Thursday, December 27, 2018

Further down the rabbit hole with Laura Ahearn's most crooked allies Burke and Spota

Left, Suffolk Co DA Thomas Spota----------------------Right, Christopher McPartland
So apparently the Suffolk Co DA and his aide have a very deep connection to the disgraced former police chief and porn king James Burke, who just got out of prison.

https://www.newsday.com/long-island/crime/spota-mcpartland-suffolk-burke-1.24819883

Court papers detail alleged efforts by Spota, McPartland to thwart federal Burke probe

The documents provide a fuller description of the alleged actions former Suffolk District Attorney Thomas Spota and aide Christopher McPartland took to shield Suffolk Chief of Police James Burke from a federal probe.

By Andrew Smith
andrew.smith@newsday.com
Updated December 26, 2018 11:30 AM

The meetings took place in a church parking lot, at an athletic field and in the Hauppauge office of then-Suffolk District Attorney Thomas Spota, court papers say.

The purpose was for top county law enforcement officials to plan how to keep federal investigators from finding out how they covered up the beating of a Smithtown man charged with stealing a duffel bag from then-Suffolk Chief of Police James Burke, federal prosecutors say in court papers.

The chronicle of events in the documents provides a fuller description of the alleged actions Spota and Christopher McPartland, chief of Spota’s governmental corruption bureau, took to shield Burke — Spota’s longtime protégé — from federal prosecutors investigating whether Burke and others had participated in the beating of Christopher Loeb and the cover-up.

“Initially, the efforts to obstruct the federal investigation were successful and, as of May 2015, the investigation had not resulted in any criminal charges,” an affidavit for a search warrant reads.

Ultimately, the papers say, the attempts to thwart the federal probe were unsuccessful. Burke pleaded guilty on Feb. 26, 2016, to depriving Loeb of his civil rights and conspiracy to obstruct justice by orchestrating a cover-up of the beating. Burke, 54, of St. James, went to prison and was released recently to a halfway house to serve the rest of a 46-month prison sentence.

Spota, 77, of Mount Sinai, and McPartland, 53, of Northport, were charged with conspiracy to tamper with witnesses and obstruct an official proceeding; witness tampering and obstruction of an official proceeding; obstruction of justice; and accessory after the fact to the deprivation of civil rights. They have pleaded not guilty and are each free on $500,000 bond. Their trial is scheduled to begin in May.

Spota’s attorney, Alan Vinegrad of Manhattan, insists his client is innocent. “Tom adamantly and unequivocally denies all charges of wrongdoing and looks forward to his trial,” Vinegrad said in an interview.

McPartland’s attorney, Lawrence Krantz, has said that his client “has always been an honest and dedicated public servant. He vehemently denies the charges and asserts his innocence. He looks forward to his day in court.”

The indictment accuses them of helping Burke cover up his crimes by pressuring witnesses not to discuss Burke’s actions and of undermining the federal investigation of him.

Burke’s crime led to the indictment and resignation of Spota. Current Suffolk District Attorney Timothy Sini did not keep McPartland on the staff when he took office in January.

In pretrial motions, defense attorneys said they have been inundated with evidence from the prosecution but have not received what they need the most — the names of other law enforcement officials who prosecutors said conspired with their clients and specific things Spota and McPartland did that amount to obstruction of justice.

Krantz, of Manhattan, wrote that prosecutors have “provided volumes of largely uninformative discovery,” including hundreds of thousands of phone records relating to calls involving Spota, McPartland and Burke.

However, Krantz continued, “These materials shed little or no light on what the defendants are alleged to have done.”

Prosecutors say that, since November 2017, the government has provided 40,000 pages of documents, 70,000 pages of telephone records, thousands of pages of bank records, hundreds of pages of state court hearing transcripts and hundreds of photographs.

In a recent interview, Krantz said, “We’re arguing that in order to properly defend the case, we need certain critical information, including who the co-conspirators are alleged to be.”

Prosecutors replied that the defense has most of what it needs already.

“While the obstruction continued for several years, this is a straightforward, uncomplicated case involving the cover-up of a civil rights violation and the obstruction of a grand jury investigation, not a complex white-collar matter,” Assistant U.S. Attorneys Lara Treinis Gatz, Justina Geraci and John Durham wrote in reply. They added that because Spota and McPartland already are accused of witness tampering, identifying witnesses publicly would risk both the “integrity of the trial and the government’s investigation, which continues.”

In an affidavit for a search warrant, FBI Special Agent Michael Weniger sought information on phones belonging to the defendants, Burke and several other members of the Suffolk police. In the affidavit, he described steps they took to avoid detection after the beating of Loeb in December 2012.

Those steps began as soon as June 25, 2013, the day after the FBI subpoenaed members of the Suffolk police department, according to the affidavit. Weniger wrote that Burke told an officer identified as Cooperating Defendant #1 “to gather the SCPD members who had been served to find out what they said to the FBI agents and make sure they were keeping quiet. Further, Burke reassured Cooperating Defendant #1 that he had Spota and McPartland on his side.”

The officer identified as Cooperating Defendant #1 has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to obstruct justice as part of a cooperation agreement with federal prosecutors, the affidavit says.

After the investigation seemed to be stalled, court papers say, prosecutors issued more subpoenas, including to an officer identified as SCPD Member #3, who participated in the beating of Loeb. That officer also has pleaded guilty as part of a cooperation agreement, according to the affidavit.

Weniger wrote in the affidavit that SCPD Member #3 and Cooperating Defendant #1 met at an athletic field next to police headquarters in Yaphank to discuss what SCPD Member #3’s attorney had told him after a meeting on June 3, 2015.

That evening, Cooperating Defendant #1 met Burke in the parking lot of St. Patrick’s Roman Catholic Church in Smithtown to relay what SCPD Member #3 had told him, the affidavit says. Phone records show Burke was in contact with Spota and McPartland before and after that meeting, according to the affidavit.

The next morning, Cooperating Defendant #1 met with Spota, Burke and McPartland in Spota’s Hauppauge office, the affidavit continues, and told them what he’d learned. Spota and Burke could not believe the federal investigation had been reactivated, and the affidavit says Spota called Burke’s attorney to see if it was true.

“McPartland stated that he thought SCPD Member #3 was a ‘rat,’ and Spota told Cooperating Defendant #1 that, if SCPD Member #3 was a rat, Cooperating Defendant #1 had better find out fast,” Weniger wrote. “Additionally, McPartland directed Cooperating Defendant #1 to ‘take his guys’ temperature’ and confront them one-on-one about whether they were a ‘rat.’ Spota reiterated that Cooperating Defendant #1 needed to ‘get his guys in order.’”

Burke then told Cooperating Defendant #1 to warn his officers about “what happens to people who ‘go against the administration,’” the affidavit says. At that point, McPartland raised the example of a former Suffolk detective whom McPartland had investigated for leaking information to reporters, according to the affidavit. That detective retired and pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of official misconduct.

The affidavit identifies that detective as John Doe #2, but the description matches the case of former Suffolk Det. John Oliva, who had worked on a federal task force pursuing MS-13 street gang members until Burke withdrew Suffolk police from the task force.

As the investigation picked up speed, SCPD Member #3 and Cooperating Defendant #1 met at a high school in Smithtown on Aug. 17, 2015, the affidavit says.

At about 6 that evening, the affidavit says, Cooperating Defendant #1 returned to the St. Patrick’s parking lot to meet with Burke and McPartland.

McPartland warned his colleagues there that they were probably committing crimes, the affidavit says. McPartland said federal investigators “might be working on an obstruction case and ‘our actions fit within the statute.’ Further, McPartland reiterated that SCPD Member #3 was a ‘rat’ and it was Cooperating Defendant #1’s failure to control SCPD Member #3 that had created the current situation,” the affidavit says.

After that meeting, the affidavit says, phone records show McPartland called Spota at his home. The court papers don’t reveal what they said.

However, Spota and McPartland again discussed their concerns about the investigation at a Farmingdale bar after attending a wake on Oct. 15, 2015, court papers say.

Burke’s last day on the job was less than a month later, on Nov. 11, 2015. That night, the affidavit says, he and McPartland met with two other people at an Asian restaurant in St. James. Burke told them he expected to be arrested, and he was, on Dec. 9.  

Krantz and Vinegrad declined to address the account of the meetings and said their clients did nothing wrong.

In a separate affidavit for another search warrant as part of the investigation, Weniger described another series of meetings that he says resulted in Burke directing the delivery of $25,000 in cash from a safe-deposit box to McPartland to pay for McPartland’s legal expenses.

The first meeting on this topic was Feb. 18, 2016, when the affidavit says McPartland contacted someone identified as CS (for cooperating source) #1, a childhood friend of Burke’s, and asked to meet at a local Chinese restaurant. When they did a few days later, the affidavit says McPartland asked CS #1 to lend him $25,000 for legal fees. CS #1 balked.

“While he had socialized with McPartland through his friendship with Burke, he did not know McPartland that well and he did not feel comfortable loaning him the amount of money requested, so he declined,” the affidavit says. “Then McPartland began to cry, thus, CS #1 said he would think about loaning McPartland the money.”

On Feb. 25, 2016, CS #1 and three other people visited Burke at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn. Another man told Burke that McPartland had asked CS #1 for the loan, according to the affidavit. Burke told CS #1 he would get the cash to him to give to McPartland, the affidavit says.

Shortly afterward, another person whose name is redacted in the affidavit contacted CS #1 and asked to meet him at a TD Bank branch in Lake Grove. That other person opened safe deposit box 251, according to the affidavit. The person, whose name is redacted in the affidavit, counted out $25,000 in cash and handed it to CS #1.

“According to CS #1, it was never made clear to him why [this person], who knew McPartland very well, did not give McPartland the money himself,” the affidavit says.

CS #1 and McPartland met again in the parking lot of the same Chinese restaurant and CS #1 handed over the cash, the affidavit says. McPartland thanked him, but CS #1 replied he wasn’t the one to thank, according to the affidavit.

“McPartland then immediately put up his hands in a ‘stop’ motion indicating, according to CS #1, that he, McPartland, did not want to know where the money came from,” the affidavit says. “Then, McPartland promised to provide CS #1 with a promissory note indicating that he, McPartland, would pay back the $25,000. However, according to CS #1, to date, McPartland has never followed through with that promise.”

Weniger said a search of the safe deposit box could turn up evidence of a conspiracy to obstruct justice, but Krantz said the episode was meaningless to the case.

“We believe that these allegations are absolutely irrelevant, as they allege nothing unlawful,” Krantz said.

Defense attorneys have until Jan. 7 to file a response to the prosecution’s claim that it does not have to disclose yet the identities of co-conspirators or outline particular criminal acts they say Spota and McPartland committed. U.S. District Judge Joan Azrack will rule on those issues at a later date.

Thursday, November 8, 2018

Dean Murray, who wrote the Ahearn-backed Assembly Bill 1651A, just lost his reelection campaign

Not sure if this changes much, but it looks like Ahearn is going to have to find another patsy to promote her  efforts to reinstate residence restrictions and expanding registration length for Tier 1s.

https://patch.com/new-york/shirley-mastic/winner-declared-new-yorks-3rd-senate-district-race

Monica Martinez Triumphs In New York's 3rd Senate District Race
Monica Martinez, a Democrat, has emerged victorious in New York's 3rd Senate District race.
By Lisa Finn | Nov 6, 2018 11:44 pm ET | Updated Nov 7, 2018 12:29 am ET
Monica Martinez Triumphs In New Yorks 3rd Senate District Race
   
LONG ISLAND, NY — The voters have spoken and in a dramatic win, Monica Martinez, a Democrat, has emerged victorious over opponent Dean Murray, a Republican, in New York's 3rd Senate District race.

Martinez, a Suffolk County legislator, took the lead over Murray by a margin of 46,265 to 43,737, according to an unofficial tally by the Suffolk County Board of Elections.

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The race was watched closely as the Dems seized the seat, open after Republican New York State Senator Thomas Croci opted not to run for re-election and instead return to active duty in the Naval Reserve.

New York State's 3rd Senate District is made up Mastic, Shirley, Sayville, Patchogue, Medford, Ronkonkoma and parts of Happauge and Brentwood.

Monday, August 6, 2018

Ahearn the Ambulance Chaser is now proclaiming that the abolishment of residency restriction laws cause clustering

We all know it is just the opposite, of course, but leave it to Suffolk County's most notorious ambulance chaser to intentionally mislead the pubic, while her favorite media News 12 Long Island, gives Ahearn's insane ramblings more air time.

http://longisland.news12.com/story/38813057/couple-raises-concerns-about-5-sex-offenders-living-in-nearby-home

Couple raises concerns about 5 sex offenders living in nearby home
Posted: Aug 04, 2018 5:13 PM EDT
Updated: Aug 04, 2018 5:13 PM EDT

SHIRLEY -
A Shirley couple says five sex offenders are living together in their community nearly 80 feet from their home.

Jennifer and Thomas Gritz, who have lived in their home for the past 14 years, say they no longer allow their 10-year-old son to play outside.

“I want my son to go outside and be a kid – play in the backyard, ride his bike up and down the street. He doesn't even do that unless one of us is with him,” says Jennifer Gritz.

Laura Ahearn, from Parents for Megan's Law, says the problem exists because the state Court of Appeals in 2015 shot down all laws restricting where sex offenders could live.

Since then, she and others have been advocating to give individual counties the power to make those decisions.

“It's the Assembly [Democrats] that will not allow suburban counties to have the power to be able to restrict where a sex offender can or cannot reside,” said Ahern. “Now, there could be 25 in one dwelling. It's an outrage.”

News 12 reported on the issue in February, and spoke with Assemblyman Dean Murray who says that Corrections Law 203 orders the state Division of Parole to come up with guidelines to avoid placing too many sex offenders in one neighborhood. He says nothing has been done to fix the problem since.

Assemblyman Dean Murray spoke with Murray on the phone Saturday, who said he's waited too long for a decision from the state corrections commissioner on the number of sex offenders living at one particular property. He is calling on the commissioner to either do his job or step down.

News 12 reached out to the state corrections commissioner for a comment.

Thursday, July 26, 2018

Polishing a turd: PFML's new "Crime Victim's Center" is the same pile of crap with a new website

There is a bit of confusion since Parents For Megan's Law changed their website. The link [https://www.parentsformeganslaw.org/] is still active but now when you go there, you'll see they're calling themselves the "Crime Victims Center." To me, it is not a shock, as that is the official name of their organization for many years, they are simply "doing business as (d.b.a.) parents For Megan's Law. 

While things have been rather quiet on this blog as of late as Ahearn and company haven't been doing much (presumably due to Ahearn's new role as Suffolk County's crime victim ambulance chaser), I'm still monitoring these idiots in case they start spewing nonsense again.

Sunday, February 4, 2018

News story from 2005 reminds us that the bill that increased time level 1s were forced to register was penned by corrupt criminal politician Dean Skelos

Don't ever forget that Laura Ahearn's biggest allies over the years later fell from grace for corruption, like Dean Skelos did.

http://liherald.com/stories/Reforming-Megans-LawHearing-held-to-determine-how-landmark-legislation-can-be-strengthened,10348

Reforming Megan's LawHearing held to determine how landmark legislation can be strengthened
Posted June 2, 2005
By Nicole Falco

Ten years old, when Russillo became his neighbor, the boy and his family never could have known that Russillo had been convicted on sexual abuse charges in 1980, because Megan's Law, which requires convicted sex offenders to register with law enforcement, didn't exist. So they never could have known that Russillo was "grooming" the boy to be his next victim.
      In 2003, Russillo was convicted on two counts of second-degree sexual abuse and one count of endangering the welfare of a child. After a four-week trial, during which the boy testified for two days, Russillo was not found guilty of the more serious charges he faced, including sodomy, that would have carried a harsher sentence. On Tuesday, Russillo was released from jail and expected to return to his Suffolk County home, just two doors down from the boy he molested.
      "I don't understand why [he] has so many rights, and kids like me don't," the boy said at a hearing last Thursday at Valley Stream North High School to solicit the community's input on possible ways to bolster Megan's Law. "I don't wish what happened to me to happen to any other kid. ... Try hard to get these laws passed."
      Coming up on the 10-year anniversary of Megan's Law - named for 7-year-old Megan Kanka, a New Jersey girl who was sexually assaulted and murdered by her neighbor in July 1994 - the state Senate Committee on Crime Victims, Crime and Correction is holding a series of public hearings to gather information, and a bill to strengthen the current law is expected to be introduced in the Senate this month. Sen. Dean G. Skelos (R-Rockville Centre), the author of the current law, and Sen. Michael Nozzolio (R-Fayette), the committee chairman, presided over the most recent hearings in Valley Stream. The first hearings were held in Albany earlier this month, and a third session will take place in Brooklyn.
      "This is, in my opinion, the most critical reform that we can pass," Skelos said. "The passing of a law to protect you, protect our community - that's the principal responsibility of government."
      The Megan's Law Reform Act of 2005 will encompass a variety of issues, including lifetime registration of all convicted sex offenders (low- and mid-level offenders currently register for 10 years), mandatory community notification, civil confinement of sexually violent predators, global-positioning-system tracking and the posting of information for all three levels of registered sex offenders on the Department of Criminal Justice Services Web site.
      "Even if [Russillo] had been registered 20 years prior, he would have only been registered for 10 years," the boy's mother testified. "A day doesn't go by that I don't think to myself, How could I let this happen? Why didn't I see it?"
      Of the 21,000 registered sex offenders in New York state, more than 400 live in Nassau County, and nearly 800 in Suffolk County. By year's end, 3,300 statewide will no longer be included on the registry, having fulfilled their 10-year obligation. Russillo is not automatically a high- or third-level offender. He is entitled to a hearing under the current law.
      The boy and his mother were two of the 10 people who testified before the committee, which was joined by other local politicians. A second victim testified, as did Laura Ahearn, executive director of Parents for Megan's Law; Dr. Marc Bernstein, Valley Stream high school superintendent; Cynthia Scott, executive director of the Coalition on Child Abuse and Neglect; and various law enforcement officials.
      The second victim, a young woman, said she was just 15 when she and three others were sexually abused by a youth counselor at her church. Matthew Maiello, now 31, who worked at East Meadow's St. Raphael Roman Catholic Church, pleaded guilty to third-degree rape and three counts of second-degree sodomy. He spent two years in jail, and is now living in upstate New York after being released in March.
      "It's ridiculous how a person who sexually abuses children can earn good time in jail," the young woman said. "I think it's the job of [lawmakers] to put forth these laws to be proactive instead of reactive."
      Ahearn called Megan's Law an effective tool, and hopes that it can be strengthened to include lifetime registration and stricter probation, and to require sex offenders who plead to the lesser charge of endangering the welfare of a child, a misdemeanor, to register. She also called for the statute of limitations to be abolished.
      "A society can be measured by how well we protect our children," Ahearn said. "Protecting even one child is all it takes to ensure that a law is effective."
      Kenneth Rau, chief of detectives in Suffolk County, raised many of the same points as Ahearn. "It's very difficult to sit down with a parent and say what happened to your child is not important enough," he said of those instances where offenders are convicted of lesser crimes or serve minimal time.
      Bernstein called for a uniform system of notification for school districts, and added that sex offenders shouldn't be allowed to live within 1,000 feet of schools and other places where kids congregate.
      Scott and Nassau County Police Department Lt. John Allen called for educational programs in schools and communities. John Fowle, supervisor of the Special Victims Unit of the Nassau County Department of Probation, suggested lifetime parole and requiring offenders to register with the Department of Motor Vehicles. And Joy Watson, Sex Offense and Domestic Violence Bureau chief for the Nassau County district attorney's office, asked that youthful offenders not be exempt from the law.
      After hearing all of the testimony, Skelos said, "Obviously, changing some of the penal sections, like endangering the welfare of a child, came up repeatedly. Also, the theme of education - giving parents and kids the tools to protect themselves - that came out really clear."

Friday, February 2, 2018

Suffolk County settles lawsuit for James Burke's porn stash beating

I hope Suffolk doesn't go bankrupt just yet, there are a couple more lawsuits they need to settle, like that one with Derek Logue versus Ahearn's group.

https://www.newsday.com/long-island/suffolk/loeb-settlement-burke-assault-1.16478078

Suffolk agrees to settle Christopher Loeb’s lawsuit, officials say
The county admits no wrongdoing in connection with Christopher Loeb’s 2012 beating by former Chief James Burke.

By Nicole Fuller
nicole.fuller@newsday.com  @NicoleFuller
Updated February 1, 2018 7:48 PM

Suffolk County has agreed to pay $1.5 million to settle a federal lawsuit brought by Christopher Loeb, whose beating by Suffolk Police Chief James Burke led to the chief’s imprisonment and the indictment of District Attorney Thomas Spota, county officials said Thursday.

Under the terms of the agreement, the county admits no wrongdoing and is released from additional liability in connection with Loeb’s 2012 beating inside a police precinct, Suffolk County Attorney Dennis Brown said in an interview.

“In this particular case, we have an admission from the perpetrator of wrongdoing, so we don’t have a lot of defenses,” Brown said, adding that Burke is not covered under the settlement and could still be held liable.

“His acts, even though he was the chief of police at the time, were not something that the county condones nor is it something that occurred within the scope of his employment.”

The county legislature will have to vote to approve the settlement.

Loeb, 31, of Mount Sinai, could not immediately be reached for comment.

Bruce Barket, a Garden City-based attorney representing Loeb, said he would not comment on the settlement until the legislature gives its final approval.

“But I will note that there is no settlement with Burke and we intend to pursue our case against him vigorously,” Barket said. “He is separately liable for the damages he caused and punitive damages, which are certainly appropriate in this case.”

Barket said Loeb, who is a recovering heroin addict, is currently “doing well and working on his health.”

Burke’s attorney, John Meringolo of Manhattan, declined to comment.

The case began when Loeb was arrested on Dec. 14, 2012, after stealing a duffel bag containing a gun belt, ammunition, sex toys and pornography from Burke’s unmarked police SUV in St. James. In 2015, Loeb filed a lawsuit in federal court charging the county, Burke and six other officers with violating his civil rights after he accused the former chief of assaulting him.

Loeb’s beating allegations sparked a federal probe that led to Burke’s indictment and arrest in December 2015. Burke pleaded guilty to violating Loeb’s civil rights in February 2016 after admitting to assaulting Loeb and then orchestrating a departmental cover-up. He is currently serving a 46-month prison sentence.

Burke’s federal probe led to last year’s federal indictment of Spota and top aide Christopher McPartland on charges they were involved in the cover-up. Both Spota and McPartland pleaded not guilty and were released on bail. Spota retired days after he was indicted.

The county considered several factors in deciding to settle, Brown said, including attorneys’ fees and the unpredictability of a possible jury award.

“We’re looking at years of litigation, very significant litigation costs; there are multiple attorneys that the county is paying for various named defendants,” Brown said. “If we were not successful in the lawsuit, the plaintiff’s attorney would also be entitled to attorney’s fees, so we could be looking at attorneys’ fees of a million dollars or more.”

Loeb had pleaded guilty to criminal possession of a weapon in the original case involving the theft from Burke’s vehicle, but in light of Burke’s guilty plea, a state Supreme Court justice vacated the plea after the special prosecutor who was appointed in the case agreed with Loeb’s attorney that the plea was unjustly coerced and tainted by police perjury.

Loeb entered the plea after a pretrial hearing in which several Suffolk officers and detectives testified under oath that they didn’t see Burke beat Loeb.

But when the plea was vacated, the original indictment, which included stealing property and other charges, was reinstated. Loeb again pleaded not guilty to those charges, which included a count of breaking into Burke’s police vehicle and stealing a duffel bag.

A defense motion to dismiss the indictment was later granted.

DuWayne Gregory (D-Copiague), presiding officer of the Suffolk County Legislature, said he would vote for the settlement because going to trial could “run the risk” of a higher cash award.

“It’s frustrating that the taxpayers of Suffolk County have to pay for the egregious actions of any individual that works for the county,” Gregory said.

If approved, the settlement will be paid by floating a bond. The county’s 2 percent interest rate over five years on a $1.5 million bond will total $91,200, said county spokesman Jason Elan.

Since being released from prison on that case last January after being sentenced to three years, Loeb has gotten into trouble with the law, including a February 2016 argument with his mother, Jane Loeb, that resulted in a harassment charge after authorities said he hit her.

Loeb was arrested in August 2017 and charged with violating an order of protection against his former girlfriend, Suffolk police said.

And last November, Loeb was arrested on charges in connection with the break-in of a car, theft of a purse and credit cards and theft of his mother’s car, police said. He was charged with fourth-degree grand larceny, fourth-degree criminal possession of stolen property, possession of a hypodermic instrument and unauthorized use of a vehicle.

He was released on personal recognizance from the Suffolk jail in Riverhead on Jan. 8 after a judge reduced his bail. The charges are pending.

Legis. Robert Trotta (R-Fort Salogna) said County Executive Steve Bellone should pay the settlement. Trotta said he would “absolutely not” vote to float a bond to pay it.

“Steve Bellone violated the trust of every taxpayer by hiring and supporting Jim Burke despite his history of misconduct. Now the taxpayers of Suffolk County will pay yet again for another Bellone blunder.”

Newsday has reported that Bellone was warned in an anonymous letter about issues with Burke, but got assurances of his character from Spota.

Elan, in response, said: “It is the height of hypocrisy coming from a man who has been accused multiple times of workplace violence.”