Serving Manhasset
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Friday, november 27, 2015
vol. 3, no. 48
Guide to
HoLiday dininG, GiFT GUide
2 sTUdenTs To Vie For $100k PriZe
LeGisLaTUre resPonds To niFa deMands
pAGES 33-44
pAGE 55
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er 27, 2015 Section • Novemb Publicat ions Special Media / Litmor A Blank Slate
N. Shore firms key in Skelos, Silver trials
80tH ANNIVERSARy
Reps for Glenwood Management, Physicians Reciprocal testify By n o a H M a n s k a r Two North Shore companies and a third with ties to Nassau County have proven central to the proceedings in the federal corruption trials against al state lawmakers Sheldon Silver and Dean Skelos, as pretrial court filings indicated they would. New Hyde Park-based luxury real estate developer Glenwood Management figures largely in both trials, in which state Assemblyman Silver (D-Lower Manhattan), the former speaker of the Assembly, and state Sen. Skelos (R-Rockville Centre), the former majority leader of the state Senate, are charged with using political power to procure favors and kickbacks. Glenwood Management, which is located at 1200 Union Turnpike, was one of three companies prosecutors allege Skelos pressured into doing favors for his son Adam Skelos, who is on trial alongside his father, worth
$300,000 in total. And at Silver’s suggestion, Glenwood gave several property tax refund cases to a Manhattan law firm that had a fee-sharing agreement with the former state Assembly speaker that earned him about $700,000. Both Skelos and Silver advocated rent control laws and real estate tax breaks Glenwood officials said the developer relies on to stay in business, news reports say. For instance, Silver used his position to block a substance abuse treatment clinic from opening near one of the firm’s high-end downtown Manhattan buildings, according to prosecutors’ pretrial filings. According to news reports, Glenwood officials have testified that despite discomfort with the arrangements, the firm kept them in place because of concerns about damaging its relationships with the lawmakers, who had proven themselves powerful political alContinued on Page 73
PHOTO BY KIMBERLY TOLEDO
From left: Manhasset Chamber of Commerce first vice president Katie Miller, State Sen. Jack Martins (R-Mineola), chamber co-president C.J. Coleman, Town Councilwoman Anna Kaplan and Town Clerk Wayne Wink celebrated the chamber’s 80th anniversary at the Historic Onderdonk House.
G.N. attorney arrested in theft of Manhasset couple By J oe n i k i c
senting himself to take out a loan as a part owner of a corA Great Neck attorney was poration owned by his former arrested Wednesday morn- mother-in-law, Acting Nassau ing for stealing more than County District Attorney Mad$470,000 from a Manhasset eline Singas announced. Daniel Spitalnic, 38, of couple selling their home and taking out and falsely repre- Queens, faces charges, in two
separate cases, of three counts of second-degree grand larceny, one count of second-degree criminal possession of a forged instrument, and one count of offering a false instrument for filing in the first-degree. Continued on Page 61
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