Tag Archives: Staten

Expect to see new Aldi locations across NY state, including a Staten Island store – SILive.com

  1. Expect to see new Aldi locations across NY state, including a Staten Island store SILive.com
  2. Shoppers will have more options to buy cheaper groceries as Aldi plans takeover of hundreds of beloved… The US Sun
  3. Could Aldi’s US Acquisitions Drive Grocery Bills Even Higher? Investopedia
  4. Aldi is getting bigger. Here’s why the no-frills German grocer is looking to the Southern U.S. for growth CNBC
  5. 0820 week in review: Aldi!, Highway 44 ‘runway,’ New Church Without Walls getting new walls and a so-so scallop season so far Citrus County Chronicle
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Pete Davidson Laughs Over Staten Island Ferry Purchase Putting Him ‘In The Hole’: It’s ‘Kinda Funny This Will Be A Lifelong Problem For Me And Colin!’ – Mediaite

  1. Pete Davidson Laughs Over Staten Island Ferry Purchase Putting Him ‘In The Hole’: It’s ‘Kinda Funny This Will Be A Lifelong Problem For Me And Colin!’ Mediaite
  2. Pete Davidson says he’s ‘in the hole’ financially after he and Colin Jost bought a $280,000 Staten Island ferry Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Pete Davidson says he’s ‘in the hole’ financially after he and Colin Jost bought a $280,000 Staten Island ferr Business Insider India
  4. Pete Davidson Updates His Staten Island Ferry Plans, But Ship’s Launch Is A Ways Away Deadline
  5. Pete Davidson Gives Update on Ferry Purchased with Colin Jost and Jokes It’s Now Their ‘Lifelong Problem’ Yahoo Entertainment
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Colin Jost disputes Pete Davidson’s claim that they were both ‘stoned’ when they paid $280,100 for a decommissioned Staten Island ferry: ‘I was actually stone-cold sober’ – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Colin Jost disputes Pete Davidson’s claim that they were both ‘stoned’ when they paid $280,100 for a decommissioned Staten Island ferry: ‘I was actually stone-cold sober’ Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Colin Jost was not stoned when he and Pete Davidson bought $280K ferry Insider
  3. Colin Jost says he was ‘actually stone-cold sober’ when buying ferry with Pete Davidson USA TODAY
  4. Colin Jost Was Sober When He Bought Staten Island Ferry BuzzFeed
  5. Colin Jost Responds to Pete Davidson’s Claim They Were ‘Very Stoned’ When They Bought Ferry Just Jared
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Buyer’s Remorse: Pete Davidson Has ‘No Idea What’s Going On’ With the Staten Island Ferry He Bought – Rolling Stone

  1. Buyer’s Remorse: Pete Davidson Has ‘No Idea What’s Going On’ With the Staten Island Ferry He Bought Rolling Stone
  2. Pete Davidson admits he and Colin Jost were ‘very stoned’ when they paid $280,100 for a decommissioned Staten Island ferry and he regrets buying it Yahoo! Voices
  3. Pete Davidson regrets buying $280K Staten Island ferry, was ‘stoned’ Insider
  4. Pete Davidson has an update on that ferry he bought with Colin Jost CNN
  5. Pete Davidson Shares Buyers Remorse for Ferry He Purchased Online with Colin Jost: ‘We Were Very Stoned’ Yahoo Entertainment
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Florida Governor Ron DeSantis visits Staten Island to talk about protecting law and order in New York City – WABC-TV

  1. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis visits Staten Island to talk about protecting law and order in New York City WABC-TV
  2. DeSantis team fires back at Eric Adams after he offers to teach Florida governor about NYC ‘values’ Fox News
  3. ‘We’re Happy to Teach You’: NYC Mayor Offers DeSantis Moral Guidance ahead of Governor’s Staten Island Rally Yahoo News
  4. Ron DeSantis sure sounds like a presidential candidate during Staten Island speech (opinion) SILive.com
  5. DeSantis warns NYC police officers critical race theory ‘teaching kids to demonize,’ ‘hate’ law enforcement Fox News
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Halo Infinite Director Joseph Staten Leaving 343 Industries to Rejoin Xbox Publishing

After today’s announcement that Microsoft will lay off 10,000 people, details on how internal restructuring will hit its gaming divisions continue to emerge, with Halo Infinite’s 343 Industries among the studios impacted.

According to Bloomberg, Joseph Staten, a Halo veteran who began his career with Bungie in 1998, will transition from his Halo Infinite creative director role and rejoin Xbox’s publishing division. Staten joined the team at 343 Industries in 2020 as the campaign project lead on Halo Infinite and later saw a title change to Head of Creative.

Bloomberg’s report includes an email from 343 Industries head Pierre Hintze, who explained the studio “made the difficult decision to restructure” and that support for Halo Infinite’s live service features will continue. Details on Staten’s new role and the exact degree of impact at 343 Industries remain unclear for now.

Microsoft Acquires Activision Blizzard: The Story So Far



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Artistic mom with ‘huge heart’ died seeking recovery on Staten Island

EDITOR’S NOTE: This is part one of two stories spotlighting the life and tragic loss of Melissa Veltidi, whose troubling death occurred while she was being cared for at Amethyst House, Staten Island’s only women’s sober living facility.

Melissa Veltidi of Haverstraw in Rockland County died at age 27 on July 22, 2021, after becoming unconscious at Amethyst House on Staten Island. (Courtesy of Anita Newell)

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — The family of Melissa Veltidi, 27, — who lost consciousness at Amethyst House in July 2021 and later died — said she was a “fantastic mother” with a “huge heart,” and enthusiastic about the arts and nature.

Veltidi of Haverstraw in Rockland County was on the cusp of recovery and a fresh start in life when she died on July 22, 2021, at Richmond University Medical Center in West Brighton, according to her bereaved family.

While Veltidi’s cause of death is listed as “undetermined,” the manner of death is “multiple drug intoxication,” according to the medical examiner. That is despite her death coming at a time when Veltidi was only taking prescribed, and not illicit drugs.

As family members continue searching for answers about how Veltidi died while in treatment at Amethyst House in Port Richmond, they don’t want their beloved daughter and sister to be defined by her addiction.

“She was a fantastic mother,” said Veltidi’s mother, Anita Newell, who declined to have her granddaughter’s name published in the Advance/SILive.com. “The way she treated her daughter was with a very, very positive attitude. She never gave her daughter any negativity, which I thought was beautiful.”

Amethyst House shuttered last year. Multiple whistleblowers previously told the Advance/SILive.com that the more than 40-year-old safe haven for women seeking sobriety became a house of mistrust and neglect over the last few years, alleging mismanagement, missing medications and lost trust.

Camelot of Staten Island said it plans to reopen the facility under new leadership.

‘FALLING THROUGH THE CRACKS’

For years before arriving at Amethyst House, Veltidi didn’t receive the help she needed for multiple issues that Newell believes stemmed from her daughter being sexually abused as a child.

“She always fell through the cracks,” Newell said. “She never got the proper mental health care.”

Veltidi was cycled through various mental health and drug-addiction programs where she was overprescribed pills instead of receiving talk therapy or other help needed to overcome her problems, alleged Newell. Over time, Veltidi became dependent on prescription pills and street drugs, including opioids and sedatives, her mother said.

“The treatment is all pills, this is [some medical professionals’] answer to everything instead of trying to find the root of this problem,” Newell said. “When you’re so drugged up, you’re in a fog.”

Veltidi learned how to manipulate doctors and other providers to obtain drugs to feed her addiction, her mother said.

“She knew what to say to get what she wanted when she did go to these people,” Newell said of doctors and other providers. “I can’t even tell you how much medication she was on at one time. It was so awful, and she kept trying to get off of the pills. She would go to a different treatment center, and they would say, ‘Well, you need this medication.’ It was just a circle.”

‘HER DAUGHTER MISSES HER TERRIBLY’

Newell had to speak quietly because Veltidi’s grade-school age daughter was taking singing lessons in a nearby bedroom.

“Her daughter misses her terribly. I’ve got to stop…” Newell said, breaking down in tears before taking time to regain her composure to continue an interview with the Advance/SILive.com.

Veltidi “had a huge heart” and was a “very caring, loving” woman, said her sister, Jacqueline Zabrowski. “She was a wonderful mother and friend.”

A Chinese lantern and balloons were released at a memorial service held for the first anniversary of the death of Melissa Veltidi, 27, of Haverstraw in Rockland County, who died on July 22, 2021, after collapsing at Amethyst House on Staten Island. (Courtesy of Anita Newell)

The 27-year-old mother enjoyed drawing with her daughter and also taking her child to fun events, such as fairs, said another of Veltidi’s sisters, Kristi Veltidi.

An amateur photographer who captured artistic images, Veltidi liked attending electric-light music festivals and dancing freestyle with friends, Kristi Veltidi said.

Even into adulthood, Veltidi managed to maintain a childlike ability to see the good in everyone and everything, according to her family.

‘A FREE SPIRIT’

“Anyone who had met Melissa saw she was a free spirit, an open-minded thinker who never judged anyone she came across,” her obituary said. “She was outspoken and passionate and had a love for music and creativity. Melissa always saw the good in people and she ensured that she raised her daughter with that same open-mindedness, positivity and strength.”

Said Kristi Veltidi, who was one month shy of 16 when her sister was born: “She was very strong and very smart. She didn’t realize how smart she was. She never knew, she never gave herself enough credit.”

Melissa Veltidi of Haverstraw in Rockland County died at age 27 on July 22, 2021, after becoming unconscious at Amethyst House on Staten Island. This is one of her baby photos. (Courtesy of Anita Newell)

As a premature baby, Veltidi “kind of had to struggle at the beginning of her life,” and that likely gave her strength, Kristi Veltidi said.

Veltidi grew up in Congers in Rockland County, where she attended Lakewood Elementary School and Clarkstown North High School. Her parents divorced when she was a child.

“She was like my little sidekick,” said Zabrowski , who is about 11 years older than Melissa. “I used to take her everywhere.”

Melissa “was an eccentric, lovable girl who loved to draw and paint, and she liked to ride her bike,” Zabrowski recalled.

“I always think of her as this little fairy,” Zabrowski added. “She was very whimsical. She didn’t do any theater or anything, but she was very much just like a little performer in life.”

Melissa Veltidi of Haverstraw in Rockland County was about 4 years old when this photo was taken. (Courtesy of Anita Newell)

Alan Veltidi remembers many idyllic days spent at Lavallette on the New Jersey Shore with his deceased daughter when she was young. She seemed to feel free swimming in the ocean and playing with her many friends in the beach community, he said.

Veltidi dabbled in learning how to play the piano and the violin with some instruction from her step-mother, Janis Veltidi. Alan Veltidi said he remembers helping his daughter with many school projects, including one based on a fictional book about what would happen if rats swarmed Staten Island.

Although Veltidi participated in many treatment programs for her issues throughout the years, she was unable to achieve peace of mind, much less long-term recovery.

“She did not want to be the person she was,” Newell said of her daughter. “There was such hope for her and she struggled every day. She had demons in her head, but you would never know it. Everybody who met her loved her. She was a beautiful young lady.”

Melissa Veltidi of Haverstraw in Rockland County died at age 27 on July 22, 2021, after becoming unconscious at Amethyst House on Staten Island. (Courtesy of Anita Newell)

RELATED STORIES:

>> Exclusive: Long-standing NYC safe haven for women shutters amid tragic death, allegations of abrupt resignation, missing meds

>> Staten Island safe haven for women, shuttered under controversy, on its way to reopening under new leadership

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Donated wedding helps ease heartache as Staten Island man, 34, undergoes treatment for terminal brain cancer

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Next week, Michelle Narducci-Aubry and Andrew Aubry will celebrate their marriage in front of their closest relatives and friends. The road to tie the knot has been extremely difficult for the loving couple.

When Narducci-Aubry first saw Aubry while they lived in the same apartment complex in Westerleigh, she knew he would be the most important person in her life.

She quickly played matchmaker for herself – heading to the same corner store when she saw Andrew walk by. And it worked. They struck up a conversation in the store one day and started to spend time together in the complex. One night, during a rare celestial event, Narducci-Aubry asked Andrew to skywatch with her.

“Ever since then, we’ve been inseparable,” Narducci-Aubry, 38, said.

The pair started to date in 2019 and he proposed Dec. 6, 2020. They moved into a new apartment together in Charleston and began to plan their future together, starting with an October 2023 wedding.

But then their world turned upside down when Aubry, 34, suffered a severe headache six months ago.

On Feb. 17, Narducci-Aubry rushed Andrew to Staten Island University Hospital (SIUH) in Prince’s Bay because he had “the worst headache of his life for the last 24 hours.”

“He had no relief from Motrin 800. And then when he started to projectile vomit and lose his footing, I automatically thought aneurysm and so did he,” she recalled. “So I said to get in the car and we’re driving to the [SIUH] south site and he keeps telling me, ‘If you love me, you’ll take me back to my bed.’ And I said, ‘I love you, that’s why I’m taking you to the hospital.’”

Andrew Aubry was diagnosed with a terminal brain cancer earlier this year. (Courtesy/Michelle Narducci-Aubry)

Within 20 minutes of arriving, the hospital provided the results of his CAT scan. Dr. James Kenny sat the couple down and explained why Andrew suffered the headache.

There was a mass in Andrew’s brain the size of a clementine in his basal ganglia and thalamus — the deepest-seated part of the brain and extremely close to his brainstem.

He was quickly transferred via ambulance to SIUH in Ocean Breeze and started him on an anti-seizure medication. He stayed in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) until Feb. 22, and just a few days later, was in major surgery with Dr. Raphael Sacho, who performed a partial resection and removed 70% of the tumor successfully.

“He only felt pins and needles but he was not paralyzed, no bleeding,” said Narducci-Aubry. “He was able to speak, no cognitive impairment, thank God. So then I automatically took him directly into the city [Manhattan] once the resection was done because a biopsy was done at the same time. And we were told that it was in fact malignant. So it was cancer.”

Aubry has astrocytoma, a type of cancer than can occur in the brain or spinal cord. It begins in cells called astrocytes that support nerve cells. Some astrocytomas grow very slowly and others can be aggressive cancers that grow quickly.

The pair went to NYU Langone in Manhattan where he received six weeks of standard of care treatment. But his pathology report came back that showed he has a specific mutation in the tumor in his brain that makes it typically unresponsive to the standard care treatment.

“So in the six weeks of treatment, he actually had a number of setbacks, one of which was hydrocephalus — the accumulation and buildup of cerebral spinal fluid in the brain. Because the tumor was growing so quickly because of that mutation, it closed off one of the ventricles in the brain and it wasn’t allowing it to drain properly,” said Narducci-Aubry. “So he needed an emergency shunt surgery. Also at NYU. It’s a VP shunt, it’s called, it goes from the brain down his neck and it drains out into his abdomen, and it’s either absorbed or excreted through his urine or bowels. After that, he had to wait two weeks to heal and resumed the rest of the six weeks of treatment.”

Narducci-Aubry had to quit her job. A GoFundMe was created to help with living expenses. (Courtesy/Michelle Narducci-Aubry)

The initial six-week effort took closer to two and a half months to complete due to setbacks.

Aubry went for another MRI a month after his last treatment round, but more bad news came: It showed a tumor growth of two millimeters. He started another aggressive, double-dose round of chemo.

On Wednesday, Aubry is scheduled for yet another test. Those results will determine if Aubry is a candidate for the LiTT procedure by Dr. Michael Schulder at Northwell Health in New Hyde Park, Long Island.

The LiTT procedure is considered minimally invasive and is for inoperable brain tumors. The doctor makes a less than a centimeter incision in the scalp under a guided MRI. They enter a micro-catheter laser directly into the center of the tumor, heat the laser, and kill the tumor from the inside out.

The recovery time lasts about two weeks. But there are risks to the surgery. Swelling and bleeding could occur, or even more extreme, Aubry could become paralyzed.

“We’re going to try to get our honeymoon in before the LiTT procedure. If not, he’ll get the LiTT procedure done and then you know, months down the road, we’ll take it as it goes. But unfortunately, the cancer is terminal,” Narducci-Aubry said. “It will always come back and it will be the cause of death for Andrew.”

A GoFundMe has been created to help with expenses for the couple.

Narducci-Aubry had to leave her job as a phlebotomist to take care of Aubry full-time.

The couple started dating in 2019. (Courtesy/Michelle Narducci-Aubry)

Aubry is still able to walk and is undergoing occupational and physical therapy once a week. But he neglects his right side of the body due to the tumor growth in his brain. His short-term memory is also non-existent, Narducci-Aubry said.

“I repeat myself all day every day,” she said. “He leaves lights on, he leaves water running. He gets confused. He’ll start a task but never finish it. I’ll walk into the bedroom and I’ll find him just standing there and I’m like, ‘What are you doing?’ And he’s like, ‘Nothing just standing here.’ and I’m like, ‘Okay.’ And he knows this. He knows that his cognitive – he’s impaired. And he is not taking it well at all. He’s very hard on himself. He suffers terribly with depression, and he’s very, very scared. He tells me every day, ‘I’m scared. I’m scared to die.’ And every day he apologizes to me.”

WISH UPON A WEDDING

Narducci-Aubry explained that, in February, Andrew was given 12 to 15 months to live. A month later, the couple was married by their friend on March 23 in their apartment.

They’re celebrating their love together with a wedding ceremony and reception on Sunday, Aug. 14.

Their dream wedding will be granted by the non-profit, Wish Upon a Wedding, which provides weddings and vow renewals to couples facing terminal illness or life-altering health circumstances. It helps alleviate the financial burden and time commitment that planning a wedding entails, focusing instead on dealing with their treatments and spending time with their loved ones.

Narducci-Aubry will look radiant in her dream wedding gown from David’s Bridal when she ties the knot with her husband (again!) on Sunday on the grounds of Snug Harbor Cultural Center and Botanical Garden in Livingston, with a reception to follow. Boulevard Cleaners 2 on Amboy Road in Pleasant Plains is providing a free tuxedo and alterations to Aubry for the big day.

Relish will cater the wedding and Palermo Bakery in New Jersey is donating the wedding cake.

“It’s definitely gonna be a much more beautiful wedding than the one that we were able to afford ourselves [when planning] back in May so we’re very grateful,” she said.

The couple will celebrate their love for each other on Sunday, Aug. 14. (Courtesy/Michelle Narducci-Aubry)

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Staten Island car wreck kills three teens

Three teenage passengers inside a Ford Mustang were killed in a horrific crash that caused the vehicle to split in half on Staten Island Sunday night, police said.

The young victims, two girls, 15 and 16, and a 15-year-old boy, were in the muscle car traveling westbound on Hylan Boulevard when they collided with an SUV going eastbound that was attempting to turn left onto Richard Avenue at about 8:45 p.m., according to the NYPD.

The 16-year-old girl and the boy were pronounced dead on scene.

Police said the 15-year-old girl was taken to Staten Island University Hospital North, where she later died.

The driver of the red Mustang, a 16-year-old boy, was hospitalized in critical condition.

The young victims were two girls, 15 and 16, and a 15-year-old boy.
Steve White

The sole occupant of the black SUV was the driver, who did not sustain life-threatening injuries, sources and police said.

It wasn’t immediately clear what caused the fatal wreck, which was being investigated by the NYPD’s Collision Investigation Squad.

The SUV was going eastbound attempting to turn left onto Richard Avenue before it crashed, according to NYPD.

Photos from the scene show the remnants of the mangled Mustang, which ended up in two pieces.

Additional reporting by Kenneth Garger

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Rudy Giuliani slapped: Video shows former NYC mayor slapped inside Staten Island supermarket, employee arrested

STATEN ISLAND, New York City (WABC) — Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani spoke out on Monday after he was slapped on the back while grocery shopping over the weekend, in an incident that was caught on surveillance video.

A ShopRite employee, 39-year-old Daniel Gill, was arrested and initially charged with second-degree assault, a felony, although those charges were later downgraded.

Gill appeared in court Monday, wearing his ShopRite uniform, to face misdemeanor charges of third-degree assault, third-degree menacing, and second-degree harassment. He was released on his own recognizance by Judge Gerianne Abriano.

Police say Gill slapped Giuliani on the back while he was campaigning for his son, Andrew Giuliani, in the state’s gubernatorial race, handing out flyers at the store on Staten Island.

“I got hit as if a boulder hit me,” Giuliani said during his virtual press conference. “It knocked me forward a step or two. It didn’t knock me down, but it hurt tremendously.”

The former mayor said he really didn’t know what had hit him at the time, and he was shocked as he had campaigned there for himself, his son, and other colleagues some 500 times, maybe as many as 1,000, he estimated.

After the slap, Giuliani says the man kept swearing and ranting to him about “killing women,” and when he wouldn’t stop, he decided to call the police and have the man arrested.

“This has to stop,” he said. “It could have been much worse of course.”

According to prosecutors, Gill said, “What’s up scumbag?” after smacking Giuliani on his back.

The smack caused Giuliani “to stumble forward” and caused “redness, swelling and substantial pain to the back and left side of his body,” according to the complaint.

The defense said Gill has worked at the story for four years and had no intention of causing the former mayor any physical injury.

“The video is clear,” his attorney, Susan Platis, said. “The video is clear that this was just a tap on the back.”

Giuliani, 78, was not seriously injured and refused medical treatment.

“Innocent people are attacked in today’s New York all of the time,” Andrew Giuliani said in a statement. “This particular incident hit very close to home. The assault on my father, America’s Mayor, was over politics. We will not be intimidated by left-wing attacks. As governor, I will stand up for law and order so that New Yorkers feel safe again. This message has resonated with voters throughout my campaign, leading up to Tuesday’s primary.”

Andrew Giuliani plans to hold a 7:30 p.m. rally on Tuesday at the store where his father got slapped.

Gill, who did not talk to reporters other than to say, “Have a good day, everyone,” is due back in court on August 17.

The Legal Aid Society, which is representing Gill, issued the following statement:

“The charges facing Daniel Gill, who has no previous contact with the criminal legal system, are inconsistent with existing law. Our client merely patted Mr. Giuliani, who sustained nothing remotely resembling physical injuries, without malice to simply get his attention, as the video footage clearly showed. Mr. Gill was then followed and threatened by one of Mr. Giuliani’s associates who allegedly poked Mr. Gill in the chest and told him that he was going to be ‘locked up’. He was then needlessly held by the NYPD in custody for over 24 hours. Given Mr. Giuliani’s obsession with seeing his name in the press and his demonstrated propensity to distort the truth, we are happy to correct the record on exactly what occurred over the weekend on Staten Island.”

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