Archive for February 28, 2010

Manhattan Adult Entertainment: Adrift in a state of uncertainty

After all, people back home care mostly about school aid, pork-barrel spending and lower taxes. The gold star any lawmaker gets for being fiscally prudent doesn’t translate into many votes on Election Day.
In past economic downturns, legislators have been able to blame whoever was governor for blunting spending or for bigger raises for public employees. It’s going to be a hard sell to convince people that so widely derided and ignored a governor as Paterson had much of a role in limiting spending.
Does that mean that the Legislature’s fiscal prudence will grow with its increased budget powers?
The easy answer is no, but who could have predicted what has happened at the Capitol since Eliot Spitzer decided to keep a date with a prostitute in Washington, D.C., two years ago?

See the full article from “Albany Times Union”

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Manhattan Adult Entertainment: GLYNN: Cuomo faces delicate task with probe

Now that Paterson has removed himself from a re-election bid, Cuomo must be somewhat relieved that he won’t have to run against the first black governor of the Empire State.
At the same time, he finds himself pushed into an unbelievably delicate situation. His office has been asked to investigate allegations the governor and state police may have urged a woman to drop domestic violence charges against a top assistant to the governor.
If Paterson is found to have interfered with the judicial system in any way, he could be forced to resign even before Cuomo leaves the candidate protection program.
Former Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s fall from grace is well documented, even to that infamous cell phone call (“Client 9”) he made from the parking lot at Shorty’s Restaurant & Sports Bar, Pine Avenue, to a high-priced prostitution ring in Washington, D.C.

See the full article from “Niagara Gazette”

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Manhattan Adult Entertainment: Centennial Year of the New York Peace Memorial at Point Park

The next day was the monument dedication event, and most of the participants traveled up to Point Park on the Incline Railway, which had opened in 1895. A few members of the official delegation also rode to the top of the mountain via that new form of transportation called the automobile.
As they approached Point Park, the spectators walked through the castle-like stone entrance that had been constructed in 1905 and was designed by local engineer E.E. Betts after the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers insignia.
When the dedication began, nearly 3,000 people were reportedly present. The highlights included music by the 11th Cavalry Band and the Chattanooga Quartet, and speeches by Gen. Sickles and others.
Gen. Sickles, who was chairman of the New York State Monuments Commission, had lived a checkered life, historical sources say. He had once escorted a known prostitute into the New York State Assembly Chambers and had shot and killed the son of national anthem writer Francis Scott Key for having an affair with Sickles wife.

See the full article from “The Chattanoogan”

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Manhattan Adult Entertainment: For Paterson, and New York, a lost chance

Posted Feb 27, 2010 @ 09:10 PM
Last update Feb 27, 2010 @ 09:18 PM
It’s hard to remember now, but Gov. David Paterson was a breath of fresh air when he succeeded his disgraced predecessor, Eliot Spitzer, not even two years ago.
Gone was the tough-talking “steamroller” who spent months fighting a pointless (and losing) battle over driver’s licenses for illegal immigrants; a man who distanced political foes and allies alike, and who was eventually forced out of office by his own hubris following a prostitution scandal.
In his place was a self-deprecating, soft-spoken legislator who came up through the ranks and demonstrated a commanding knowledge of state issues, on which he spoke at length extemporaneously (he had to, being legally blind).
But almost immediately, there were red flags. The acknowledgment of past affairs and drug use; the conscious but status-eroding informality (“Call me David”); the drumbeat of rumors about travel and lodging.

See the full article from “MPNnow.com”

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Manhattan Adult Entertainment: Man and woman accused of prostituting girl, 17

Man and woman accused of prostituting girl, 17
By: Freeman Klopott
Examiner Staff WriterFebruary 28, 2010
Prince William County police say two New York City residents lured a 17-year-old California girl into a prostitution ring run out of D.C.-area hotels.
The 17-year-old girl called police from a Woodbridge toy store early last week, asking authorities for help, police said. The girl ran away from her California home in December, and police say 21-year-old Julie McKenna helped her move to New York, where McKenna and 32-year-old Marc Brickhouse began prostituting her.
They eventually brought the girl to Prince William County, where she worked out of various hotels, authorities said. McKenna and Brickhouse were arrested on prostitution-related charges in a Laurel hotel Thursday.
– Freeman Klopott

See the full article from “Washington Examiner”

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Manhattan Adult Entertainment: Spitzer, Paterson and a Cult of Faux Piety

Published: February 26, 2010
It was Friday morning, and his successor as governor, David A. Paterson, was a ruin.
“Sad,” Mr. Spitzer said of Mr. Paterson. “I don’t know enough of the facts to say anything meaningful.”
That should not stop anyone else from stating the obvious.
Every minute that Mr. Paterson stays in office, he proves that the laws of political relativity do not apply in Albany.
Two years ago this month, an article in The New York Times disclosed that Mr. Spitzer had been a customer of an escort service — that is, a client of an expensive prostitute — that was under surveillance by federal investigators. Less than 48 hours after the article appeared on the newspaper’s Web site, Mr. Spitzer said he was sorry and resigned.

See the full article from “New York Times”

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Manhattan Adult Entertainment: Paterson Scandal Scars a Piece of Harlem History

Governor Paterson, who will be 56 in May, is still a youngster by the Gang of Four’s standard, even though he served for two decades in the State Senate, mostly in the Democratic minority. In 2006, he accepted Eliot Spitzer’s opportunistic invitation to join his ticket as the candidate for lieutenant governor. (Mr. Paterson was elevated to the state ticket, in part, because he is black, in contrast to what Ray Jones once said of Basil Paterson: “This is a man whose full scope was never appreciated and never achieved clearly because he was an African-American.”)
When Mr. Spitzer became embroiled in a prostitution scandal and resigned in 2008, Mr. Paterson became New York’s first black governor. A week ago he invoked the McFadden & Whitehead lyrics from the 1970s as he sought validation for a full term:

See the full article from “New York Times”

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