about an hour after police arrived and was arrested before being questioned at the 77th Precinct stationhouse. A kitchen knife believed to be the murder weapon was recovered.

The pouring water came from a sink that apparently had been left running before the fight, police said.

Neighbor Raul Morales, 61, said the victim had trouble with her two sons.

“The big one is in jail now. The other one is a little bit out of his mind,” he said. “He looks at you with wide-open eyes, or he’s laughing like he’s crazy.”

Original Story Date: 04/14/01

STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION Rare street hopes makeover will be worth all the hassle By MICHAEL O. ALLEN, Daily News Staff Writer

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Monday, April 09, 2001

Residents of quiet 74th St., a few blocks from the Narrows in Bay Ridge, have been waking to the quaking of their homes lately as heavy machinery rolls in.

Repairs to step street at 74th St. and Colonial Road in Bay Ridge have delighted tenants, though they must endure intrusion of heavy machinery.

It is the start of a major project to replace the unusual step street linking Ridge Blvd. and Colonial Road at 74th St., as well as repair the street’s sewers and water mains.

“Let’s face it, it has to be done,” said Blanca Ortiz of 115 74th St.

But that doesn’t mean she enjoys it. “I’m in bed this morning and the bed, along with the house, was shaking,” Ortiz said.

She quickly called Janet Richichi, community construction liaison from the city Department of Design and Construction.

“I told her that I hope our houses don’t develop cracks because of the pounding,” Ortiz said. “She told me that she’d consulted with the engineers and that they’re not supposed to pound beyond a certain degree so as to not cause any damage.

“It’s an inconvenience, and the noise, but it has to be done.”

The consolation for the neighborhood is that its unusual public steps finally will be repaired.

Assemblywoman Joan Millman (D-Bay Ridge) secured the $300,000 that Community Board 10 officials told her in 1997 it would cost to fix the steps.

“In my enthusiasm and my naiveté about how these things work, I thought it was going to happen, like, right away,” Millman said.

When city officials inspected the project, they found that the sewers and water mains needed total reconstruction along with the stairway. It took the intervening four years to get the $786,000 estimated cost for the project into the budget, with the city Department of Environmental Protection picking up the tab for the remainder of the project.

City Design and Construction Department Deputy Commissioner Matthew Monahan said the street above and below the steps would have 600 new feet of curb, three fire hydrants and five catch basins to draw off rainwater, along with the new steps, sewer and water main, when the project is completed in July.

The repairs were long overdue, said Steve Harrison, chairman of Community Board 10. “The steps are unsafe,” he said.

“That they are fixing them is something that makes us ecstatic.”

Step streets are more common in the Bronx, but Brooklyn, being part of Long Island, is flatter. Harrison believes only two such street steps exist in the borough, the set under reconstruction and another set on 76th St.

Marylou Notaro of 145 74th St., who has lived in the neighborhood for 15 years, praised the city workers doing the job but said she was concerned about what would happen to a community garden on either side of the steps.

“About 10 years ago, we turned an area that was a dumping ground into a beautiful garden, and people from all around the neighborhood came to admire the roses and the tulips and the daffodils,” Notaro said.

“I’m hopeful that after the construction is done, we can restore the garden to the beautiful garden that it once was.”