Monday, September 7, 2020

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Senator Buys Crack in Undercover Operation

July 10, 1986 GMT
NEW YORK (AP) _ U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuliani, who bought two vials of crack in an undercover operation with U.S. Sen. Alfonse D’Amato, says the court system is bankrupt because arrested dealers are freed too quickly. 
Giuliani, wearing a black leather Hell’s Angels motorcycle vest over his white button-down shirt at a news conference Wednesday, said changes must be made in how local, state and federal courts deal with those who sell crack, a potent cocaine derivative. 
″You’re building on what was already an emergency problem, an epidemic,″ he said. ″We need a lot of changes in a system which was pretty much bankrupt already.″ 
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Arrested dealers are often on the streets a day later, and rarely serve lengthy jail sentences, he said.
″What we’re teaching kids is you can sell drugs, you ca make money and you can get away with it,″ Giuliani said. 
Giuliani, D’Amato, R-N.Y., and Benjamin Baer, chairman of the U.S. Parole Commission, worked with federal Drug Enforcement Administration agents to highlight what they described as an epidemic of dealing in neighborhood streets.
D’Amato, dressed in a khaki Eisenhower jacket, green fatigue cap and tasseled black loafers, said he and a female agent had ″absolutely no problem″ buying two vials of crack. 
The female agent, parked with D’Amato at an intersection in Upper Manhattan, touched her nose and signaled that she wanted two vials and a dealer went into a nearby building, D’Amato said.
″He came back out,″ the senator said. ″I handed him the $20. He gave me the two vials and that was it.″ 
The transaction was recorded by agents and news photographers in a nearby van. The dealer, a bearded man wearing a sleeveless plaid shirt, took about eight seconds to make his sale.
No arrests were made in Wednesday’s operation. But Robert Stutman, special agent in charge of the DEA’s New York office, said he expected arrests to be made after more evidence was collected.
The senator, who is running for re-election in November, called for new laws to lessen the amount of crack needed for a felony charge of possession and also demanded mandatory prison terms and tougher parole rules for convicted crack dealers.
Of more than 56,000 drug arrests made in New York City in 1985, D’Amato said only about 5,000 people spent more than one night in jail. 
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Baer joined an agent in a third car involved in a drug deal, buying two vials of crack for $15 each. 
″This personal experience ... gives me a feeling that the problem is much much, much greater than I ever imagined,″ said Baer, dressed in white overalls and a painter’s hat. 
The costumes were supplied by the DEA. 
DEA spokesman Robert Strang said laws against drug possession would not apply to D’Amato or Baer in this case. 
″When a citizen is in the company of a DEA agent on an investigation, it is not a crime to purchase narcotics,″ Strang said. ″The reason is that you’re doing it to build a case against a defendant.″ 
D’Amato also said his presence had nothing to do with his re-election campaign and that he has been working for several years to tighten enforcement against drug smuggling and sales in the city. 
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Nassau OTB adopts Trump’s payroll tax pause


And they’re off — to getting a temporary bump in their take-home pay.
The Nassau County Off-Tracking Betting Corporation has taken up President Trump’s call and is giving workers a pause in paying the 6.2 percentpayroll tax, which funds Social Security.
The move will provide OTB employees more take-home pay in the short term during the COVID-19 pandemic —  but they could see less weekly money in early 2021 as they pay back the tax, unless Congress decides to finance the revenue loss, which is very questionable.
Many businesses have declined to implement the payroll tax holiday despite Trump’s Aug. 8 executive order urging the action because of the potential higher tax liability for workers down the road.
The decision by Nassau OTB to embrace the temporary payroll tax relief will certainly raise eyebrows because the county-run bookie’s president, Joseph Cairo, is also chairman of the Nassau County Republican Party.
“It’s just a gimmick because you have to pay the money back,” said OTB cashier Jackson Leeds, who opposes the change.
“And it’s political because Cairo is chairman of the Nassau County Republican Party,” he added.
The Nassau OTB Management’s Sept 1 memo to workers says: “Please be advised that the ‘take home pay’ on your paycheck from now through December 31, 2020 will be higher than usual. This is because President Trump by memorandum of Aug. 8, 2020 has authorized employers to temporarily defer collection of your Social Security payroll tax (6.2%).
“The amounts may eventually be forgiven by Congress but at this time is a deferral only, and should be viewed as a short term interest free loan that must be repaid…Please be aware that this means that the `take home pay’ in your January-April 2021 paychecks will be lower than you currently receive because the regular social security amount will be deducted as well as the payback amount,” the Nassau OTB notice to workers said.
A rep for Nassau OTB, former Sen. Al D’Amato, defended the tax deferral as a good stimulus for the betting agency and its workforce.
“It makes sense. You’re paying people more and you’re not laying off workers,” said D’Amato, whose Park Strategies lobbying firm represents Nassau OTB as a client.
But the US Chamber of Commerce told the White House and congressional leaders last month that many of the nation’s major industries would decline to implement the president’s order to pause collecting the 6.2 percent payroll tax without a subsidy from Congress.
“Under current law, the EO [executive order] creates a substantial tax liability for employees at the end of the deferral period. Without Congressional action to forgive this liability, it threatens to impose serious hardships on employees who will face a large tax bill as a result of deferral,” the chamber said in an Aug. 18 letter to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).
“If this were a suspension of the payroll tax so that employees were not forced to pay it back later, implementation would be less challenging. But under a simple deferral, employees would be stuck with a large tax bill in 2021. Many of our members consider it unfair to employees to make a decision that would force a big tax bill on them next year,” the chamber said.
“It would also be unworkable to implement a system where employees make this decision. Therefore, many of our members will likely decline to implement deferral, choosing instead to continue to withhold and remit to the government the payroll taxes required by law. We hope Congress and the Administration come together on a path that supports workers instead of burdening hardworking Americans with a large tax bill next year.”

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A spokesman for Nassau OTB said it was the management’s decision to suspend collection of the payroll tax cut after consulting with workers.

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