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NYPD Arrest Hatzolah Member

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נשלח ב-30/8/2005 14:04 לינק ישיר 
NYPD Arrest Hatzolah Member

Manhattan +Hatzolah Dispute+ At 19 Pitt Stree Hatzolah requesting all available members to proceed to the 7th Pct station house, due to a dispute involving Hatzolah members and PD, one Hatzolah member under arrest.


http://vosizneias.blogspot.com/2005/08/manhattan-hatzolah-dispute.html



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נשלח ב-9/9/2005 18:22 לינק ישיר 

מצורף קובץ

Shalom Jacob, in rear seat, as he leaves the precinct, ducks out of view of a photographer.

http://www.thevillager.com/villager_123/grandstmanagers.html



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נשלח ב-9/9/2005 18:19 לינק ישיר 

מצורף קובץ

Grand St. manager's son arrested in E.M.S. ruckus


By Albert Amateau

When Shalom Jacob, 37, a supervisor with Hatzolah, the Jewish volunteer ambulance service on the Lower East Side, was arrested on the evening of Aug. 29 for trying to force his way passed an Emergency Medical Service team into a Grand St. apartment to help an elderly distressed woman, it was the beginning of a high-profile brouhaha that echoed for a week.

Jacob, the son of Heshie Jacob, manager of the East River and Hillman co-ops on Grand St. and longtime friend of Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, was brought in handcuffs to the Seventh Precinct, and before he left about three hours later, his father, Silver and a crowd of Jacob's Grand St. supporters had gathered at the Pitt St. police station demanding his release. Deputy Chief Brian Conroy of Manhattan South Borough Command also came to the precinct in response to the incident.

It wasn't until the following day that police served Shalom Jacob with a desk-appearance ticket for disorderly conduct.

Silver said later that he had suggested the summons be written and held at the precinct until a Wed. Aug. 31 meeting with police, Hatzolah and the Jacob father and son. However, the Wednesday meeting was cancelled. The speaker told reporters that he had not suggested that no violation at all should be issued.

But on Tuesday, Seventh Precinct members of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association — the police union — protested that Shalom Jacob had been released without a charge and that, when finally issued, the charge had been downgraded from obstructing government administration.

''Does this mean that anytime officers of the Seventh Precinct have to take enforcement action against anyone dressed in Hasidic clothes they are going to be overly scrutinized?'' said Officer Aaron Jackson, the P.B.A. delegate at the Seventh Precinct. ''They should be able to enforce the law impartially, not one way against some people and another way for everyone else.''

But Paul J. Browne, the Police Department's deputy chief for public information, said on Thursday, ''Nothing was downgraded or voided. Police officers are expected to enforce the law impartially and they are supported by the Police Department in doing so.''

The incident started when the E.M.S. team arrived about 7:30 p.m. at a ninth-floor apartment at 575 Grand St. in the East River Houses to assist a 96-year-old disturbed woman. The volunteer Hatzolah ambulance turned up later, and although the Hatzolah attendants were told they were not needed, they refused to leave.

Meanwhile, Shalom Jacob, who also lives at 575 Grand St., arrived at the apartment and insisted that the Hatzolah volunteers should treat the distressed woman. Police said he put his foot in the door and tried to push past the E.M.S. team and police who accompanied them. ''At the time of the incident, he was not wearing a uniform or displaying any ID,'' a police spokesperson said.
Heshie Jacob also appeared at the apartment door and insisted the Hatzolah volunteers should treat the woman. But a police lieutenant told him he too would be arrested if he did not leave the floor.

The elder Jacob then went to the Pitt St. station, along with a group of Grand St. neighbors including Morris Faitelewicz, a Community Board 3 vice chairperson and citywide coordinator/deputy inspector of the Police Department's Auxiliary Police Support Emergency Services Rescue Unit.

Officers who declined to be identified said that instead of being held in a cell at the precinct, Shalom Jacob was held in a room usually reserved for juvenile suspects, with people constantly going in and out.

Silver, who also lives on Grand St., turned up at 10 p.m. on Aug. 29. He characterized his role as a mediator of a jurisdictional dispute between E.M.S. and Hatzolah.




Heshie Jacob, at right, looking at camera, Morris Faitelewicz, far left, and others converge at the Seventh Precinct on Pitt St., after Shalom Jacob was arrested on Aug. 29



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נשלח ב-5/9/2005 05:22 לינק ישיר 


ווי עס קוקט אויס וועט דאס זיין אין די קומענדיגע טעג נאכמאל פאר באהאנדלונג
וואס זאגט איר צו דעם קוקט אריין אין דעם באלאג
http://www.hatzolahtalk.com/

וואס איינע מיינע חברים אין הצלה האט מיר געגעבען ווי עס קוקט אויס וועט נאך זיין דארט הויך יו"ט ווי עס וועט אויסקראכרען דער קריג צווישען לאקאל אין סענטראל בפומבי אין דאס וועט זיין פין נאכוויען פין די פרשה




http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/03/nyregion/03precinct.html

An Emergency Call Brings So Much Help a Scuffle Breaks Out
By KAREEM FAHIM and COLIN MOYNIHAN
Set against the daily cadence of drama in the city, an emergency call from a Grand Street apartment on Monday night was routine enough. An elderly woman, suffering from Alzheimer's disease, was threatening to hurt herself, possibly with a knife. So her neighbors called for help.

It came sometime before 8 p.m., when a Fire Department ambulance arrived at the Lower East Side apartment. A few minutes later, two emergency medical technicians with Hatzolah, the volunteer Jewish ambulance service, arrived, summoned by the neighbors. Officers from the Seventh Precinct had also been called. The woman, it seemed, would have all the care she needed.

But a dispute broke out between a member of the Hatzolah crew and a police officer - resulting in the arrest of the Hatzolah volunteer - and the dispute escalated later that night into a shouting match involving a small crowd outside a Manhattan station house that calmed only after Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, who lives nearby, arrived and helped broker a truce. The Hatzolah volunteer, the son of a prominent local resident, was released.

Five days later, the emotional temperature has still not cooled. After the frenzied scene on Monday, the meeting planned as part of the truce was canceled and the police served the Hatzolah volunteer with a summons. Some officers are furious, saying they were coerced into giving preferential treatment to an organization with strong political connections. A petition circulating in the Seventh Precinct goes further, suggesting that the fight had religious overtones. The angry parties are set to meet next week, Mr. Silver said, to discuss the dispute and to make sure it does not happen again.

The entire episode took only a few days to develop into the kind of caustic New York brawl that can blister bystanders and leave scars on neighborhoods. It could lose steam just as suddenly. In interviews yesterday, though, the fight still seemed fresh. A volunteer for Hatzolah recalled the events that night, saying police officers and medical technicians on the scene had been insensitive, ignoring Hatzolah's advice that an elderly Jewish woman might be better cared for by their volunteers - familiar faces who had grown up in the neighborhood, and who speak Yiddish.

It all started downstairs from the woman's apartment, said the emergency medical technician, Kenny Fried, 22. When he arrived, he said, a Fire Department ambulance was outside the woman's building. "They said: 'We don't need you guys. You can leave,' " he said.

But they did not leave, Mr. Fried said, because they thought they had a special responsibility to the woman.

The dispute continued as a low-level squabble, Mr. Fried said, until the crews reached the woman's door.

There, police officers arrived, and so did a Hatzolah supervisor, Shalom Jacob. After that, conditions deteriorated, and Mr. Jacob was taken into custody.

While the course of events that evening remains the subject of dispute, there is general agreement that Mr. Jacob repeatedly appealed to officers at the scene to allow the Hatzolah volunteers to treat the woman.

A spokesman for the Police Department, Paul J. Browne, said Mr. Jacob tried to interfere with the care the woman was receiving, and as a result, he was arrested.

Fire officials said that the Fire Department emergency medical technicians were already treating the woman quite capably and that allowing another crew to do so would have changed the patient's environment, possibly making her worse. The department crew "rendered excellent patient care," and took the woman to Bellevue Hospital Center in stable condition, a department spokeswoman, Virginia Lam, said.

Mr. Jacob's father, Heshey Jacob, also a Hatzolah supervisor, was called to the scene. His son was already in handcuffs, he said, and a police lieutenant was threatening to arrest him, too, if he and the rest of the Hatzolah crew did not leave immediately. "He said, 'Shut up and get off the floor,' " the elder Mr. Jacob said yesterday in a phone interview.

He said that he decided to walk over to the Seventh Precinct station house to see if he could resolve the trouble.

Mr. Silver, who lives in a Lower East Side building managed by Heshey Jacob, said that sometime after 10 p.m., he got a call from someone in the neighborhood about the incident. The caller - not the elder Mr. Jacob, he said - told him that a crowd of people, supporters of the Hatzolah volunteers, was gathering around the station house. Mr. Silver said he went there, where Deputy Chief Brian Conroy said that officers would serve Mr. Jacob with a desk appearance ticket for disorderly conduct.

"I said to the officer, you have this situation outside that you don't need," Mr. Silver recalled in an interview yesterday. "We've got to cool the situation down. Let's walk away from here as best we can." He said he suggested that the summons be written and left at the station, and that they all meet again on Wednesday to discuss the matter further, when "cooler heads would prevail." Mr. Silver said he assumed that the summons would be served then.

On Tuesday, Mr. Silver said, officers served Mr. Jacob a summons, a move that Mr. Silver called "totally unnecessary." The Wednesday meeting was later canceled.

Mr. Silver said that he never suggested that Mr. Jacob not be served with a summons for his conduct outside the woman's apartment.

But for reasons that are still unclear, that perception has persisted among officers assigned to the Seventh Precinct, and this week, precinct representatives of the police union, the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, began circulating a petition claiming interference in their daily work. It has been signed by 40 officers so far, a union delegate, Officer Aaron Jackson, said yesterday.

"The police officers of the Seventh precinct believe that whenever we have to take enforcement actions against a person who is Hasidic/Jewish or politically connected, that the hierarchy of the N.Y.P.D will overly scrutinize our actions, and lawful arrest," the petition reads in part. "We also believe that if a police officer makes a lawful arrest, it has the likelihood of being downgraded or completely voided."

Mr. Browne, the Police Department spokesman, responded by saying: "Nothing was downgraded or voided. Police officers are expected to enforce the law impartially and they are supported by the Police Department in doing so."

A police officer at the precinct, speaking on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution, said he was disappointed that Mr. Jacob seemed to have received special treatment while he was detained at the station on Monday. The officer said that Mr. Jacob was held not in a cell, but in a room usually used for juveniles, and that visitors walked in and out of the room freely.

The elder Mr. Jacob and Mr. Silver both said that relations between the Jewish community on the Lower East Side and the Police Department were normally very good. Still, Mr. Jacob said he was treated badly by some officers during the confrontation at the station on Monday.

Another meeting is scheduled for next Tuesday, Mr. Silver said, and would include representatives from his office, and from the precinct, Hatzolah, and the Fire Department. The goal is for Hatzolah and fire crews to work out proper protocol







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נשלח ב-5/9/2005 05:18 לינק ישיר 

קען איינער ארייליגען דעם הייטיגען טיימס וואס איז געשטאנען פין די קאנטערווערסיע



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נשלח ב-30/8/2005 20:00 לינק ישיר 

http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?sectionId=17&id=44310



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נשלח ב-30/8/2005 17:20 לינק ישיר 

http://hatzolahtalk.com/




Silver rushes to the rescue
in downtown EMS dispute



BY KERRY BURKE, ALISON GENDAR and MELISSA GRACE
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS

After confronting cops and city paramedics over treatment of a lower Manhattan Alzheimer's patient, a Jewish ambulance corps brought in a big gun to solve a little dispute last night.
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, the state's most powerful Democrat, arrived at the 7th Precinct stationhouse on Pitt St. after the 9 p.m. confrontation.

"I live in the neighborhood, I just wanted to mediate," Silver said as he left the stationhouse shortly after midnight.

The confrontation inside 575 Grand St. began when a Hatzoloh Emergency Medical Service technician insisted on seeing the sick Jewish woman, whom FDNY paramedics already were treating, sources said. Cops told him to wait, police sources said.

"He was in the apartment, then he was out of the apartment. He was screaming and shouting in the hall," a source said. Police took the technician to the stationhouse to confirm that he was a member of the well-connected volunteer ambulance corp.

A Hatzoloh source said it was the cops who were belligerent with the technician.

"It was a wonderful result, the outcome was totally in our favor," said a Hatzoloh spokesman who refused to give his name.

Originally published on August 30, 2005

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/local/story/341835p-291882c.html


From the NY POST:

RIVAL AMBULANCE CLASH

By BRIGITTE WILLIAMS and JOE McGURK

August 30, 2005 -- A "hot-headed" volunteer ambulance driver was detained by cops last night after refusing to yield to a city ambulance crew that had arrived first at the Lower East Side home of an Alzheimer's patient, police said.

The driver, from the Jewish volunteer corps Hatzolah, was hauled off by cops. But he was later sprung after about two dozen supporters, as well as Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, rushed to the Pitt Street station house.

"The outcome was totally in our favor," a man who identified himself as the president of Hatzolah said as he jumped into his car.

Silver said he had rushed to the precinct simply to "help mediate the dispute."

"It was a jurisdictional dispute," the state's most powerful Democrat said. "They all have to work together for the betterment of the people here."

According to police, the EMS crew was already on the scene when the Hatzolah team pulled up to the Grand Street apartment.

The city crew was assisting the emotionally disturbed woman — who is Jewish, police sources said — when the Hatzolah driver tried to force his way into the apartment.

A cop closed the door on the driver, but the driver stuck his foot inside and demanded to treat the patient, police said.

"The officer again asked him to leave but he didn't," said a police spokesman. "He started to leave, but then he stayed in the hallway and started yelling and screaming."

That's when the driver — whom a Hatzolah source described as "sometimes a hothead" — was brought to the station house, police said.

"He's a guy who sometimes causes problems," the source said.

When the crowd of Hatzolah supporters gathered outside, police said they were questioning the driver only to determine if he was, indeed, a medical technician for the 38-year-old group.

Additional reporting by Gersh Kuntzman





תוקן על ידי - ekstein - 30/08/2005 17:55:29



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