Friday, January 29, 2016
tmor Publications A Blank Slate Media/Li Special Section
$1
The PULse oF The PeNiNsULa
vol. 91, no. 5
VaLeNTiNe DiNiNG aND GiFT GUiDe
FeW TickeTs For kaiMaN iN, shoP DeLiGhT BosWorTh NoT
PAGES 31-38, 47-54
PAGE 2
PAGE 6
January 29, 2016
Singas sworn in as new Nassau DA
WHItEoUt
Renews campaign promises to fight against political corruption By N o a h M a N s k a r At her inauguration to her first full term Monday, Nassau County District Attorney Madeline Singas renewed her pledge to make fighting public corruption the foundation of her administration, as it was the foundation of her 2015 campaign. Speaking to local elected officials, police officers, political supporters and family, the Manhasset resident said her election confirmed that she speaks “for the people, all of the people” as the county’s top prosecutor. “Those that think they can abuse their position of trust, exploit the taxpayers or manipulate the government for their own process and their own profit must think twice,” Singas told the crowd at the Cradle of Aviation Museum in Garden City. “Every crime against public trust, no matter how insigificant, corrodes our faith in government and corrupts our very institutions.”
Singas, 49, took the helm of the Nassau DA’s office in an acting capacity last January, when former DA and current U.S. Rep. Kathleen Rice (D-Garden City) took her seat in Congress. Janet DiFiore, the newly appointed Chief Judge of the New York State Court of Appeals, administered her oath of office. Singas won a full term in November, beating former Hempstead Town Supervisor Kate Murray, a Republican from Levittown, with 58 percent of the vote to Murray’s 42 percent. In the race, Singas touted her work toward contract reform in Nassau County following the indictment of former state Sen. Dean Skelos, the Rockville Centre Republican, last May. State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman called Singas a “rock star of reform” and said her election in November was “one of the most important shots fired in the battle for reform in the State of Continued on Page 69
PHOTO BY JOSH FORST
Great Neck Vigilant Fire Company members preparing for Winter Storm Jonas Saturday morning at their headquarters.
Vigilant fights unplowed roads to aid blizzard birth By J oe N i k i c The Great Neck Vigilant Fire Company overcame unplowed roads and ambulances stuck in the snow Saturday to deliver a Great Neck woman who had gone into labor dur-
ing Winter Storm Jonas to the hospital. Great Neck Vigilant Fire Company Chief Josh Forst said fire company members were returning to the station Saturday evening after aiding an injured pedestrian when they re-
ceived a call at 5:02 p.m. about a woman on Old Pond Road in labor. “We got to the house and walked in and the woman said she was eight-and-a-half months pregnant and her waContinued on Page 69
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