Friday, February 17, 2017
THE PULSE OF THE PENINSULA
Vol. 92, No. 7
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GUIDE TO SPECIAL OCCASIONS
NOREN WON’T RUN AGAIN
GOP TARGETS SUOZZI IN 2018
PAGES 35-38
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Ex town aide tied to alleged Terry front
EN GARDE!
Helped create corp. ID’d in indictment, denies role in alleged hiding of income BY N O A H M A N S K A R Jonathan P. Fielding, a Town of North Hempstead zoning oďŹƒcial until this week, helped Gerard Terry, an indicted Democratic political operative, create a company that Terry allegedly used as a front to hide income from the Internal Revenue Service, documents show. Fielding, who was secretary to the Board of Zoning Appeals, no longer worked for the town as of Tuesday, a town spokeswoman said. He indicated that he had been forced out. Fielding’s departure coincided with questions posed by Blank Slate Media to the town about his relationship to Terry’s company. It also comes two weeks after Terry, the former North Hempstead Democratic Committee chairman who worked as the zoning board’s attorney, was arrested on federal tax evasion charges for allegedly failing to pay nearly $1 million in income taxes.
Fielding in 2010 ďŹ led documents to incorporate a company, Neville Warwick LLC, that a federal indictment says Terry used to hide income from IRS tax collectors. State corporation records list Fielding as the recipient of correspondence for the company and list as its address a Mineola law ofďŹ ce where he has practiced. But Fielding’s role did not extend beyond preparing documents to organize the company, and he did not know for what purpose it would be used, he said in an interview. “I’ve never seen a bank statement or any other corporate minutes or anything else, or any other documents related to the LLC, since that organization seven years ago,â€? Fielding said. Terry and Fielding have a professional relationship that goes back to at least September 2008, when they served as Manorhaven’s Continued on Page 51
PHOTO COURTESY OF GREAT NECK PUBLIC SCHOOLS
The Great Neck South High School girls fencing team finished the season undefeated, going 14-0. See story on page 25
Great Neck residents vote down $85.9M school bond There were 1,677 no votes and 1,564 yes votes cast in a referendum. “While we have always Great Neck residents on Tuesday voted against a pro- maintained that this was the posed $85.9 million school community’s bond, it is clear that portions of the community bond.
BY ST E P H E N ROMANO
who were not in favor have spoken,� Board of Education President Barbara Berkowitz said. “Today’s bond proposition came at the conclusion of years of meetings and assessing the Continued on Page 52
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