Monday, January 24, 2011

Frozen Monday links


It's a cold one today, doncha know?

Let's take five!

*The New York Times anoints Williamsburg as Toddlertown, complete with anecdotal evidence to prove its point! Take a deep breath Ward. More on this later.

*A partner with Il Buco wants to open an Italian bakery on Kent Avenue across from Domino. It's not Eataly, but the concept of bakery, specialty food store and restaurant should win over the waterfront.

*Tenants at 338 Berry hope the Loft Law will shield them from an aggressive landlord.

*Jeff Mann at the Gazette looks at the Polish petition over concentration camps.

*The Real Deal's hardbitten editorial writer Amy Tennery looks at a mortgage scheme gone bad on S. Second Street.

Yes it's really that cold outside. What are you going to do? Make a song about it?

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Thursday links


It must have been busy in Queens this morning.

*The tri-state mob sweep is leading the news this morning, which means William Rashbaum and John Marzulli are going to be hard to reach today.

*The Newtown Creek Nature Walk is expanding.

*Live in Bushwick from Community Board Four!

*Brooklyn housing data is out and BusinessWeek and the Wall Street Journal note that home sales are in decline compared with last year.

*Finally, the Brooklyn Paper's Andy Campbell tries the new Williamsburg Camel cigarettes and is upset that they taste like regular Camel Lights.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Wednesday links


Mayor Bloomberg makes a pit stop.

Mayor Bloomberg's state of the city is upon us, which will drive the news today. The New York Times and DNAInfo Manhattan have an advance look at the speech, City Hall News plots Bloomberg's "comeback," and the Wall Street Journal picks out the mayor's livery cab proposal making it legal for livery cabs to pick up passengers in the outer boroughs.

But onto some other links.

*It's been far too long since I put up a Chris Bragg story. Here is his report on Walmart and the city's labor unions and the dueling Walmart surveys at City Hall News.

*The Daily News' Erin Durkin finds theft at an East New York nursing home.

*Commercial property sales surged in Brooklyn, but there's a more comprehensive report coming out today, so we'll have to compare.

*Classically-trained Dan Deacon is the prince of percussive pop, although I'm just stringing words together at this point.

*Finally, Greenpoint is getting a fart factory. And Jeff Daniels is going to manage it.


*Bonus link! This is what happens when Jim Dwyer is on leave.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Tuesday links


Let's take ten in honor of the new Greenpoint CoWorking site on Norman Avenue.

*More details are emerging about the weekend shooting on Monitor Street that left a 30-year-old man on life support. New York Shitty has notes from last night's brief precinct meeting.

*Greenpoint residents are upset about a fence on Noble Street blocking access to the river and New York Shitty adds on.

*A man who allegedly tried to rape a woman in an elevator at Bushwick Houses has been arrested.

*Checking in with Achievement First Bushwick.

*Meanwhile there were two big fires in Bushwick this week.

*Landlords are losing out on rent now that the off-track betting shops are closed.

*Atlantic Yards Report analyzes the Nets-Carmelo rumors (and so does Capital New York's Howard Megdal regarding the Carmelo-Knicks rumors.

*Steiner Studios is doubling in size thanks to some federal funding (but Greenpoint Broadway Stages is still having trouble getting that bond

*A very detailed, interesting piece out of Gotham Gazette about the city's growing income gap.

*And the Wall Street Journal tours the Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant in this video.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Press Release of the Week: Illegal Liquid Silicone

For Immediate Release
January 14, 2011 United States Attorney's Office
Southern District of New York

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Charges Bronx Woman with Illegal Administration of Liquid Silicone Injections Through Underground Business

PREET BHARARA, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, JANICE K. FEDARCYK, the Assistant Director-In-Charge of the New York Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation ("FBI"), and MARK DRAGONETTI, Special Agent-in-Charge of the New York Field Office of the Food and Drug Administration's Office of Criminal Investigations ("FDA"), announced the arrest today of WHALESCA CASTILLO on charges that she administered illegal injections of liquid silicone for cosmetic purposes, as part of an underground business she ran out of her Bronx home. The Complaint alleges that CASTILLO, who does not have a medical license, charged over $1,000 in some instances for each round of shots.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney PREET BHARARA said: "As we allege, Whalesca Castillo put the health of unsuspecting women at risk, all to make a quick buck. She compounded the danger in which she placed her clients by allegedly discouraging at least one woman from seeking medical attention after she developed complications from the injections. We will continue to work with our partners at the FBI and the FDA to expose and prosecute such underground operations that seek to profit by offering unsafe treatments at the expense of public health and safety."

FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge JANICE K. FEDARCYK stated: "Castillo allegedly performed procedures she was not licensed to perform, using substances unapproved for that purpose. She knew what she was doing was illegal, as she told one of her customers. In her thirst for profit, she put lives in peril. The mission of the FBI Health Care Fraud Task Force is not only to minimize the monetary effects of fraud, but to protect the health and safety of the public from unscrupulous practitioners."

FDA Office of Criminal Investigations Special Agent-in-Charge MARK DRAGONETTI said: "FDA's regulatory requirements are designed to ensure the safety and quality of the medical devices and drugs distributed to American consumers. We will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to investigate and prosecute those who disregard regulatory requirements and jeopardize the public health by engaging in the distribution of unapproved and misbranded products."

According to the Complaint unsealed today in Manhattan federal court:

Although the FDA has approved certain forms of silicone for cosmetic use, it has prohibited the injection of liquid silicone or silicone gel to fill wrinkles or augment tissues anywhere in the body for public and health safety reasons. Tissue augmentation using injectable fillers such as silicone has resulted in death and serious injuries in both the United States and abroad, especially when injections are performed by unlicensed practitioners and outside a clinical setting. Risks associated with such injections include permanent lumps within the skin, infection, skin ulceration, and potentially fatal pulmonary blood clots.

Since at least 2009, CASTILLO, who does not hold a medical or nursing license of any kind in New York State, has imported liquid silicone from the Dominican Republic, and administered injections of it to women for breast and buttocks enhancement. She has administered these injections in her Bronx home, telling women that the injections are safe, and charging them hundreds of dollars per injection. One woman, who paid CASTILLO $1,000 for injections, experienced pain and shortness of breath following the procedure, and fainted within hours of the procedure. After being revived by her boyfriend, the woman called CASTILLO to report her medical symptoms. CASTILLO discouraged the woman from seeking proper medical attention, saying that a hospital would not help her because the procedure was illegal.

In November and December 2010, federal agents, working together with the New York City Police Department and the New York City Department of Sanitation, Environmental Police Haz-Mat Unit, recovered numerous trash bags in the vicinity of CASTILLO's home. The trash bags contained over one hundred bottles, some of which were tested and had silicone residue on them, syringes, needles, bloodied gauze, and dozens of tubes of Krazy Glue, which unlicensed practitioners sometimes use to seal puncture wounds.

CASTILLO, 36, of Bronx, New York, is charged with one count of distributing an adulterated or misbranded product. She faces a maximum of three years in prison on that charge.

Mr. BHARARA praised the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Office of Criminal Investigations, the New York City Police Department, and the New York City Department of Sanitation for their work in investigating this case. He also said that the investigation is continuing.

The FBI has set up a hotline, in English and Spanish, that individuals can call if they received liquid silicone injections from WHALESCA CASTILLO or anyone else. That number is (212) 384-2400.

This case is being handled by the Office's Complex Frauds Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorney SARAH LAI is in charge of the prosecution.

The charges contained in the Complaint are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

Video of the day: Rat attack!


A rat attacks a subway passenger on the 4 train- and it gets captured on video. Note how nonchalantly the man brushes away the rat, which awoke him from his slumber, and how nobody tried to help him.

And minutes later, someone creates a t-shirt inspired by the rat attack.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

CB1 January thoughts, sponsored by White Castle


Community Board 1 gets its snack on via White Castle after last night's meeting.

A couple of thoughts about last night's meeting before moving onto other topics.

*It was one of those kitchen sink meetings that had a lot of little things to chew on (new bar openings, a mild debate over two venues Club Rust and The Wick, moderately substantial committee reports) but no big-picture controversy or presentation to frame the whole thing, so it felt pretty lethargic. I kept waiting for Mieszko to break free for a 40 yard run or for Esteban to lash out at something, but it didn't really happen.

*Councilmembers Diana Reyna and Steve Levin did not show up. I don't know what Diana's excuse was but Steve was busy climbing a rock wall at a fundraiser in the Gowanus. Fortunately, Patch.com's Carrol Gardens' edition has a photograph (right).

*If I had to pick five new things that you'll probably hear more about in the coming weeks that came out of that meeting they'd be anaerobic gas, The Wick, the Polish Slavic Center's cafeteria, the Noble Street fence, and the Kosciouszko Foundation's concentration camp messaging campaign which is a nice NYTimes/ NPR feature story that I haven't read yet.

*Neighbors Allied for Good Growth's Lacey Tauber isn't talking to the press anymore because "spambots" stole her identity and are commenting on the blogs. That's a new one.


*Jason Otano, the seductive-cherubic (seducherubic?) 31-year-old general counsel for Borough President Markowitz pushed a few upcoming Marty-centric events and reminded people to re-up to the board in a couple of months. Jason would be a nice addition to CB1 but he can't join the board because he's the guy who helps pick who gets on all the boards.

*The city declared a state of emergency at 4:47 pm yesterday and snow plows hit the streets maybe an hour after the snow started to fall. Looks like the sanitation officers decided to spend a little less time in the jacuzzi with Linda Ronstadt.

*What exactly is in "crack pie?"

*Finally, I can't stop watching this video of Secretary of State Clinton tripping on the portable stairway and tumbling into her plane. She can take a fall with the best of them.