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Thomas Demakos, Judge in Howard Beach Murder Case, Dies at 98

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Thomas Demakos, Judge in Howard Beach Murder Case, Dies at 98

In 1974, Mr. Demakos prosecuted Thomas J. Shea, the primary New York Metropolis police officer indicted on costs of homicide dedicated in the midst of obligation. The officer, a white man, had shot a 10-year-old Black boy, Clifford Glover, in South Jamaica, Queens, in what he mentioned was self-defense. An all-white jury acquitted him, and the capturing and the decision spawned riots.

In 1989, as some 250 law enforcement officials within the courtroom cheered, Justice Demakos sentenced a 23-year-old drug supplier to the utmost of 25 years to life in jail for the homicide of Edward Byrne, a rookie New York Metropolis police officer, the earlier 12 months.

“This vile act was additionally a lethal declaration of conflict towards the very foundations of our society and a defilement of the cornerstone on which our criminal-justice system relies,” Justice Demakos mentioned through the sentencing.

He was born Anastasisos Demakos, a son of Greek immigrants, on Nov. 28, 1923, in Manhattan and raised within the Bronx. (He was at Yankee Stadium in 1939 when Lou Gehrig delivered his well-known “luckiest man on this planet” speech.) His father, Gust C. Demakos, was a restaurant proprietor. His mom, Jane (Chrisomalis) Demakos, was a homemaker. He legally modified his title to Thomas in 1955.

After serving within the Marine Corps from 1943 to 1946, he earned a bachelor’s diploma in accounting from Lengthy Island College in 1949 and a grasp’s in enterprise administration from New York College in 1952.

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He practiced accounting for a number of years however turned bored and enrolled in N.Y.U.’s College of Regulation, graduating in 1957. He was named an assistant prosecutor in 1962, after the Greek Orthodox Church flexed its political muscle for the appointment of a Greek American to the district legal professional’s workplace. He was made chief assistant in 1975.

Justice Demakos served on the Felony Court docket from 1980 to 1985. He was elected to the Supreme Court docket in 1985 and served till 1999, when he reached the obligatory retirement age of 76. He was a judicial listening to officer till 2011.

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New York

Video: Adams’s Former Chief Adviser and Her Son Charged With Corruption

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Video: Adams’s Former Chief Adviser and Her Son Charged With Corruption

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Adams’s Former Chief Adviser and Her Son Charged With Corruption

Ingrid Lewis-Martin, who resigned as Mayor Eric Adams’s chief adviser, and her son, Glenn D. Martin II, were charged with taking $100,000 in bribes from two businessmen in a quid-pro-quo scheme.

We allege that Ingrid Lewis-Martin engaged in a long-running bribery, money laundering and conspiracy scheme by using her position and authority as the chief adviser of — chief adviser to the New York City mayor, the second-highest position in city government — to illegally influence city decisions in exchange for in excess of $100,000 in cash and other benefits for herself and her son, Glenn Martin II. We allege that real estate developers and business owners Raizada “Pinky” Vaid and Mayank Dwivedi paid for access and influence to the tune more than $100,000. Lewis-Martin acted as an on-call consultant for Vaid and Dwivedi, serving at their pleasure to resolve whatever issues they had with D.O.B. on their construction projects, and she did so without regard for security considerations and with utter and complete disregard for D.O.B.’s expertise and the public servants who work there.

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Read the Criminal Complaint Against Luigi Mangione

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Read the Criminal Complaint Against Luigi Mangione

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
V.
LUIGI NICHOLAS MANGIONE,
Defendant.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK, ss.:
Original
AUSAS: Dominic A. Gentile,
Jun Xiang, Alexandra Messiter
24 MAG 4375
SEALED COMPLAINT
Violations of
18 U.S.C. §§ 2261A, 2261(b), 924(j), and
924(c)
COUNTY OF OFFENSE:
NEW YORK
GARY W. COBB, being duly sworn, deposes and says that he is a Special Agent with the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, and charges as follows:
COUNT ONE
(Stalking – Travel in Interstate Commerce)
1. From at least in or about November 24, 2024 to in or about December 4, 2024, in
the Southern District of New York and elsewhere, LUIGI NICHOLAS MANGIONE, the
defendant, traveled in interstate commerce with the intent to kill, injure, harass, intimidate, and place
under surveillance with intent to kill, injure, harass, and intimidate another person, and in the
course of, and as a result of, such travel engaged in conduct that placed that person in reasonable
fear of the death of, and serious bodily injury to, that person, and in the course of engaging in such
conduct caused the death of that person, to wit, MANGIONE, traveled from Georgia to New York,
New York for the purpose of stalking and killing Brian Thompson, and while in New York,
MANGIONE stalked and then shot and killed Thompson in the vicinity of West 54th Street and
Sixth Avenue.
(Title 18, United States Code, Sections 2261A(1)(A) and 2261(b)(1).)
COUNT TWO
(Stalking – Use of Interstate Facilities)
2. From at least in or about November 24, 2024 to in or about December 4, 2024, in
the Southern District of New York and elsewhere, LUIGI NICHOLAS MANGIONE, the
defendant, with the intent to kill, injure, harass, intimidate, and place under surveillance with intent
to kill, injure, harass, and intimidate another person, used an electronic communication service and
electronic communication system of interstate commerce, and a facility of interstate or foreign
commerce, to engage in a course of conduct that placed that person in reasonable fear of the death
of and serious bodily injury to that person, and in the course of engaging in such conduct caused
the death of that person, to wit, MANGIONE used a cellphone, interstate wires, interstate

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Video: Luigi Mangione Is Charged With Murder

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Luigi Mangione Is Charged With Murder

The first-degree murder charge branded him a terrorist over the killing of UnitedHealthcare’s chief executive, Brian Thompson.

We are here to announce that Luigi Mangione, the defendant, is charged with one count of murder in the first degree and two counts of murder in the second degree, including one count of murder in the second degree as an act of terrorism for the brazen, targeted and premeditated shooting of Brian Thompson, who, as was as you know, was the C.E.O. of UnitedHealthcare. This was a frightening, well-planned, targeted murder that was intended to cause shock and attention and intimidation. It occurred in one of the most bustling parts of our city, threatening the safety of local residents and tourists alike, commuters and businesspeople just starting out on their day.

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