Serving Roslyn, East Hills, Roslyn Estates, Roslyn Harbor, Roslyn Heights, Greenvale, Old Westbury and North Hills
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Friday, December 11, 2020
Vol. 8, No. 50
HOLIDAY DINING, GIFT GUIDE
EX-HOME OF J.P. MORGAN FOR SALE
ELECTION RESULTS CERTIFIED
PAGES 23-32
PAGE 2
PAGE 8
Late F. Hill mayor named in Trump suit
REAL CUTUPS
Estate of John Walter sued in rent fraud case involving president BY R O S E W E L D ON The late Flower Hill Mayor John Walter has been named in a case against his cousin, President Donald Trump, as the Trump Organization faces a class-action lawsuit saying that tenants of over 14,000 apartments in Trumpowned buildings across New York City in the 1990s were overcharged on rent. Walter, the son of Fred Trump Sr.’s sister Elizabeth Trump Walter and first cousin to the president, lived in Flower Hill’s Manhasset area for most of his life and served as mayor of the village from 1988 to 1996. He died in January 2018. The case alleges a long-running scheme in which a Trumpcontrolled company, All County Building Supply, artificially increased the cost of appliances and other materials, which led to raised rents. The scheme was first reported in a 2018 New York Times investigative article.
Twenty plaintiffs are named, representing a class of victims who formerly were tenants of 30 of the Trump Organization’s rentregulated buildings in Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island in the 1990s. The buildings were sold in 2004, but the plaintiffs claim that the inflated rents persisted. The suit was filed in New York State Supreme Court in Brooklyn, and the plaintiffs are represented by attorneys Jerrold S. Parker and Raymond Silverman of Port Washington-based Parker Waichman LLP. “This is a massive fraud spanning 28 years, victimizing several hundred thousand tenants in Trump regulated apartments and needs to be addressed,” Parker said in a statement to The Washington Post. “These regulated tenants, many of whom struggle just to pay the rent and put food on the table, must be made whole for the money that was unlawfully Continued on Page 36
PHOTO COURTESY OF MIKE KLEBA
A cardboard cutout of North Shore school district Superintendent Peter Giarrizzo, right, awaits a performance of North Shore Masquers’ winter play “The 39 Steps” while seated next to a cutout of Alfred Hitchcock, who directed the play’s film adaptation. The Masquers filmed their production, a radio play, before an audience of cutouts and streamed it over Broadway HD last week.
New FAA deal reached, say Suozzi, Schumer BY R O S E W E L D ON The Federal Aviation Administration has revised air traffic procedures for the New York metropolitan area to reduce aircraft noise for
communities, U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-Glen Cove) and Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY) announced Monday. The new procedure will improve the quality of life for areas in the flight plan of
John F. Kennedy Airport like Roslyn, East Hills, East Williston and New Hyde Park, as well as Huntington Station, Huntington, East Norwich and Old Brookville, according to Continued on Page 36
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