Thursday, April 16, 2009

Motorcyclist Seriously Injured in Motor Vehicle Crash

*Updated
ST. JAMES (Suffolk County Police Department) - Suffolk County Police Fourth Squad detectives are investigating a motor vehicle crash that killed a motorcyclist this morning in St. James.

Timothy Otis was driving his 2004 Kawasaki motorcycle west on Route 25 at 8:27 a.m. when his motorcycle collided with a 2006 Range Rover, driven by Gina Caliguri, that was making a left turn onto Route 25 from Hillside Avenue.

Otis, 37, of Centereach, was pronouced dead at 4:06 p.m. at Stony Brook University Medical Center. Otis had been admitted in critical condition following the accident.

Caliguri, 29, of Smithtown, was treated and released from Stony Brook University Medical Center.

The investigation is continuing. Anyone with information on this crash is asked to call the Fourth Squad at 631-854-8452.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Dog Rescued from Well on Kings Park Lawn

KINGS PARK (Suffolk County Police Department) - Suffolk County Police, assisted by the Kings Park and Commack Fire Departments, rescued a black lab from a well in Kings Park this evening.

Fourth Precinct police officers responded to a 911 call regarding a dog that fell into a well at 1135 St. Johnland Road in Kings Park at 9:16 p.m. Mindy, a 14-year-old black lab, was out in the yard on a dog-run when she fell into an old well, approximately 8-feet-deep.

The Suffolk County Police Emergency Services Section, the Commack Fire Department Technical Rescue, and the Kings Park Fire Department Heavy Rescue responded and with a combined effort, the dog was pulled out at 10:55 p.m.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Capt Freed

Bulletin: US captain held by pirates off Somalia has been freed. 3 of 4 pirates killed.
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Sunday, April 5, 2009

Small Plane Crashes Off Smith's Point

Suffolk County Police Homicide Squad detectives are investigating a single-engine plane crash in Mastic Beach that claimed the life of the pilot this afternoon.

Suffolk County Police received several 911 calls at approximately 1:25 p.m. today reporting that a small plane crashed into the water off Smith Point County Park. The Suffolk County Marine Bureau, Seventh Precinct police officers, Suffolk County Park Police, the United States Coast Guard and the New York Air National Guard 106th Rescue Wing conducted search and rescue efforts. The plane has not been recovered. 

Robert Baranaskas, 61, of Northport, has been identified as the pilot of the World War II-era plane. 

The Federal Aviation Administration will conduct an investigation to determine the cause of the crash.
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

Italian Poetry Contest Awards


Two Smithtown High School East students were awarded Honorable Mention at an Italian Poetry Contest at Stony Brook University on March 27th. Alissa Cutrone and Taylor Trentadue are ninth grade students in Ms. Yarcak’s Italian 2 class.

Gunman in Binghamton, N.Y., shooting felt 'looked down upon'

By Matthew Chayes and Andrew Strickler

Newsday

(MCT)

NEW YORK _ The gunman behind the deadliest shooting rampage in modern New York history was apparently disgruntled because he'd been recently fired and felt "looked down upon" because of his broken English, Binghamton, N.Y.'s city police chief said Saturday.

Wearing a bulletproof vest and armed with two handguns and a satchel of ammunition, Jiverly Wong, 41, stormed an upstate center for immigrants _ where he had himself been a student until last month _ fatally shot 13 people on Friday and wounded four others before turning a gun on himself, officials said.

Police said the body armor and the extra ammunition suggested the attack was well-planned and that Wong anticipated a firefight with police, although he killed himself just before police arrived.

"He was upset about losing his job and felt disrespected and looked down upon because of his not being able to speak English," Joseph Zikuski of the Binghamton Police Bureau said Saturday.

Zikuski said people close to Wong, who had changed his last name to Voong and lived with his mother, father and sister in nearby Johnson City, told police that Wong's violent spree was "no surprise" to them.

But, Zikuski said, "We may never know the true motive."

The chief said the shooter had been laid off from his job as a per diem employee at Shop-Vac.

The bloodbath began Friday when the shooter arrived at the American Civic Association, which helps immigrants settle in the United States, in Binghamton shortly before 10:30 a.m. He blocked a rear exit with a Toyota Camry borrowed from his father, police said, before entering the front door.

"He never spoke a word," Zikuski said Saturday at a news conference.

He quickly shot two receptionists before turning to an adjacent classroom and firing repeatedly at people there. One wounded receptionist, who police said pretended to be dead, called 911 and hid under a desk.

The suspected gunman's body was found in the classroom where the shooting happened. Two handguns, for which Wong had permits, were recovered.

A total of 37 people _ including more than two dozen people who heard the initial shots and barricaded themselves in a boiler room _ escaped unhurt.

Most of those killed did not speak English and were at the center for language and citizenship classes. Andrew Block, a Binghamton city spokesman, said officials have begun to reach out to friends and relatives of victims. Zikuski said authorities would try to begin releasing names of victims late Saturday.

The two handguns were registered to Jiverly Wong, he said; fingerprints on the gun permit matched fingerprints taken from the shooter's body.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Among the wounded was a visiting chemistry scholar from Binghamton University, according to school spokesman Ryan Yarosh. The position is supported by the Chinese government, although he could not confirm the scholar's nationality.

As SWAT teams spent hours securing the building, relatives of many still inside waited for word at a nearby relief center.

Among them was Omri Yigal, 53, whose wife, Dolores, was at the center Friday morning. A recent immigrant from the Philippines, she takes English classes in the hope of attaining American citizenship, Yigal said.

"I need to know where she is, how she's doing and if she's OK," Omri said as he stood in a drizzle.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

New York Gov. David A. Paterson expressed his "profound outrage at a senseless act of violence in which innocent people were killed, injured and probably traumatized."

The shooting follows several other bloody incidents in recent months and years. In March alone, gunmen in North Carolina, California and Alabama shot and killed a total of 23 people in separate incidents. Last year, a man opened fire in an Illinois university lecture hall, fatally shooting five students before committing suicide. In April 2007, Seung-Hui Cho fatally shot 32 people at Virginia Tech University in Blacksburg.

Vice President Joe Biden, who was in Manhattan to deliver a speech Friday, asked for prayers for the Binghamton community. "We got to figure out a way to deal with this senseless, senseless violence," he said.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

Among the community and government organizations offering assistance is the American Red Cross Southern Tier Chapter, whose executive director said victims and their families might continue to reach out for help well after the shooting.

"They may not need us today, they may need us next week," she said. "It's like when there's a death in the family, and you spend the first few days planning the funeral, it's very busy. You don't really process. The processing comes after all that initial activity and you realize what's happened," executive director Cynthia Gordineer said.

___

(Evan Drellich in Binghamton, N.Y., contributed to this report.)

___

© 2009, Newsday.

Visit Newsday online at http://www.newsday.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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GRAPHIC (from MCT Graphics, 202-383-6064): NY SHOOTINGS

North Korea Rocket Launch

Bulletin: North Korea fires 'test' rocket over ocean. The rocket was believed launch over Japanese ocean. No threat. The fear on behalf of countries such as China, South Korea and the U.S. is the apparent available of such technology in North Korea, a feared nuclear country.