Tuesday, June 30, 2020

it is now july &

Cairo said OTB plans to make a payment at the end of June "when the financials are completed.”
It's unclear whether the agency can the full $5 million payment that was due last month.
Referring to OTB's reduced revenue stream,Cairo said: “Obviously, that has to be a factor in what we give the county. We can’t give them what we don’t have.”
Mike Fricchione, a Nassau County spokesman, said the county expects "OTB will meet its commitment by June 20th.”

hit the boss man up for cash courtesy of his own

arrogance

Says who, counsel for nyc otb

https://www.nydailynews.com/archives/sports/open-1st-palm-sunday-otb-rakes-2m-article-1.659016



find a nyc bettor  of your own selection who believes in ny const art 1 sec 3 and sue andrew cuomo for violating their rights and to have ny pml sec 109 declared unconstitutional and inapplicable to the holy church of nassau otb

it should not take you long to determine whether the case willl pay off at the window

burn it up like the wandering dago food truck woman did  in the second circuit





https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-2nd-circuit/1884941.html








Lawyers accused of tossing Molotov cocktail at NYPD vehicle eligible for bail should consider tossing bettor case at andrew cuomo and his legal minions who burn ny const art 1 sec on the cross


The two Brooklyn lawyers charged with hurling a Molotov cocktail at a marked NYPD vehicle during the George Floyd protests may go free on bail as the case moves forward, a federal appeals panel affirmed Tuesday.
Colinford Mattis and Urooj Rahman both came up with the $250,000 bonds needed to secure their release earlier this month, only for federal prosecutors to appeal the offer of bail, leaving the pair locked in a state of legal limbo — and the Metropolitan Detention Center — as the arguments were weighed.
In a 2-1 decision, the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled in favor of granting the pair bail.
“There is no question that the evidence before the district court demonstrated that the crimes charged are serious and the defendants’ conduct on the night of their arrests could well have resulted in significantly more harm than it did,” wrote Judge Peter Hall in the majority decision.
“By affirming the district court’s order to release the defendants on the conditions imposed, we do not seek to minimize the severity of the offense.”
As protests raged across the city late May 29 into early May 30, Rahman hurled a Molotov cocktail crafted out of a Bud Light bottle through the broken window of an NYPD vehicle near Fort Greene’s 88th Precinct station house, then hopped into a getaway car driven by Mattis, authorities allege.
The vehicle was empty at the time, and no cops were harmed as it went up in flames.
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Rahman, 31, and Mattis, 32, were quickly arrested and charged, and face the possibility of life behind bars.
They have pleaded not guilty.
In making the initial arguments for their release on bail, attorneys for the defendants — who are themselves lawyers — noted that neither has a criminal history.
But federal prosecutors would argue in their appeal that due to the defendants’ legal work, they should have known better than most not to break the law — an argument the appeals panel rejected.
“If now a defendant’s life history and characteristics can support detention, on the one hand, because that history demonstrates the defendant engaged in bad acts, and on the other hand, because the history is so spotless and impressive that the defendant should have ‘known better,’ the inquiry into a defendant’s background may well become meaningless,” wrote Hall.
“We decline to endorse such a ‘heads I win, tails you lose’ zero-sum analysis.”
In the lone dissenting opinion, Judge Jon Newman wrote that the alleged firebugs demonstrated a public danger not worth the risk of a repeat performance.
“In my view, it was unimaginable, before the event, that they would have acted as they did. But we now know that they were susceptible to being provoked to take seriously dangerous actions that night, and they remain a risk to being provoked again to take additional dangerous actions,” he wrote.
“I do not contend that it is certain they will act dangerously if released. I do not even say it is highly likely,” continued Newman. “I do say that the risk of their doing so is unacceptable, a risk no community should be asked to bear. That risk creates a danger to the community.”

the royal families of europe are laughing at the idiot clowns

it may be readily observed that trigeminal neuralgia ran in the toyal families of europe and yet when eugene j ratner showed causation and how to treat same none of the israeli clowns cared

dityo for the foold in the us who were shiwn how to treat the cause of causalgia, the lancet p 106 jan 14 1978 and dailed to do so


clowns clowns clown


Recovered coronavirus patients report mystery pains months later

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Coronavirus patients are increasingly being stricken by mystery pains even months after they are deemed recovered, according to a report.
“What we are seeing is very frightening,” Prof. Gabriel Izbicki of Jerusalem’s Shaare Zedek Medical Center told the Times of Israel.
“More than half the patients, weeks after testing negative, are still symptomatic.
Rather than typical symptoms of COVID-19, however, many patients are reporting pain in completely unexpected places, Eran Schenker, director of a clinic in the city of Bnei Brak, told the paper.
“It can appear in the arms, legs, or other places where the virus doesn’t have a direct impact,” Schenker said.
“If you ask about the pain level on a 1 to 10 scale, can be 10, with people saying they can’t get to sleep,” he told the paper.
“Some of them had coronavirus in March, so they may have been recovered for months,” he stressed, saying the long-term pains do not correlate with how seriously ill they were while infected.
“We do scans and can’t see anything, but they have this pain — we’re told about it again and again,” he said.
One 55-year-old man who had coronavirus in March now “feels like he’s broken,” his wife told the paper — even though he tested negative for COVID-19 last month.
“He’s actually worse than he was when he was hospitalized,” she told the paper, saying he is so fatigued, he can hardly walk.
Enlarge ImageA man performs a physical rehabilitation workout in the recovery ward for COVID-19 patients at the MontLegia CHC hospital in Liege, Belgium.
A man performs a physical rehabilitation workout in the recovery ward for COVID-19 patients at the MontLegia CHC hospital in Liege, Belgium.AP
As with almost everything connected to the coronavirus, the complete novelty of the symptoms make them almost impossible to treat.
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“Painkillers block the pain but don’t relieve the source, but we don’t know how to address the source and you can’t be on painkillers the rest of your life,” Schenker said.



Heather Swift

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Heather Swift
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Almost lawyer, conversationalist, conspiracy theorist
Los Angeles, CaSomeday.comJoined January 2015

a muse tonight





NY PML Sec 109 is:
1 unconstiutional, see NY Const Art 1 Sec 3
2 does  not apply to Nassau OTB. when you walk into nassau otb to bet an out of state track, you are betting in NY, but the race is outside NY. The statute does not apply.
3 is vague, indefinite, and or overly broad. note I work with two members of the Orthodox Curch as well as many Roman Catholics, and several others. 

Nassau OTB sells and cashes NY Lottery tickets. The NY State Lottery operates e ery day of the year.

Perhaps you know an attorney or others with an interest in such things?

I do not know if there may be an attorneys fee statute that would cover such a case.
The case has excellent publicity potential. A favorite California track of NY bettors has run on Roman Catholic Easter Sunday. Th case is meritorious.See NY daily News Article below addressing a statute prior to NY PML Sec 109. NYC OTB went bankrupt about ten years ago.


Sincerely yours,




Sunday, April 12, 2020
Track CodeTrack NameEntryScratch1st Post
ET
1st Post
Local
Time
Zone
Stakes Race(s)Stakes GradeT.V.
Indicator
SASANTA ANITA PARK72483:00 PM12:00 PMPDT
SUNSUNLAND PARK168242:30 PM12:30 PMMDTMt. Cristo Rey H.
TAMTAMPA BAY DOWNS72012:35 PM


https://www.nydailynews.com/archives/sports/open-1st-palm-sunday-otb-rakes-2m-article-1.659016

New York City Off-Track Betting made history yesterday, taking bets on Palm Sunday. Since 1973, when Sunday racing was made legal in New York State, race tracks have been allowed to operate every Sunday except for Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday. While Aqueduct kept its doors shut, NYCOTB had its betting parlors open despite a letter from the New York State Racing and Wagering Board stating that it couldn't do so. "We're not a race track," NYCOTB president Ray Casey said. "OTB's business is a simulcasting business.
" Bettors responded by wagering an estimated $2 million yesterday on tracks from around the country, including Keeneland in Kentucky and Gulfstream Park in Florida. While in the past NYCOTB has respected the law and shut down on Palm Sunday, it took a chance this time because its business is down. "With the weather being the way it's been our handle has been off significantly," Casey said. "Our lawyers felt from their point of view that we could open (yesterday).
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" The law says race tracks can't open. It doesn't mention OTBs. "I respect the Racing and Wagering Board and I have the utmost respect for chairman Michael Hoblock but I felt we're right on this one," Casey said. The NYSRWB didn't return phone calls yesterday but said on Saturday it would meet this week to discuss fines and penalties it can impose on NYCOTB. "This isn't personal," Casey said. "I just didn't agree with the board's interpretation.
" Casey also said NYCOTB may open on Easter Sunday.



Thanks for the help. The item’s below. I’d be happy to mail you a copy, if you give me a mailing address.

Claude Solnik
Long Island Business News
2150 Smithtown Ave.
Ronkonkoma, NY 11779-7348 

Home > LI Confidential > Stop scratching on holidays

Stop scratching on holidays
Published: June 1, 2012



Off Track Betting in New York State has been racing into a crisis called shrinking revenue. Some people have spitballed a solution: Don’t close on holidays.
New York State Racing Law bars racing on Christmas, Easter and Palm Sunday, and the state has ruled OTBs can’t handle action on those days, even though they could easily broadcast races from out of state.
“You should be able to bet whenever you want,” said Jackson Leeds, a Nassau OTB employee who makes an occasional bet. He added some irrefutable logic: “How is the business going to make money if you’re not open to take people’s bets?”
Elias Tsekerides, president of the Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York, said OTB is open on Greek Orthodox Easter and Palm Sunday.
“I don’t want discrimination,” Tsekerides said. “They close for the Catholics, but open for the Greek Orthodox? It’s either open for all or not open.”
OTB officials have said they lose millions by closing on Palm Sunday alone, with tracks such as Gulfstream, Santa Anita, Turf Paradise and Hawthorne running.
One option: OTBs could just stay open and face the consequences. New York City OTB did just that back in 2003. The handle was about $1.5 million – and OTB was fined $5,000.
Easy money.