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A reputed teenage gang member with three gun busts in four months had his bail reduced by a Bronx judge allowing him to get out of jail and allegedly fire a random shot that killed an innocent father of two, ....
Matt Mignanelli Kelly Brigham has lived her entire life in Burlington s only mobile home park. The resident-owned North Avenue Cooperative has 114 homes, including Brigham s gray single-wide, purchased with an inheritance from her late mother in 2016. At the time, the city assessed the home for $69,300. Brigham, 54, has since paved her parking lot, installed a privacy fence and added an entrance ramp. Still, when the results of Burlington s first citywide reassessment in 16 years arrived in mid-April, she was one of hundreds of homeowners who gasped at the numbers on their notices. The valuation of Brigham s home had more than doubled, rising by nearly $100,000. She wasn t alone: Around her neighborhood, the average mobile home had doubled in value, according to the city s data. Some valuations had more than tripled. ....
Sadly, said Bucci, her husband Agostino, who was helping her with her research, died last July. Agostino, a third-generation Bucci in Lymansville, was the grandson of Arthur and Angelina Bucci, of King Street, who raised 11 children while they lived here. One of those children was Ruth Bucci’s father-in-law, also Agostino, and he and his wife, Anna, lived on Zambarano Avenue, where they raised three children, one of them her husband. Bucci and her husband lived on Intervale Avenue, where they raised their daughter Laura, who attended Ricci Elementary School, and Bucci still lives in Lymansville. Bucci said that now that the weather is starting to get better, she’s hoping residents will get out and take her self-guided Lymansville History Walk through the neighborhood, appreciating the history and beauty of this old village. ....
The man who experienced a real-life New York City nightmare falling into a rat nest after the sidewalk collapsed beneath his feet, leaving him too terrified to scream and risk having the rodents crawl into his mouth is suing the city and a building landlord coronavirus Nov 15, 2020 New York City sheriffs broke up an unlicensed fight club Saturday night, finding more than 200 people drinking, smoking and fighting without social distancing at the “Rumble in the Bronx.” Deputy sheriffs entered the Coster Street commercial warehouse about 11:15 p.m. and found a massive crowd “watching and participating in an amateur fighting event.” “Patrons were also observed… ....