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Pleasantville, N.Y.: A Walkable Village That Checks ‘All the Boxes’

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Pleasantville, N.Y.: A Walkable Village That Checks ‘All the Boxes’

Before discovering Pleasantville, N.Y., several years ago, Erin Williams lived with her husband and elementary-school-age daughter in a succession of Westchester communities. They bought a house in Ossining, N.Y., but found the commute to Manhattan too time-consuming. And getting around town wasn’t any easier. After selling their house and renting in Manhattan for a while, they moved into a rental in Tarrytown, N.Y., while searching for their next stop.

That’s when they hit upon Pleasantville, a village in the Westchester town of Mount Pleasant. There, the family found a three-bedroom 1880s colonial house for $600,000, in a close-knit neighborhood with residents of various cultures, near the village center.

“It checked all the boxes,” said Ms. Williams, 40, a graphic novelist, who likes the area’s walkability, the school system and the community. “We love our neighbors. One snow-blows our driveway without asking and another, a Korean lady, brings us cucumbers from her garden.”

Another draw was the arts scene. At the center of the village is the Jacob Burns Film Center, which has been attracting moviegoers from Westchester and beyond for more than 20 years. Three of the five screening rooms were recently revamped and there are plans to install a wine bar, said Denise Treco, the center’s director of marketing and communications.

The film center “put Pleasantville on the map,” said Hillary Landau, an associate real estate broker with Compass, attracting a “very eclectic” mix of residents, including “creative types, entrepreneurs, doctors, lawyers.”

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Her clients from New York City and elsewhere in Westchester, she added, “want to walk into town, to the train and to the farmers’ market.”

That should be even easier come fall, when a state-sponsored project to widen downtown sidewalks and add more pedestrian-friendly streets is expected to be completed, said Eric Morrissey, the village administrator. And a 79-unit rental building currently under construction downtown will yield more housing — both market-rate and affordable apartments — a short walk from the train station. (Other planned development includes a handful of single-family homes on a 1.2-acre site outside the village center that once was owned by the Girl Scouts Heart of the Hudson.)

Loretta Chiavetta, an agent with Coldwell Banker, wanted the same small-town experience for her family that she had as a child in Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y., when she and her husband moved out of a Manhattan co-op 30 years ago. With prices too high in Hastings, she said, they visited Pleasantville at the suggestion of a relative. There, Ms. Chiavetta saw “kids in the street and bikes on the lawn,” and was hooked.

Her family settled into an 1890 three-bedroom colonial house on Washington Avenue, in the downtown area, within walking distance of restaurants, shops and the Metro-North station. Ms. Chiavetta still lives there with her husband and college-age daughter, and now has many clients seeking the same experience.

“There are so many from Brooklyn,” she said. “And I can see why — the charm of the houses, the walkability of the village and the closeness of the city.”

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Pleasantville occupies less than two square miles in the town of Mount Pleasant, in Westchester County, about 30 miles north of Manhattan. According to 2021 census figures, the village has around 7,400 residents, about 84 percent of whom identify as white, 14 percent as Hispanic, 4 percent as Black, 4 percent as Asian and 3 percent as multiracial. The median household income was $165,987.

The village is best known for its colonial-style houses downtown, but the inventory also includes ranches, split-levels and Cape Cod-style homes on lots of a third of an acre or less. While larger houses on bigger lots can be found farther from the village center, “you don’t come to Pleasantville to get an acre and a pool,” Ms. Landau said.

Attached townhouses are available at Club Court, a development bordering a nine-hole golf course operated by the Pleasantville Country Club, and at the Enclave at Pleasantville, a high-end Toll Brothers development. Foxwood offers condominiums in a multi-building complex, and there are garden-style condominiums at Greenwood and Pleasantville Gardens. As for co-ops, options include the Commons, Pleasant Manor and Ledgerock Gardens. Apartment rentals include lofts along Washington Avenue and one- and two-bedroom units at the Atwood, on Vanderbilt Avenue.

With low inventory, high demand and rising mortgage rates, this is a “very competitive time for buyers,” said Ms. Chiavetta, who co-hosts “The Real Estate Connection,” a local cable show about real estate.

According to a Coldwell Banker analysis of data from the OneKey Multiple Listing Service, the median sales price of a single-family home dropped to $652,500 in April, from $784,000 a year earlier. This was due, in part, to fewer sales at the high end — and fewer sales overall — than during the previous year, Ms. Chiavetta said.

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In April, there were 16 single-family homes on the market in the Pleasantville postal zone, including a three-bedroom, one-bath raised ranch listed for $599,000, and a five-bedroom, four-and-a-half-bath home listed for $3.999 million. Also listed were two three-bedroom townhouses (for $1.99 million and $1.050 million) and several condominiums ranging from $240,000 to $429,900.

Monthly apartment rentals can run $4,800 for a loft on Washington Avenue or slightly less than $3,000 for a one-bedroom at the Atwood, on Vanderbilt Avenue.

On nice days, students in middle school and high school stroll from their nearby campus to Frank & Joe’s Deli and the Black Cow Coffee Company on Wheeler Avenue, in the village center. Diners fill the outdoor tables at Pubstreet and Fatt Root, an Asian food shop recently featured in Westchester Magazine, while brown-baggers eat lunch on benches along Memorial Plaza. Cheese lovers praise Second Mouse Cheese on Manville Road. For casual dining, there is the Pleasantville Diner, on Memorial Plaza.

On Saturday mornings, the Pleasantville Farmers Market — considered by some the best in Westchester — draws crowds to Memorial Plaza. Popular annual events include the Pleasantville Music Festival, which will be held this year on July 8 at Parkway Field, and Pleasantville Day, a celebration of the village’s food, goods and services held in May at Memorial Plaza.

Favorite spots for young families include the playing fields at Roselle Park and Soldiers & Sailors Park, as well as the pool at Nannahagan Park. Mountain bikers enjoy five miles of trails in Graham Hills Park, off Route 117. Indoor activities are held at the Mount Pleasant Public Library, on Bedford Road, and the Recreation Center, on Marble Avenue. Older residents gather at the Senior Center on Clinton Street. For Ping-Pong fans, there is the Westchester Table Tennis Center, on Tompkins Avenue.

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The Pleasantville Union Free School District has an enrollment of about 1,635 at three schools. Bedford Road School serves students in kindergarten through fourth grade; Pleasantville Middle School and Pleasantville High School share a campus on Romer Avenue, serving students in fifth through 12th grade. Some high school students are from nearby Pocantico Hills, which does not have a high school.

“The school is the hub here,” said Tina DeSa, the superintendent of schools. “We care about the kids, and that’s why everyone wants to live in Pleasantville.”

According to New York State Education Department data from 2021-22, Pleasantville High School had a 97 percent graduation rate and the student body was 73 percent white, 15 percent Hispanic, 6 percent Asian, 2 percent Black and 4 percent multiracial. Average SAT scores for the class of 2022 reported by the district were 618 in evidence-based reading and writing and 622 in math, compared with statewide averages of 534 and 533. The high school was named a National Blue Ribbon School in 2021.

A 200-acre branch of Pace University is also in Pleasantville.

The trip to Grand Central Terminal in Manhattan on the Harlem Line of the Metro-North Railroad takes a little less than an hour. A one-way ticket bought in advance is $14.75; a monthly pass is $322.

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Annual parking passes are available for $600 to village residents and business owners only. For nonresidents, there are 12-hour and hourly parking spaces.

In the 18th century, Pleasantville was an agricultural area known as the Manor of Philipseburgh. Early inhabitants included members of the Sint Sincks and Rechgawawanks Native American tribes, as well as Dutch settlers and Quakers.

In the mid-1800s, the village was known as Clark’s Corners. During the Civil War, it was a stop on the Underground Railroad. Past residents include the writers Lillian Hellman and Dashiell Hammett, and the actor Sidney Poitier. Reader’s Digest magazine was co-founded by a former resident, DeWitt Wallace, and was headquartered in the village before it moved to neighboring Chappaqua and, later, to Manhattan. The Usonia Historic District, a planned community designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in the 1940s, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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New York

Who Are Key Players in the Menendez Case?

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Who Are Key Players in the Menendez Case?

Senator Robert Menendez, Democrat of New Jersey, and his wife, Nadine Menendez, are accused of taking part in a wide-ranging, international bribery scheme. Federal prosecutors in Manhattan have charged them with accepting bribes worth hundreds of thousands of dollars from several New Jersey businessmen in exchange for political favors.

Mr. Menendez goes to trial on May 13 with two of the businessmen, Fred Daibes and Wael Hana. Ms. Menendez’s trial was postponed after her lawyers said she had a serious medical condition requiring surgery and a recovery period; it is now expected to start in July. All four have pleaded not guilty.

Defendants

Senator Robert Menendez

New Jersey Senator

First elected to Congress in 1992, Mr. Menendez is now charged with taking bribes of gold, cash and a luxury car in exchange for trying to aid the governments of Egypt and Qatar, and seeking to disrupt separate criminal investigations involving his allies in New Jersey.

After his arrest, he stepped down, as required, as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, but he has refused calls to resign and left open the possibility that he will run for re-election in November if he is exonerated at trial. This is his second federal bribery trial in seven years. In the earlier case, a jury was unable to reach a verdict and the charges were later dismissed.

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Fred Daibes

New Jersey Real Estate Developer

Mr. Daibes is accused of giving Mr. Menendez furniture, gold and cash. These were bribes, prosecutors say, for Mr. Menendez’s efforts to have unrelated federal bank fraud charges Mr. Daibes faces in New Jersey quashed and for the senator’s help in lining up financing for a stalled real estate project.

Wael Hana

Founder of the IS EG Halal company

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Prosecutors say that Mr. Hana, a United States citizen born in Egypt, helped to arrange meetings with the senator and Egyptian officials that led to a lucrative monopoly for Mr. Hana’s company, IS EG Halal. The company, which certifies that products shipped to Egypt are prepared according to Islamic law, was used to funnel bribes to the Menendezes in exchange for the senator’s s efforts to steer U.S. weapons and aid to Egypt, according to the indictment.

Nadine Menendez

Mr. Menendez’s Wife

Ms. Menendez served as a go-between for Mr. Menendez, Egyptian intelligence officials and men who were seeking political favors from the senator, according to the indictment. Prosecutors say that bribes and messages went through Ms. Menendez to the senator.

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The Co-Operator

Jose Uribe

Former New Jersey insurance broker

Mr. Uribe had been charged with seeking the senator’s help to scuttle state insurance fraud investigations that involved Mr. Uribe’s associates. He pleaded guilty in March and agreed to cooperate with the government, admitting in court that he had given a $60,000 Mercedes-Benz to Ms. Menendez to influence the senator.

The Court

Judge Sidney H. Stein

Presiding Judge

He was appointed by former President Bill Clinton to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York in 1995. Among the more prominent defendants whose cases he has overseen are Jennifer Shah, a “Real Housewives” star sentenced to 78 months in prison in connection with a telemarketing fraud scheme, and Hassan Nemazee, a major donor to Democratic political causes, who was sentenced to 12 years in a bank fraud case.

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Prosecution Team

Damian Williams

U.S. Attorney, Southern District of New York

Mr. Williams joined the U.S. attorney’s office in 2012 and was named by President Biden to the top post in 2021. He leads an office of 220 assistant U.S. attorneys and executives. He has overseen the prosecutions of defendants like Sam Bankman-Fried, convicted of stealing billions of dollars from his FTX cryptocurrency exchange, and Juan Orlando Hernández, the ex-Honduran president convicted in a cocaine importation case.

Christina Clark

Trial Attorney, Justice Department

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She works in the department’s national security division. Ms. Clark helped to prosecute the former high-ranking F.B.I. official Charles McGonigal, who pleaded guilty in a money-laundering case in connection with his work for a Russian oligarch under sanctions.

Catherine Ghosh

Assistant U.S. Attorney, Southern District, Public Corruption Unit

She helped prosecute 70 current and former employees of the New York City Housing Authority in what the authorities called the “largest single-day bribery takedown in the history of the Justice Department.”

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Eli Mark

Assistant U.S. Attorney, Public Corruption Unit

He helped to prosecute defendants in an N.C.A.A. basketball recruiting scandal, as well as a former State Supreme Court justice in an obstruction case.

Paul Monteleoni

Assistant U.S. Attorney, Public Corruption Unit

He helped to prosecute a former Brooklyn assistant district attorney in a bribery case and Robert Hadden, a former Columbia gynecologist who lured patients to his office and abused them.

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Lara Pomerantz

Assistant U.S. Attorney, Public Corruption Unit

She helped to prosecute Ghislaine Maxwell, the former companion to Jeffrey Epstein, in a sex trafficking case and Norman Seabrook, the former longtime president of New York City’s correction officers’ union, in a bribery case.

Daniel Richenthal

Deputy Chief of the Southern District’s Criminal Division

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He helped to win the convictions of Sheldon Silver, the former Democratic speaker of the New York State Assembly, and Michael Avenatti, the once high-flying lawyer who tried to extort more than $20 million from the apparel giant Nike.

Defense Lawyers

Adam Fee

Lawyer for Robert Menendez

He previously spent five years as a prosecutor in the U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District — the same office prosecuting Mr. Menendez. Based in California, Mr. Fee focuses on white-collar criminal defense work.

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Avi Weitzman

Lawyer for Mr. Menendez

He spent nearly seven years as a Southern District prosecutor and is now a New York City based partner at the same law firm as Mr. Fee, with an emphasis on complex civil and criminal cases.

Lawrence Lustberg

Lawyer for Wael Hana

A prominent New Jersey defense attorney, he was previously a federal public defender. He also represents Mr. Daibes in the pending bank fraud case in New Jersey.

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César de Castro

Lawyer for Fred Daibes

Previously a prosecutor in the Manhattan district attorney’s office, he now runs his own New York City-based law firm. Last year, he represented Genaro García Luna, Mexico’s former top security official who, after a high-profile federal trial in Brooklyn, was convicted of taking millions of dollars from the Sinaloa drug cartel.

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Video: Judge Says Michael Cohen Must Stop Taunting Trump

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Video: Judge Says Michael Cohen Must Stop Taunting Trump

Ahead of what could be the most explosive testimony in Donald J. Trump’s criminal trial, the judge on Friday told prosecutors that he was personally asking that Michael D. Cohen stop taunting the former president. Jonah Bromwich, a criminal justice reporter at The New York Times, gives his takeaways.

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Live Updates: Quiet End of Week for Trump Trial as Cohen Looms as Witness

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Prosecutors said they could rest their case as soon as Thursday, and the judge asked them to keep Michael D. Cohen, expected to take the stand on Monday, from attacking Donald J. Trump in the meantime. Five witnesses testified Friday in rapid succession.

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