Sunnyside
Chamber Hears
From Brown,
Pizzuti
BY
THOMAS COGAN
 |
| Both DA Brown and Assistant Chief Pizzuti favor the proposed move of the Police Academy to College Point. |
|
Queens District
Attorney Richard
Brown told the
April luncheon
audience of the
Sunnyside
Chamber of
Commerce that he
had just
returned from a
vacation spent
fishing in
Florida, an
interlude he
sought in the
wake of the
grand jury's
indictments in
the Sean Bell
shooting case.
The busy
schedule that
awaited him upon
his return
forced him to
leave the
meeting early,
and thus he
could not share
the spotlight
with Assistant
Chief Diana
Pizzuti,
commander of
Patrol Borough
Queens North,
who was also
scheduled to
appear but got
delayed arriving
from a school
safety
conference in
Brooklyn.
Auxiliary Police
personnel were
also commended.
Finally, there
were
announcements of
some meetings
and a religious
tolerance
project to be
presented by
LaGuardia
Community
College in the
last half of
May.
Brown began
by saying that
the Sean Bell
grand jury
procedure was
the biggest he
has ever seen
and the best
handled. In
proceedings that
lasted more than
three weeks (22
days of
prosecution and
defense,
followed by
three days'
deliberation)
and elicited
testimony from
500 witnesses,
indictments were
returned on
three police
officers and the
case is headed
for trial. "I
will fight
vigorously to
keep that case
in Queens
County," Brown
said, as a reply
to those who
would take it to
a venue outside
the borough
where the
shooting
incident took
place the
weekend after
last
Thanksgiving.
Getting around
to general
matters, he said
he has 300
assistant
district
attorneys and
each year
receives 1,300
applications for
about 35 ADA
positions in
Queens. Those
who are hired
make a
three-year
commitment, and
then, as Brown
said, perhaps
overstating, "We
lose them."
Recentlygraduated
law students
tend to have a
heavy debt
burden, and
while they will
tolerate
relatively low
pay in exchange
for the valuable
experience of
working in the
Queens DA's
office (hence
the 35-40
applications for
every one
appointment),
it's on to
higher pay
elsewhere when
the commitment
is fulfilled.
Brown said that
wherever the
former ADAs
land, he
believes those
hiring them
should be
impressed by the
education in law
they have had in
his office. The
matter of a
tight budget
came up again
when Brown was
asked about Bill
53, a measure
coming out of
the City Council
public safety
committee,
chaired by
Councilmember
Peter Vallone
Jr. As law, it
would demand
"charge or
release"
regarding the
recently
incarcerated:
either arraign
the detainee or
let the detainee
go. Brown said
that fast
arraignments are
good for his $35
million budget;
additionally,
they get police
officers back to
their
crime-fighting
duties and out
of the courts,
where they are
required as
witnesses to
arrests. Even
though Queens
has the fastest
arrest-to-arraignment
rate, 18.5 hours
(in contrast,
the rate in The
Bronx is 30
hours, he said),
he'd like it to
be even faster.
Before the
District
Attorney left,
he introduced
Jesse Sligh,
executive ADA
and head of the
DA's crime
victims advocate
program, and
also referred to
the breakfast
he'd had with
special victims
unit personnel
that morning,
which he called
an hour and a
half of
excellent
dialogue.
Assistant Chief
Pizzuti came in
after Brown had
left and was
quickly asked,
as Brown had
been asked
before her,
about the
proposal to move
the Police
Academy from 235
E. 20th St. in
Manhattan to
College Point.
She said she
favored it,
since she
understood it
would be far
larger than the
current academy
(as did Brown,
for the same
reason). She was
commander of the
academy from
2002 to 2006
(where she
oversaw training
of 14,000
rookies), and
believes that
its current
facilities are
no longer
adequate for the
training task.
When Marc
Leavitt, a local
attorney, noted
that the
incarcerated
tended to have
education
problems and
asked if she
foresees
schooling
programs at
Rikers Island,
she said she was
more in favor of
earlier
intervention, in
the public
schools. For
example, she
said, she would
like to develop
a program to
teach middle
school students
how to resist
dangerous peer
pressure.
Diane Ballek
of the 108th
Police Precinct
Community
Council
presented
plaques to two
auxiliary
officers,
Sergeant Greg
Baranowski and
Officer. Thomas
Massa, who
recently
responded to a
call to aid
someone who had
apparently
suffered a heart
attack. The
incident
involved
defibrillating
the victim
twice. Captain
Thomas Kavanagh,
commander of the
108th Precinct,
called the
auxiliary force
"a seven-day
operation".
Apart from
the general
luncheon theme
of law
enforcement,
Elise Johmann of
LaGuardia
Community
College related
news about
Difficult
Dialogues, a
Ford
Foundation-sponsored
project that
brings members
of various
religious
denominations
together in a
series of study
circles aimed at
establishing
better
understanding
and tolerance.
As its title
implies, the
series may prove
those virtues
are gained only
with
considerable
effort. The
dialogues will
be held at the
school and
various houses
of worship in
Queens (such as
St. Joan of Arc
in Jackson
Heights),
beginning
Saturday, May 12
and ending
Wednesday, May
30 at LaGuardia,
where the
meeting will
feature a
performance by a
choral group. |