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WPCNR AVIATION NEWS. From Peter Katz, Editor, NTSB REPORTER. JUNE 29, 2016:
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WPCNR AVIATION NEWS. From Peter Katz, Editor, NTSB REPORTER. JUNE 29, 2016:
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FORMER SUPERINTENDENT OF WHITE PLAINS SCHOOLS, TIMOTHY CONNORS, LEFT, WILL CONTINUE ON A PER DAY BASIS TO SUBSTITUTE FOR DR. PAUL FRIED, SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, RIGHT, FOR THE NEXT TWO MONTHS.
WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. JUNE 29, 2016:
THE WHITE PLAINS BOARD OF EDUCATION HAS EXTENDED THE PER DAY CONTRACT WITH FORMER SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, TIMOTHY CONNORS, THROUGH AUGUST TO CONTINUE AS “INTERIM SUPERINTENDENT.”
DR. PAUL FRIED THE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS MR. CONNORS IS SUBSTITUTING, AT THIS TIME IS APPARENTLY EXPECTED TO BE UNAVAILABLE AS HE RECOVERS FROM SURGERY, THE NATURE OF WHICH HAS NOT BEEN DISCLOSED.
MICHELE SCHOENFELD, CLERK TO THE BOARD OF EDUCATION TOLD WPCNR THAT MR. CONNORS IS NOT EXPECTED TO WORK 5 DAYS A WEEK, BUT ONLY COME IN AS NEEDED. THE PER DAY RATE WILL BE AVAILABLE AFTER MR. CONNORS SIGNS THE TWO MONTH CONTRACT.
In other Board of Education action…
It approved a new Memorandum of Agreement with the Administrators and Supervisors Association, through the 2018-19 school year, setting salary scales for different positions at an increase of 2%, according to Interim Superintendent Connors. Details of which are not available yet until the agreement is signed by the union.
Fred Seiler, outgoing Assistant Superintendent for Business, told WPCNR that as part of the agreement, administrators at the top of the new salary scale (about one-third of the administrator work force) would receive an additional 3/4% the first year, 1% the second year and 1-1/4% the third year of the contract, while those within the scale “who have not been here as long,” would receive an average of 2%. Seiler said the contract fit within the new budget beginning July 1. Incidentally, tomorrow June 30, is Mr. Seiler’s last day with the district. He is retiring after 10 years.
The Board approved a Memorandum of Agreement with the White Plains Teachers Association settling a series of “grievances” issues. The details are not available to the public until the agreement is signed.
Jessica O’Donovan, Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction had her contract extended for another three years, through the 2018-19 school year.
Deborah Augarten’s salary as Assistant Superintendent for Special Education & Pupil Services for 2016-17 school year was approved.
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WPCNR FBI WIRE. Special From the Federal Bureau of Investigaton. June 28, 2016:
Earlier today, Darren Goodrich, a registered broker at a brokerage firm in El Segundo, California, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit securities fraud for manipulating the stock of Cubed, Inc. (Cubed), which traded (ironically) under the ticker symbol CRPT.
Since fiscal year 2009, the Justice Department has filed over 18,000 financial fraud cases against more than 25,000 defendants. For more information on the task force, please visit www.StopFraud.gov.
The guilty plea was entered before United States Magistrate Judge Vera M. Scanlon at the federal courthouse in Brooklyn, New York. When sentenced, Goodrich faces up to five years in prison, as well as restitution, criminal forfeiture, and a fine.
The guilty plea was announced by Robert L. Capers, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, and Diego Rodriguez, Assistant Director-in-Charge, Federal Bureau of Investigation, New York Field Office.
According to court filings and facts presented at the plea hearing, between March 2014 and July 2014, Goodrich and his co-conspirators engaged in a scheme to defraud investors and potential investors in Cubed by artificially controlling the price and volume of traded shares in the company through fraudulent concealment of the defendants’ and their co-conspirators’ ownership interests and engineering price movements and trading volume in the stock.
In March 2014, Goodrich’s co-conspirators took Cubed public through an asset purchase agreement. On April 22, 2014, Cubed’s stock began trading in earnest. Between April 22, 2014 and April 30, 2014, Goodrich and his co-conspirators concocted trading volume in this stock by purchasing more than 50% of the total number of Cubed shares purchased during this period.
Between May 2, 2014 and June 29, 2014, law enforcement authorities conducted a judicially-authorized wiretap of one of Goodrich’s co-conspirator’s cellular telephone. The wiretap revealed that Goodrich and his co-conspirators fraudulently manipulated Cubed’s stock by artificially controlling the price and volume of that stock through orchestrated trading.
Rather than generating significant market interest and causing a quick pump and dump that would elicit regulators’ scrutiny, the conspirators gradually increased the price of Cubed’s stock to give it the appearance of a legitimate company with genuine and steady market demand for the security.
For example, on May 5, 2014, while Cubed was in a period of gradual increase from $5.20 on April 22, 2014 to $5.42 on May 22, 2014, a co-conspirator called Goodrich, and stated, “Can you buy a 100 and see if [the other market maker] moves?” Goodrich complied and then responded, “Yeah, they’re going.”
Goodrich and his co-conspirators used an attorney escrow account to successfully control the price and volume of Cubed’s stock.
On June 23, 2014, Cubed reached its highest closing price of $6.75 per share, resulting in a market capitalization of approximately $200 million.
Previously, Cubed filed with the SEC a Form 10-Q and reported less than $1,500 in cash, zero revenue, negative stockholders’ equity, a net loss of $15,000, and accrued professional fees of $131,824.
* * *
The government’s case is being prosecuted by the Office’s Business and Securities Fraud Section. Assistant United States Attorneys Shannon C. Jones, Christopher L. Nasson, and Patrick Hein are in charge of the prosecution, with assistance provided by Assistant United States Attorney Claire S. Kedeshian of the Office’s Civil Division, which is responsible for the forfeiture of assets.
The charges were brought in connection with the President’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. The task force was established to wage an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. With more than 20 federal agencies, 94 U.S. Attorneys’ offices, and state and local partners, it is the broadest coalition of law enforcement, investigatory, and regulatory agencies ever assembled to combat fraud.
Since its formation, the task force has made great strides in facilitating increased investigation and prosecution of financial crimes; enhancing coordination and cooperation among federal, state, and local authorities; addressing discrimination in the lending and financial markets; and conducting outreach to the public, victims, financial institutions, and other organizations. Since fiscal year 2009, the Justice Department has filed over 18,000 financial fraud cases against more than 25,000 defendants. For more information on the task force, please visit ww.StopFraud.gov.
The Defendant:
DARREN GOODRICH
Age: 37
Residence: Manhattan Beach, California
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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey. June 28, 2016:
The new owners of the former Good Counsel Property at 52 North Broadway, George Comfort & Sons, Inc. and ROC Group, Inc. unveiled their preliminary development concept Monday evening at the Common Council Special Meeting, calling for a preservation of the 3 acres of North Broadway great lawn while opening the former campus to a mix of residential uses.
The proposed development includes a 66 person Pace Law School Graduate Student privately managed residential building on the north side of the property; a new 130 person (including 29 units for memory loss residents) Sunrise Assisted Living project on the southern side of the campus, and a 10 story market rate rental complex on the eastern border of the property overlooking the Cross Westchester Expressway.
The residential building (a portion of which is shown above) proposes a zoning change allowing a 10 story complex with parking underneath the sweeping curve of the building. A total of 402 apartments including 40 affordable housing units, is planned at this time at market rates.
The Assisted Living building would be two stories with three stories in the rear with 50 parking spaces around the driveway. 131 residents would live in the assisted living complex, with 29 of them reserved for the memory-impaired
The new proposed PACE UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL PROPOSED GRADUATE STUDENT LIVING COMPLEX would be built on the north side of the campus and consist of 3 stories with a sstudent residential complex housing 66 students. It would be privately managed. (Renderings,Courtesy of Perkins Eastman)
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THE BIG THREE
JOHN BAILEY
PETER KATZ
JIM BENEROFE
ON A WILD WHITE PLAINS WEEK
BRITAIN VOTES TO LEAVE EUROPEAN UNION
U.S. SUPREME COURT UPHOLDS AFFIRMATIVE ACTION, 4-3
CONGRESS DOES SOMETHING ON GUN CONTROL– IT SITS DOWN
NEW QUESTION FOR THE WHITE PLAINS TRANSIT DISTRICT
SCHOOL DISTRICT MULLS WHAT TO DO ABOUT SUPERINTENDENT’S RECOVERY FROM ILLNESS
WHITE PLAINS SALES TAX RECEIPTS DROP 10.4% IN MAY LARGEST DROP IN A MONTH IN YEARS. OTHER CITIES IN COUNTY UP.
SEE IT NOW ON
www.whiteplainsweek.com
OR YOU TUBE INSTANTLY AT
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ON PEOPLE TO BE HEARD
YOU’VE GOT
MICHELLE BRISBANE
ON THE EFFECTS OF ALZHEIMER’S ON HER FAMILY
AND
DEBBIE WARBURTON
DIRECTOR OF GOVERNMENT RELATIONS
FOR ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION HUDSON VALLEY
ON THE STATE OF ALZHEIMER’S TODAY
THE WARNING SIGNS
THE NEED FOR MORE RESEARCH FOR A CURE
WHAT POPULATION GETS ALZHEIMER’S MORE THAN ANY OTHER
PREVENTIVE MEASURES TO SLOW ALZHEIMER’S PROGRESSION
THE MOST IMPORTANT INTERVIEW YOU WILL SEE THIS YEAR
SEE IT AT
www.whiteplainsweek.com
or YOU TUBE NOW AT
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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Board of Legislators. June 16, 2016:
A Special Meeting of the Westchester County Board of Legislators will take place Monday, June 27, 2016, at 9:00 a.m. for the purpose of setting a date for the special election to fill the seat which was vacated by Legislator Bernice Spreckman in the 14th Legislative District.
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WPCNR THE FEINER REPORT Special to WPCNR from Town of Greenburgh Supervisor Paul Feiner. June 23, 2016:
Jefferson application is being terminated in Ardsley —controversial development won’t happen!
On Wednesday evening I received a letter from Rick Rucoba, Public Affairs Manager for Akzo Nobel advising that their company has terminated contractual relations with the Jefferson and is starting to market the property for commercial or industrial purposes.
In recent months hundreds of NO JEFFERSON lawn signs have appeared in front of homes in Ardsley, unincorporated Greenburgh and Dobbs Ferry. The Texas company had proposed to build 272 rental apartments at a former chemical manufacturing plant site on the Ardsley/Greenburgh border. Residents had numerous complaints – ranging from significant traffic in Ardsley, parking problems, impact to the schools, flooding. This news is expected to be greeted with lots of smiles from a community that was almost unanimous in their opposition against the proposed development.
I thanked Mr. Rucoba for listening to the community and expressed an interest in working with his company to find an acceptable use of the property. Congratulations to the hard working and dedicated members of our community for their effectiveness!
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Dear Friends:
Downtown Music begins its 29th season in just a few months. We ask your help in creating an anniversary celebration which reflects our joy in reaching this milestone.
When Downtown Music began in 1988, the center of White Plains looked far different than today. We were one of the few cultural opportunities in a city that had seen better days. Now our music, in a renewed and exciting downtown area, reaches a diverse audience of more than 4,000 people each year. Recent highlights include internationally acclaimed performers and notable premiers of opera and other works– world class music that is convenient affordable and welcoming.
Our musical partnerships have grown to include members of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic, the Westchester Philharmonic and the Stecher and Horowitz Foundation, sponsors of the New York International Piano Competition. Our Downtown Sinfonietta accompanies internationally recognized soloists, and REBEL, the ensemble for Baroque music, visits several times each year.
As we approach our 29th season, our early belief in the cultural potential of the downtown area has proven well founded. And, with your help, we look forward to increasing and realizing that potential for years to come.
No anniversary season would be complete without a celebration– a season of concerts which is truly special. Your gift today will directly determine what sort of 29th season we will have. If Downtown Music has been important to you for any of the last 29 years, then we ask you to consider a special and generous commitment to our future.
To make a donation using a credit card or PayPal, please click on the link below, or send a check to: Downtown Music at Grace, 33 Church Street, White Plains, NY 10601.
Best Regards,
Timothy Lewis
Artistic and Managing Director
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“You do not need to be a classical music buff to enjoy the simple delight of arriving at this small, landmark church with wonderful acoustics, taking your seat, and allowing the music to wash over you. A true escape from the rigors and unwanted noise of our lives.”
Joshua Worby |
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Downtown Music at Grace
2015-2016 Concert Sponsors: Downtown Music’s programs are made possible by ArtsWestchester with support from Westchester County Government.
This season is also made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.
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