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The Journal News from White Plains, New York • Page 6

Publication:
The Journal Newsi
Location:
White Plains, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Wgdnesday, January 28, 1998 JN I fj TS Rockland Journal-News ggjTUARIES COURT ACTIOIJ jggn C. Maloney, 00: former waitress if C- Maloney of Orangeburg aied Monday, Jan. 26, 1998, at home. She was 80. 10re- Maloney was born Aug.

16, 1317, New York City to Karol (Charles) and Ludwika Kolodziej Drzal. On Feb. 22, 1941, she married Robert Maloney in St. Matthew's Church in New York City. He died Sept 15, 1978.

She was a graduate of St. Peter's School in New York City. She was an eight-year resident of Orangeburg. Mrs. Maloney was a retired waitress who worked in New York City for 30 years.

She enjoyed caring for Robert E. McDonagh, 30, of 50 Lincoln Sloatsburg, admitted, ih court to being drunk at 4:30 Nov. 2 when Clarkstown stopped his 1994 Saturn for speeding on Route 303. A sobriety found he had a blood-alcohol level of 0.15 percent prosecutor Jessica Horowitz said. All traffic' summonses are covered by the" guilty plea His sentencing is scheduled for March 10.

He had been convicted of driving while intoxicated June 5, 1990, in Ramapo Justice Court A 19-year-old Orange County man pleaded guilty to second-degree assault resulting from a scuffle during which a Clarkstown; police officer broke his right ankle at the Nanuet Mali The teen-ager's name waseafcd from public knowledge because Judge William Nelson gave him youthful offender status as part.f the guilty plea Nelson said" "he would sentence the llth-grader to five years' probation and community service on March 10. The teen was charged with'rel-ony assault because an officer. Sgt. Louis Bavaro, broke his anKlg trying to arrest him on May 26 at Foot Locker. ig Police were responding -ta a shoplifting report and arrested -another youth on that charge, Prosecutor Jessica Horowitz told Nelson that the District Attorney's Office and Bavaro supported.

4he nonjail sentence along with nvjtu-nity service. Steve Liebermn court. Judge William Nelson also sentenced Kaufman to five years' probation when her jail sentence ends. Nelson cited her presentence report, which stated Kaufman admitted she planned to sell the crack to make ends meet Nelson also said the report stated her parents had kicked her out of their house because she had a history of rebelling. Nelson then offered her some advice.

"Make some changes, Ms. Kaufman," Nelson said. "The next time out of the box could be state prison." Two Rocklanders pleaded guilty to a felony charge of driving while intoxicated. After hearing separate guilty pleas, Judge William Nelson said he would sentence both men to five years' probation, a $1,000 fine, loss of his driver's license and 200 hours of community service. Michael Youvan, 36, of 73 Bul-son Town Road, Stony Point admitted in court to drunken driving on Oct.

17 during questioning by prosecutor Carrie Ciganek. Stony Point police stopped Youvan on Route 9W and a Breathalyzer test found his blood-alcohol level at 0.27 percent The legal limit is 0.10 percent Youvan was charged with a felony because of a drunken driving conviction July 15, 1995, in Highlands Justice Court in Orange County. His sentencing is scheduled for March 2. NEW CITY Rockland District Attorney Michael E. Bongiorno announced the following action in County Court yesterday: A 22-year-old Haverstraw village man twice convicted of drug dealing was sent to prison for 4 to nine years for selling $40 worth of cocaine on Oct.

4 in Haverstraw village. Rudolfo Fernandez, who lived at 179 Hudson Haverstraw, pleaded guilty Dec. 9 to third-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance. He admitted selling cocaine Oct 4 at 1:20 a.m. on Main Street to undercover officers for the Rockland Narcotics Task Force.

Judge William Nelson sentenced Fernandez as a repeat felon to the mandatory minimum of 4 'a years in prison. Fernandez has four misdemeanor convictions since age 16 and one felony conviction in 1994 for selling drugs. A 21-year-old Nyack woman was sentenced to six months in the county jail on a plea agreement after being arrested and accused of possessing 38 envelopes of crack cocaine when stopped for speeding by Orangetown police in October on Route 9W. Andrea Kaufman, who lived at 12 Highland had pleaded guilty Dec. 16 to attempted third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance.

Summonses for speeding and driving with a suspended license were dropped as part of her plea, prosecutors said in Monique Busssercth, 77: Nanuet homemaker Monique Buissereth of Nanuet died WertnpsHnv 91 IQQft at the Westchester Medical Center in Valhalla She was 77. Ms. Buissereth was born July 27, 1920, in Fonds-des-Blancs, Haiti, to Jacob and Mannp Rnicsprpth In 1971, she immigrated to the United States and settled in Brook lyn. Ms. Buissereth, a homemaker, had been a resident of Nanuet for 10 years.

She is survived by four daugh Jonathan Boycott, 20: Army veteran Jonathan C. Boycott of Dover, N.J., an Army veteran who served in Germany during Operation Desert Storm, died Saturday, Jan. 24, 1998, at home. He was 29. Mr.

Boycott was born July 10, 1968, in Denville, N.J. He was a student in his senior year at the University of Maryland's campus in Mannheim, Germany. He had lived in Germany while serving with the Army for several years. He moved to Dover seven years ago. Mr.

Boycott is survived by his father, Donald H. of Haverstraw, the village's building inspector, his mother, Barbara Grego of Dover, three brothers, Dudley S. of Valley Cottage, David S. of Garnerville and Christopher Grego of Germany; and a sister, Lisa Fitzula of Harri-man, N.Y. The wake is today at the Turtle Funeral Home, 272 Highway 10, Randolph Township, N.J.

The funeral will be tomorrow at 11 a.m. at the funeral home. Burial will follow in Pleasant Hill Cemetery in Randolph. BIzaheth Kelson, 71: former bus driver Elizabeth Kelsen of Suffern died Saturday, Jan. 24, 1998, at home.

She was 71. Mrs. Kelsen was born Oct. 26, 1926, in Nyack to Norton David and Isabelle Ellen Angevine Anderson. Her husband, Harold Kelsen, died in 1996.

Mrs. Kelsen was a former bus driver for Chestnut Ridge Transportation. She is survived by two daughters, Debbie Polanco of Suffern and Kathleen Williams of Nanuet; two sons, Clifton Shorter of Newburgh and Robert Shorter of Cocoa Beach, 10 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. The wake is tomorrow at the Wanamaker and Carlough Funeral Home on Route 59 in Suffern. The funeral will be Friday at 9:30 a.m.

at the funeral home. Burial follows in the Frederick W. Loescher Veterans Memorial Cemetery in New Hempstead. her family and her home, her family said. Mr.

Maloney is survived by a son, James of Orangeburg; a daughter, Jean Hummell of Neshanic Station, N.J.; a sister, Florence Bonjorni of New York City; two brothers, Stanley Drzal of Queens, N. and John Drzal of Long Island City, N.Y.; and seven grandchildrea The wake is today at the Assum-ma-Shankey Funeral Home in Pearl River. A Mass of Christian burial will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Margaret's Roman Catholic Church in Pearl River.

Burial follows in the National Cemetery in Calverton, N.Y. ters, Marie S. Jean Baptist of Pleasant Hill, France Buissereth and Theresa Lafontant, both of Nanuet, and Nadine Beauvais of Spring Valley; eight grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. The wake is Friday night at the Hannemann Funeral Home, 88 S. Broadway in Nyack.

A Mass of Christian burial is at 9 a.m. Saturday at St. Ann's Roman Catholic Church, 18 Jefferson St. in Nyack. Burial follows in Oak Hill Cemetery in Nyack.

to Bernard and Lena Linden Stark. She was a retired handbag executive with Bien and Davis in New York City. Mrs. Cohn is survived by her son, Walter Stark of Nyack; two grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren. The funeral was Jan.

25 at Hellman Memorial Chapels in Spring Valley. Burial was in Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Mount Pleasant. The family is observing a period of mourning through tonight at the home of granddaughter Jodi Budnick in Suffern. Memorial contributions may be made to a charity of the donor's choice. Sylvia S.

Cohn, 90: former handbag executive Document released by Mason, lawyer adds to trial confusion Sylvia S. Cohn of Lauderhill, died Thursday, Jan. 22, 1998, at the Northern Manor Geriatric Center in Nanuet. She was 90. Mrs.

Cohn was born Feb. 22, 1907, in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., LIST OF DEATHS GALLUP, Edith M. Stony Point, NY. 92 years of age died suddenly at home on January 10. She was the widow of Jack Gallup who died In 1983.

Born In Plains, PA. Daughter of Thomas and Edith Walker Tregaskis. She attended Wllkes-Barre, PA area schools. She was a member of the First United Methodist Church, Carbondale, PA. Survlng are 3 daughters, Dorothy Price and Margaret Ryan, both of Stony Point and Ann Truman, Carbondale, PA, 11 grandchildren, 21 great grandchildren, 1 great-great grandchild, neices and nephews In Carbondale area.

She was preceded in death by a son Robert in 1991. Wake and funeral took place in Carbondale, PA. Brennan Funeral Home handled arrangemnts. 4. first part of Grady's statement-.

It was left to William attorney for Pagones, to the record straight "If the facts alleged by Tawana Brawley were true Grady" began. He went on to say if Brawley was right Pagones was in the area and "could very well be part of this incident" In fact in the meeting with Hillery, Grady cited a statement by Pagones that he was an alibi witness for a part-time police officer who had been accused by Brawjfcy. Pagones said that on the afternoon of the 28th he was shopping. ahe Danbury Fair Mall with Crist 'Jfad two other men who also were tjer accused of the alleged assault "On a scale of 1 to lQit'4 llL-it'4 a minus-5, Stanton said. ing between then-Dutchess County Court Judge Judith Hillery, Dutchess District Attorney William Grady, and his chief assistant William O'Neill.

The transcript was sealed by Hillery and was only distributed to the attorneys yesterday. At the meeting, Grady and O'Neill explained to Hillery why their office should not continue to investigate Brawley's story. Jackson and Mason said the transcript reveals that Grady said he had evidence that Pagones, then an assistant district attorney, was in the area where Brawley was found in a plastic bag and covered with feces on the afternoon of Nov. 28, 1987. "On a scale of 1 to 10, this is a 15," Mason said.

But Jackson did not reveal the ByBillVarner Staff Writer POUGHKEEPSIE The attorney for C. Vernon Mason yesterday outside of court released portions of a document that he and Mason said would go a long way toward implicating Steven Pagones in the kidnap and rape of Tawana Brawley. Unfortunately for Mason and his co-defendants in the $395 million defamation lawsuit filed against them by Pagones, the information was incomplete. It was an apparent attempt to mislead media covering the trial at the Dutchess County Courthouse. Pagones is suing Mason, Alton Maddox, and the Rev.

Al Sharpton for saying he assaulted Brawley. The document in question is the transcript of a January 1988 meet ilochbnd cfourMl-jNVitfS -i I. I i fill; To advertise, call 914-578-2324 I ZZ ZZZZZ ZZZZZZZZZ'ZZZZZZ'. llrMWOOy i THE HOUSEHOLD A Mors fc.i&lV TOOTHPASTE 5 Caffim NBcMi7 2 PASCACK VALLEY SZ Pqfi BUNKR ft Wl uncDiTAi A kr Beading pi'itj Hfok.Ml PI! TTttf IcsaT hospital MIA 1 QBflT I JAZm 14 YEARS IN UJUKY ft 4S BUSINESS 4g? Yi 1 VreeFrameX 1 Vl "zi I rBnn rr fe2 3 lS: nPL Sir $lVX Bsf-i r7 i I III fLTL MkniitL. i Kfiiltc An'malVaefcfirs I Pearson's Nips.

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